Don't flame me, but I really recommend using Ubuntu on laptops. If you really want CentOS, you should go with version 7. Many new laptops won't work well with that either though.
CentOS 6 only works well these days on older hardware or on virtual machines. On Apr 27, 2016 7:27 PM, "Brian Bernard" brian.brianbernard@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
I'm looking at buying a Lenovo Y700 Notebook, and wondering if it would work with CentOS 6. Or if anyone has experience with using it under CentOS 6. I assume that the WiFi could be an issue as it uses an Intel 8260 card. I want to make the correct decision.
Thank you,
Brian Bernard _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On 04/27/2016 07:43 PM, Mike Mohr wrote:
Don't flame me, but I really recommend using Ubuntu on laptops. If you really want CentOS, you should go with version 7. Many new laptops won't work well with that either though.
CentOS 7 works fine on my T410 thinkpad but that's not a new laptop...
I use to use Ubuntu on the desktop but I stopped when they believed it was okay to send information I searched for my local workstation to Amazon without asking me first.
I can not support any distribution that believes it is okay to do that sort of thing.
Maybe it would have been okay if it had been opt-in, but it wasn't opt-in.
On Wed, April 27, 2016 10:12 pm, Alice Wonder wrote:
On 04/27/2016 07:43 PM, Mike Mohr wrote:
Don't flame me, but I really recommend using Ubuntu on laptops. If you really want CentOS, you should go with version 7. Many new laptops won't work well with that either though.
CentOS 7 works fine on my T410 thinkpad but that's not a new laptop...
I use to use Ubuntu on the desktop but I stopped when they believed it was okay to send information I searched for my local workstation to Amazon without asking me first.
I can not support any distribution that believes it is okay to do that sort of thing.
Maybe it would have been okay if it had been opt-in, but it wasn't opt-in.
I would first try CentOS 7, second Debain. I have the same feelings about Ubuntu as Alice does. I also do tend to avoid Lenovo after they were caught installing malware on Windows system the ship. You can search for superfish and lenovo. Once caught, they stopped it. But once caught one looses my trust for very-very long. I would look for Dell if I were needing laptop without much trouble installing Linux on it - you can find one certified for Ubuntu (sigh) and shipped with it. Just wipe Ubuntu, and install system of your choice. For myself I got Toshiba ultrabook U904, had no trouble to make it dual boot: Windows and CentOS 7 (all worked on Linux side including touch screen, not much fanciness in Linux as far as touch screen is concerned, but I kind of don't like touching my screen anyway). Now, however, I wiped both systems and run only FreeBSD on Toshiba ultrabook U904. Compared to Linux took me a bit of effort, but I like it more that way.
I hope, others will mention other hardware choices (I figure, Lenovo really set me off by what they did, sorry Lenovo fans).
I hope, this helps.
Valeri
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Valeri Galtsev Sr System Administrator Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics University of Chicago Phone: 773-702-4247 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++