Good laptop, especially for the price; some minor Linux issues
Let me begin by saying that the perfect laptop probably doesn’t exist: every manufacturer makes mistakes. Some of the disadvantages of the computer I ordered (the N850EK1) are simply to be expected given the size, performance envelope, and price—as well as the fact that it’s a Linux laptop specifically. Some of the problems, however, could definitely be rectified, which is why I’m rating it 4 stars.
To be clear, here are the specs of the machine I ordered:
- Intel I5 8th gen, 45W.
- Nvidia GTX 1050 4GB.
- 16GB DDR4 RAM.
- Samsung 250GB PCIe SSD.
- 4K LG-Philips screen.
- Fancy backlighting for the keyboard.
- Price as configured: €1185
It’s no surprise—based on the specs—that the laptop is fast. Laptop hardware has come a long, long way since I had my first laptop 10 years ago. The graphics card will play demanding games just fine at 1080p, and even older titles at 1440p and 2160p. The SSD is fast; there’s a lot of RAM. Cooling isn’t an issue as far as temperatures, although the fans could be quieter. This machine will definitely handle editing 24MPix RAW photos for when I’m travelling and away from my desktop.
But hey, this is true for all laptops you can buy today—specs no longer matter as much as they did. What makes this laptop better than the competition?
The good:
- The machine is very repairable. No soldered SSDs or RAM slots here!
- The screen is good. Not the best, mind you, but excellent given the price point. It’s sharp; sufficiently bright; it controls reflections well; and it has good colours (93% sRGB coverage). However, contrast could be better, though this isn’t immediately obvious because of the screen’s good performance overall (I only notice it next to my superior 4K monitor). Remember: many laptops still come with crappy TN panels or substandard IPS ones. Gaming laptops at this price point have IPS as standard, but they’re rarely high DPI, and rarely cover more than 90% of sRGB.
- All hardware is supported by Linux, even function keys, backlighting and the touchpad. Oh, and High DPI scaling is pretty good with Cinnamon.
- Customer support is fast and helpful.
The bad:
- The screen assembly doesn’t rotate far enough, and it wobbles.
- Very plasticky build; I would have expected some aluminium at this price.
- Crummy battery life, but that’s to be expected.
- Although the hardware is fully supported, drivers were NOT perfect out of the box. I had to install the nvidia proprietary driver, vaapi for video decoding on Intel, and a missing OpenCL package; this should not happen on a laptop pre-installed with Linux.
The okay:
- They keyboard is good but not great. It’s better than the Apple keyboards—I bought this machine to replace my ageing MacBook Pro, and tested the crappy butterfly keyboards on the new MacBooks, so I know what I’m talking about—since it has decent travel, big arrow keys, and all those keys like hash, backslash and end which are missing on Apple laptops. Nonetheless, the overall tactile feedback doesn’t stand up to a Model M or an old Thinkpad. Bear in mind, however, that I’m a fantasy novelist—I’m very picky about these things!
- The touchpad is not as good as my old Mac. Natural scrolling and tap-to-click works, but it’s not as smooth or precise.
Overall, I’m expecting this machine to last a long time. The hardware is good for the most part, and support is prompt and useful. If you’re in the market for a Linux laptop, Snaak Systems is a viable choice. If you’re outside the Netherlands, though, I would still go with a dedicated Linux company like Entroware or System76. I would still buy from this company again, though, especially if they fix the outstanding Linux issues out of the box.
25 September 2018
Unprompted review