Fozzologs

RSS Feeds

About...

These posts are the creation of Doran L. Barton (AKA Fozziliny Moo). To learn more about Doran, check out his website at fozzilinymoo.org.

Right Side

This space reserved for future use.

New laptop: Dell Latitude D830

Posted: 22 March 2008 at 20:51:00

Yesterday, my new laptop arrived. KnowledgeBlue purchased it for me as my HP Pavilion ZV5000Z was about three years old and was starting to show its age. KnowledgeBlue has standardized on Dell as its hardware supplier and, while I don't care for their desktop machines at all and I'm okay with their servers, I really had no clue what to think about their laptops.

What is nice about Dell is they have a line of Open Source laptops. These laptops have been certified as being friendly with open source operating systems like Linux and are available for purchase without a pre-installed operating system (the laptop does come with FreeDOS installation media).

HP also offers FreeDOS as an operating system option on many of its Business laptops for those people looking to run an open source operating system or simply avoid paying HP for a preinstalled Microsoft product.

So, anyway, I got a customized Dell Latitude D830. Here are some of the features:

  • Intel Core2 Duo CPU T7700 @ 2.40GHz
  • 2GB RAM
  • 120GB hard drive (w/ free fall sensor)
  • DVD burner
  • 9-Cell battery
  • NVidia Quadro NVS 140M (256MB)
  • 1920x1200 widescreen LCD panel
  • Intel 3945 802.11a/g wireless

Let me just say I am impressed. So far, this laptop has been nothing but awesome. The screen is absolutely beautiful. Most impressive is the fact all the hardware seems to just work in Linux. After all the hurdles I had to jump to get my previous laptop working with Linux, this was a paradisical experience.

I did a network install of Fedora 8 after booting from a CD burned from the distribution boot.iso. The software properly configured the video card to use the open source nv driver and accurately identified the characteristics of the display panel. Sound worked fine right out of the box. I was worried about wireless networking and was prepared to install a third-party driver from a site like Livna or FreshRPMS, but when I enabled NetworkManager, it just worked! I could scan for wireless networks (it saw more than my Atheros card ever did) and connected to my home network (encrypted with WPA2) with no problems at all.

One thing I do like about my HP laptop is the ability to disable the trackpad so that when I'm using a USB mouse, I don't have to worry about brushing against the trackpad while I'm typing. Speaking of pointing devices, the D830 has taken a cue from IBM/Lenovo and provides both a trackpad and a eraser-point stick thingie with a second set of left and right buttons.

One thing that has been a bit of a concern is the sound card. Maybe I need to dig deeper, but the mixer support seems really weak. The only controllable channels I've seen in my mixer is PCM and Front. From what I've seen so far, the headphone jack is not independently controllable (it is on my HP) and I haven't seen channels for Line In or Microphone.

Battery life seems good. I haven't timed it yet, but I think I'm getting about 2-3 hours off a single charge and I haven't really tried any power saving settings. I know the Intel chipset offers a lot of options in that department.

I haven't tried any kind of suspend or sleep stuff yet. I'll have to report my findings about that in a later post.