OpenBSD on Laptops

I've been using OpenBSD on a laptop as my primary workstation since the early 2000s. Since many other OpenBSD developers tend to stick to what already works so they can focus on hacking, my OpenBSD hacking is largely focused on making laptops work. To do that, I frequently acquire new laptops to try them out, review the hardware itself, and then try to make OpenBSD work well on them.

Huawei MateBook X (2020)

2021年08月20日, last updated 2021年08月24日
My old 2017 Huawei MateBook X has been my most reliable laptop and continued to be my daily-use workstation despite trying half a dozen others (and a desktop or two) in the past four years. Every time I'd try a new laptop, certain components wouldn't work properly, or the keyboard would feel strange, or the screen quality would be poor, or a constantly-running fan or some coil-whine noise would drive me nuts. And every time, I'd return to my trusty MateBook X and everything would just work silently.

Microsoft Surface Go

2018年08月31日
For some reason I like small laptops and the constraints they place on me (as long as they're still usable). I used a Dell Mini 9 for a long time back in the netbook days and was recently using an 11" MacBook Air as my primary development machine for many years. Recently Microsoft announced a smaller, cheaper version of its Surface tablets called Surface Go which piqued my interest.

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon (5th Gen)

2017年09月01日, last updated 2017年09月04日
ThinkPads have sort of a cult following among OpenBSD developers and users because the hardware is basic and well supported, and the keyboards are great to type on. While no stranger to ThinkPads myself, most of my OpenBSD laptops in recent years have been from various vendors with brand new hardware components that OpenBSD does not yet support. As satisfying as it is to write new kernel drivers or extend existing ones to make that hardware work, it usually leaves me with a laptop that doesn't work very well for a period of months.

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