![]() On that same desk, I also have a small 19in HP monitor with a Roku hooked up to it. But, it didn't have a thunderbolt adapter and connecting thunderbolt to HDMI sucks. FWIW, a few months ago I had an older Intel NUC. So, I haven't had time to hook up the scanner to it yet. The Linux box just replaced an old Mac tower. Mouse: old crappy Logitech mouse (w/ scroll wheel) OS: Fedora 29 beta (29 supported dual monitors "out of the box") Monitors: 27 in Apple monitor, 27 in Dell monitor However, there is a mix of Raspberry Pis and random other things I play with occasionally.ĭesktop: Intel Hades Canyon (32GB, 250GB SSD) These run a mixture of various Linux distros, ChromeOS, and at least one Windows machine.Ĭraig Sebenik : 90+% of my time is spent on my laptop or my desktop. And there are additional laptops for family-use (each kid has their own as does my wife) that I do not manage. We have a Brother DCPL-2540ODW laser printer/copier/scanner which has decent Linux support. The latter two machines run Ubuntu because it is far easier to set up the nVidia graphics. *this one is old and used in the living room by the family RAM: 4GB (soldered to the motherboard.prevents r)ĬPU: Twelve 6-core 3.47GHz Xeon x5690 with hyperthreadingĬPU: 2.67GHz 6-core Xeon x5650 with hyperthreading (orig. ![]() Laptop: Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A 13.3" ultrabook Matthew Helmke: In active use right now I have (not counting work-provided equipment): At least, until my ADHD takes over and makes me switch. I often distro-hop but I've been staying on Pop!_OS LTS for quite a while now, and I intend to stay there for the foreseeable future. (I have a YouTube video about the rest of the software and tools I'm running.) FreeNAS itself synchronizes to Backblaze B2 weekly for off-site backup. I use Syncthing to synchronize files between my machines, with FreeNAS as the central place each computer syncs to. My Ansible configuration automatically sets up my servers, as well as my desktops and laptops (using the method I wrote about in an earlier article series). I have an older System76 Lemur that runs Arch most of the time. Jay LaCroix: I have a System76 Galago Pro (latest model) and a custom-built water-cooled desktop, both running Pop!_OS. It is hooked up to an HD projector and a Sony 7.1 speaker surround sound system (general purpose receiver, not computer speakers). We have also a trusty Samsung C410 laser printer which has been awesome for its Linux support. My home lab consists of 144G of ram 18 cores and 3 TB of SSD storage spread over 4 machines (I won't bore you with the details). This computer drives our entertainment center. HDD 2-6: Seagate NAS 4TB hard drives in a ZFS Raidz-1 (16TB usable space) Video Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050/Intel Graphics HDD: 250G Samsung 850 PRO SSD HDD2: 250G Kingston SSD In active use right now we have (not counting the home lab, router etc) three desktops and three laptops. Steve Ovens: We are an Arch house primarily. Keyboard: Mitsumi AT (Yes! AT) with AT-PS/2 adapter (replaced USB keyboard that died)Įverything works well and is very stable! ![]() Monitor: ASUS 27" Logitech MX310 (replaced G500 that died) It works perfectly for both printing and scanning using XSANE. I use any 'ole wireless micro mouse, and I use the laptop's keyboard which is awesome.Īlan Formy-Duval: I've always built my own PCs. My latest desktop is just over a year old with the following specs: Tony McCormick: I fly a System76 Galaga iCore7 solid-state laptop that came prebuilt with Ubuntu, dual 22" monitors, and HP LaserJet 1536dnf MF (requires HPLIP driver support). My printer is an HP color LaserJet, which works seamlessly with Linux. When I'm feeling nostalgic, I swap out the ergo keyboard with my replica IBM Model M keyboard by Unicomp the buckling spring keys are really easy to type with. I love my Perixx ergonomic keyboard and my Microsoft Classic Intellimouse. That gives me a dual-display configuration that lets me work in one window on the larger display while having a separate space to run my music player or other apps. Jim Hall: I run Fedora Workstation on a Lenovo X1 Carbon laptop, with an ASUS 24" external display. We want to know what your Linux setup looks like, too. We got in on the action by asking our writer community to share. Our friend Steve Ovadia has a whole blog dedicated to the question "What's your Linux rig?" In the tech world, people want to know what other people's laptop stickers look like, what text editors and distros they love (and hate), and, of course, details about their Linux setups. For reasons related to human psychology, we love to compare.
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