Project I've been working on that I'm very passionate about. A fully upgradeable gaming handheld where you can upgrade the battery, mainboard (cpu), ram, storage by utilising Frameworks modular components. I will be selling it soon as a DIY kit for those that want another way to reuse (or buy new) their Framework components.
Can be currently upgraded to a Ryzen 7840U mainboard and a 61Wh battery for maximum performance.
Components used in video:
Intel 1260p mainboard
16GB ram
512gb ssd
55Wh Battery
dual speakers
7 inch FHD touchscreen
High speed WIFI & Bluetooth
It is a framework mainboard. The display is almost certainly connected via displayport on one of the framework usb-c ports, so that should be fine, and I’m pretty sure they mention the game pads are Bluetooth. There should be no issues running Linux on this.
@thejevans @DoomBot5 crazy to think that popos and other Linux distributions don’t run on Framework
They do? I’ve run everything from Debian to Arch on mine with zero issues.
@Sailor_jets website says different.
My guy, you have zero clue about what you are talking about. Fuck the website. All Linux distros are the same except for the package manager. If Ubuntu works on something then so will pretty much everything else that runs a modern kernel.
@Sailor_jets https://community.frame.work/t/status-of-official-linux-distribution-support/30511/4
What is your point of posting some forum post with zero context as to what I should be reading (I read the whole thing btw)? Some sort of gatcha moment?
Denied. Hardware drivers on Linux are IN THE KERNEL and the appropriate modules for your hardware are loaded at boot while all the other drivers relax in /usr/lib/modules. And wouldn’t you know? Framework laptops all use hardware that has the drivers included with the kernel! such as Intel wifi, Intel & AMD graphics. And it’s done on purpose! Woah!
And just out of spite, here’s my framework laptop running Pop_Os! just fine and dandy.
Experience > Text on a webpage
@Privatepower42 @thejevans @DoomBot5
They most likely do, and without any problems. They’re just not *officially* supported; you can’t ask for support if there’s an issue.
They officially supported the two largest user distros. Beyond that, there are community supported distros. I can’t imagine it would be too hard to get other supported ones on there if someone wanted to maintain it.