Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by JorgeGT 410 days ago
Lenovo has been doing this in Spain for quite a bit, and you can even buy them without any preinstalled OS at all for a lower price still. But at least here the option is typically available for ThinkPads rather than for more cheap consumer lines. Same with Acer. Dell offers Linux options but no "empty" option afaik.
1 comments

Linux is free and proves the hardware isn't defective when you press the power button.
I work at an e-waste recycling company, where we use Linux in precisely this way. I take corporate decommisioned laptops, wipe them, install Linux, run fastfetch, take pictures, and post on Ebay.

https://www.ebay.com/str/evolutionecycling

How do you get your hands on the hardware?
Most of it comes from businesses decommissioning their IT assets, but we also accept people walking in to drop things off. Most of that is "certified", meaning that we go through everything they dropped off, remove the drives, scan serial numbers, and ensure data on the drives are destroyed (either by physically destroying the drives, or overwriting them[0]). Laptops with sufficiently high specs are stacked on pallets in the warehouse area I work in, where it becomes a sort of free-for-all with my 3 co-workers there. Most of what we have is 5 to 10 years old, but sometimes there's the occasional retro piece, or electronic equipment that isn't a computer, like radars, lidars, or A/V stuff. I've been excited to pull out a laptop with a recent 14th gen (or so) Intel Core CPU, only to be let down when I discover it has a broken screen or is unbootable.

[0] https://wipeos.com/