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by detaro
2242 days ago
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I wouldn't necessarily agree with "very little progress", but: Thinkpad X220 is from 2011, but was far from alone in reaching such battery life (it's just the one I have first-hand experience with). Workstation laptops from the time (e.g. Thinkpad W510) can take 32 GB, just as most laptops today, and thus remained viable machines for a long time. Many-core systems are more possible today, but also far from the standard. 4-8 cores is still the default. |
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Today, you get the power of a W510 in a much smaller package (compare a current Gigabyte Aero 15 to a W510, say). Even a P1 (X1 chassis) outperforms the W510 by every metric, and is downright tiny in comparison. Now, a current P53 features 16GB of RAM.. on its GPU! It can 128GB of faster RAM total.
But considering Intel itself - yes, more progress could have been had (and it'll come via AMD). Nevertheless, the P53 processor is more than three times faster benchmarks compared to the W510. It's bound to be more extreme in desktops.
Most importantly, however, is the fact that the libreboot certified laptops are largely sold out (except the X200's) according to the certification website. In any case, they eventually will be.
So I feel that my point still stands. With all due respect to the FS people, the critique of all alternatives (Purism, System76) may be valid. But their approach amounts to simply not using a performant and portable machine, or eventually no laptop at all.