I purchased a Lenovo u150. Every device other than bluetooth work great in
OpenBSD 4.8 and higher. Even the webcam works for video chat. Great little
laptop that is 64bit capable, small, better screen resolution than the older
thinkpads, and cheap
Nick
On Tue, Apr 19, 2011 at 16:20, Clint Pachl
STeve Andre' wrote:
On 04/15/11 19:03, Paul M wrote:
Hi all,
It's time for a new OpenBSD laptop, and I have a couple of questions.
Note that I dont want to spend money on performance I dont need, but
I do want to spend money on a decent quality machine.
First, finding quality machines in th
>Date: Sat, 16 Apr 2011 11:03:15 +1200
>From: Paul M
>To: OpenBSD general usage list
>Subject: laptop questions/comments
>Message-ID: <04d87a5828d374d828bc3e1b091de...@no-tek.com>
>
>Hi all,
>
>It's time for a new OpenBSD laptop, and I have a couple of
OpenBSD general usage list
> Subject: laptop questions/comments
>
>
> Hi all,
>
> It's time for a new OpenBSD laptop, and I have a couple of questions.
>
> Note that I dont want to spend money on performance I dont need, but I
> do want to spend money on a decent quality
On 04/15/11 19:03, Paul M wrote:
Hi all,
It's time for a new OpenBSD laptop, and I have a couple of questions.
Note that I dont want to spend money on performance I dont need, but I
do want to spend money on a decent quality machine.
First, finding quality machines in the backwoods where I l
You should always pick up a current .iso snapshot and stick it in the
device...
Personally, I wouldn't buy a Celeron. I know there's tons of Celerons
around with this enabled and that disabled but its performance is
pitiful compared to a i3 or even a AMD Bobcat/APU. I would go for a
AMD Bobcat des
Hi all,
It's time for a new OpenBSD laptop, and I have a couple of questions.
Note that I dont want to spend money on performance I dont need, but I
do want to spend money on a decent quality machine.
First, finding quality machines in the backwoods where I live is really
hard. The shops see
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