This is not a review you are doing here, but rather advertising. As if the notebook has no weaknesses at all. Can you also address weaknesses? What's wrong with you?
Framework 2 years ago: We're not _officially_ supporting Linux, but we won't make it a pain Framework now: We added a Super key, mock Windows on social media and send one to every Linux UA-camr
windows has nothing to sell anymore, their new updates only add more spyware on your system while still having the same issues they never fixed since windows xp (cough cough getting to desktop while a game runs in fullscreen mode, still a thing that doesn't work on windows 11). Linux desktop arrived at the stability of windows these days and has all the critical software, namely a browser and things like telegram, watsapp. If they manage to make games support officially linux, then that will be game-over for windows, as that is the only relevant use-case these days.
@@D4no00 no need for games to have linux builds either, the translation layers are good enough, the problem is stuff like anti-cheats that don't work, either intentionally or not, on proton/wine
I have a lot of respect for Framework. I do not own one of their laptops at this time, but they are on the short list when I need to purchase a new one.
@@jackwoodheadYes, I do and I do want the 3,5mm jack. To be fair, when I'm on the move I only need a USB-A port for my RF-mouse and a micro-SD card reader. At home I can easily use a port replicator.
Truly. This is the machine I have been waiting for. I was bummed when framework was exclusively selling intel laptops, but had yet to find an amd manufacturer that matched the ethos and affordability of framework.
Those “hot-swappable” ports are simply USB-C dongles, in a specialized form factor! Pretty clever design, really, turning dongle life from a hassle into a fully integrated user experience.
@@mrcvry You’re really not supposed to use the USB-C ports on the motherboard directly, because the pressures of insertion/removal could cause problems. On laptops you go out and buy, the outward facing port is on a small ribbon to the motherboard, both to absorb the physical shocks and so it could be replaced (yes, even from Apple). The direct USB-C modules for the Framework serve a similar purpose.
@@erickleefeld4883 Sadly not all laptop manufactures follow that rule. I recently learned at work that the main charging/docking USB-C port of the Lenovo X1 Carbon G8 is directly soldered to the mainboard, so if you wreck that port the whole MB has to be swapped... But yeah, I guess Framework really avoids issues like that with the modules since they are guided to always slot in correctly which should minimize stress for the "internal" USB-C ports.
Two things: Framework has ALREADY kept their promise and release several generations of updated mainboards, display, mic/webcam, chassis, etc. Perhaps worthwhile to mention that they already have a good track record.
@bennypr0fane they are slowly releasing webcam+mic upgrade, but I haven't been able to get my hands on it yet. People say it's better, but I am yet to see a good comparison
@@YLprime why would the fact that it's a laptop change anything? Hell, I'd go as far as to say that it could make it even more of an issue, as if you want higher quality webcam/mic, it's more of a nuisance to carry external devices for a laptop on the go than if it were a desktop.
For those on the fence, I have a gen2 framework that I've been using daily for the past 3 years. They're very good machines. Since then acorss their releases: the battery, hinges, screen, speakers and webcam modules have been updated, besides the mainboard. To know that I can upgrade individually any of those components as I need is simply a dream come true. And a huge win for sustainability. The device is well made and very functional, I've been very happy with it myself. Also worth noting the screen bein 2/3 gets you a little extra height for the same 13inch size in width, which is nice for text, websites and some productivity apps.
If the webcan/mic has been updated, but they're this terrible quality shown in the video, then I find it disappointing. Or can you actually get better ones than the ootb parts?
@@bennypr0fane The unit doesn't seem to be using the new microphone / camera board as the video quality is average indeed. Same on my unit, it's enough for people to see my face, that's as far as it goes. Regarding Mic quality I have not had any issues or heard anyone on calls complain about mic quality. Shame this review doesn't have a sample audio test recorded. Dunno why framework didn't send a unit with the new screen and camera installed, seems counter intuitive to me. Correction, the mic doesn't seem different, only the camera is upgraded. You can see sample tests at the end of this video. It's deccent but nothing stellar indeed. ua-cam.com/video/k6AsIqAmpeQ/v-deo.html
@@Pumpkinwaffle I'm getting a bit confused if you're talking about the unit reviewed by Nick or your own. I think calling the video quality demonstrated here average is putting it nicely - and more so considering the price. So you're saying there's a more recent, better cam/mic released by Framework that didn't make it into this build?
