For what it is worth, I recently bought a Dell XPS13-9333 that came with Ubuntu 12.04 pre-installed. Almost as soon as I switched it on, I received a message advising of an upgrade to 14.04 being available which I accepted. The upgrade retained the Dell-supplied drivers for the WiFi and Bluetooth chip however.

Since I bought the laptop specifically as a platform on which to learn more about Linux and Ubuntu, I experimented with creating a bootable USB thumbdrive containing the Ubuntu 14.04 ISO installation downloaded from the Ubuntu website. The laptop booted up well enough (using Ubuntu's own drivers) to give me the confidence to do a fresh install from the thumbdrive. I have since upgraded the OS to Ubuntu 14.10 and most things seem to work reliably with the exception of the built-in sound system that seems to have a mind of its own. Sometimes it does not detect the built-in speakers and at other times it links them to HDMI. I find that plugging in a pair of headphones and re-selecting the speakers will correct the linkage although the sound remains directed to the headphones as one would expect with a normal headphone socket. I have filed a number of bug reports on this and similar subjects but Canonical people seem to have more important things to do.

I have not attempted to contact Dell and, after reading your message, have no intention to do so. Dell, unfortunately, seem to be tied to Windows.

I have to admit that a MacBook Pro is my main and dependable workhorse as they are for my architect daughter and my design engineer son. I see no reason to change that at present although I am hopeful that Linux / Ubuntu will become the preferred platform for software that is otherwise over priced.

Regards,

David

On 05/01/15 15:25, TT Mooney wrote:
On 08/12/14 13:53, Alan Pope wrote:
On 6 December 2014 at 15:51, George Tripp <luggeo...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
I feel it's a pity that Canonical don't collaborate with a supplier to provide 
PC / laptops which are definitely compatible with Ubuntu.
Canonical does. For example there are around 300 different lines of
Dell machines which are certified to run Ubuntu. We have a lab in
China where machines are tested and approved. It's up to the OEM which
ones they sell in what region though. Some countries have very
significant sales of Ubuntu machines, whereas others do not.
This is from last year, but still worth a reply.

I bought the Ubuntu-flavour XPS 13 9333 (Sputnik 3). It came with a
totally supported 12.04 release, which worked well. I wanted LUKS (from
the install) and when 14.04 LTS came out, I did a fresh install.

14.04 is not incredibly reliable, mostly due to regressions in the WiFi
driver. Dell support doesn't really care, and they don't even seem to
know they're supposed to provide support for Linux. And I bought the
all-singing, all-dancing support package, as well.

In the end I narrowed the problem down (with help of the Internet) to an
occasional problem in the interaction of powersaving mode and 5 GHz
connectivity. So I keep the laptop plugged in most of the time when I'm
on a 5 GHz AP. Not great, but kind of okay. However, if I wanted to
troubleshoot my own issues I could have got two laptops for the amount I
paid for the XPS 13.

Now, this isn't Canonical's fault, but Dell isn't really keeping up
their end of the deal. I hope that their support on the approximately
298 lines that we don't get in the UK is superior to that I get here.

So, just getting Ubuntu preinstalled is not enough. And this is why I
see Linux Devops people carrying Macs all the time now. It's a bit sad.

travis



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