@@bennypr0fane I would guess so considering he got the 1080 screen instead of the upgraded one. Just watch the end of the video I linked, you'll see a comparison between old and new camera modules. around 19min mark It's up to you where you see value or not, no machine is perfect, this one isn't either. The tradeoffs here are for the sake of upgradeability and repairability. If those are not priorities for you, you will indeed get better specs for the same price on non repairable laptops. Depends on the use case. Mic and camera are average, like any laptop that's not a macbook pretty much. Was not a dealbreaker for me based on my needs. Depends what your needs are on your end. To me personally the device is worth it and I think I will recup the premium I paid when I upgrade and get a new motherboard instead of having to buy a whole laptop. But granted that's not to everyone's tastes. For eco friendly / sustainable laptops there are only so many options, and framework is the best one currently, swapping out a mainboard and keeping old functional components is about as good as it get to limit e-waste. (oh and motherboard is designed to work standalone outside the laptop, so can create a smart TV or whatever out of your old mainboards.)
Same dude, I'm not a person that had a good experience with laptop on the past Heat+bad battery+using the igpu instead of dedicated one made me a no go for laptops in general, maybe I can give framework a shot if the time comes by
@@ArifGhostwriter I tried once but I kept running into issues where websites wouldn't load properly on any browser i could get to run on it. like it kept loading the mobile version of everything and then not working right
About the Price: You can buy storage and RAM yourself. If you take a look at a price comparison site you can easy safe 100-200€. So the gap gets a bit closer
@@frankhuurman3955 True; the real problem here is that they're still a relatively small company that isn't yet able to take advantage of economies of scale the way companies like Acer can. It's less the cost of the parts, more the cost of assembly because the fewer machines you can build at once, the more expensive each individual one becomes to build - and even the DIY kits have to be fully assembled in order to test them and make sure they actually work before then disassembling them for use as kits.
@@frankhuurman3955 better specs in a crappy body with repair parts that are "what repair parts? Lmao!" I know this for a fact because I groan whenever someone brings in an ASUS or Acer for hardware repairs.
@@Ebalosus The price is still unacceptable. For the same price I got an asus with better cpu, better build quality, better screen, better battery life. Being "repairable" is not an excuse to overprice your products
One note on price: you can bring your own SSD and NVMe, which brings down the price a good bit; On top of that, if you compare with something like a Lenovo T or X series, Dell XPS or Apple MacBook, suddenly it is cheap for the price
Absolutely. I bought it with 2*32 gb ram Kingston fury impact and 2TB ssd for hynix Gold. The ram and ssd upgrade are really compatible and much more cheaper than apple macbook air🤡.
Earlier this year I bought one of these for my children, knowing that if they did anything to it, I'd be able to get parts and fix it. Super impressed with what Framework have done! So much so, I bought myself one! Yes, it is a compromise from a hardware perspective; but that's a good tradeoff for upgradability! Oh and the excellent Linux distro support (yeah the Windows support is good too). I like the idea that when I want to upgrade the motherboard, there are 3rd party cases to mount the motherboard into, superb!
@peterjackson6228 Yes, the upgrade-ability is for real. My personal 2021 FW13 has been upgraded from the original 11th gen Intel mainboard to the Ultra Series 1 mainboard, and the 11th gen mainboard went into one of the Cooler Master cases, resulting in a second very portable computer!
Something to think about when considering the price of a Framework: it’s competing with business grade semi-repairable laptops like Dell Latitudes and HP EliteBooks, not consumer laptops. Those business laptops are priced a lot more similarly to Framework’s devices, but without the upgradeability path.
Thanks, that's an excellent point. I'm keen on the upgrade path over time, but I'm also aware that a mainboard+CPU will entail new memory and storage. But other components like battery, wi-fi, etc can be upgraded, and being able to adapt various expansion ports for video, USB, etc is nice. Not having to replace the whole unit is a significant difference. Now imagine an organisation that doesn't have to totally replace every device every two, three or four years, but can cycle through an upgrade process.
My purple bezeled Framework Laptop 16 has been better on Linux than any of my Windows laptops have been on Linux. The fingerprint sensor works, the system has offical Ubuntu and Fedora support, and it's much better in terms of build quality and screen quality and aspect ratio than Linux-first laptops. And it has US ANSI keyboard layouts, unlike Tuxedo and Slimbook at the time.
Also, the expansion card system isn't the _only_ reason to buy a Framework Laptop, the official Linux support, right to repair focused design, and another level of upgradability are all reasons as well.
That fingerprint reader works out of the box because myself and a bunch of other people on the 13th gen Intel one ran into an issue with their new rendition and they started flashing the new firmware on those fingerprint readers before they leave the factory. To get mine working, I had to load up a Windows VM, pass through the fingerprint reader, and update the firmware. They fixed that problem now. Fedora 41 was a massive upgrade for these laptops because switching from the power profiles daemon to the Red Hat-tuned service got me about two extra hours of runtime just for changing my power management service.
I got my DIY Framework AMD 13 almost a year ago and installed Linux Mint on it. I had to get the OEM kernel to get the video resolution correct, but by the time Mint 21.3, I just use the release kernel now. I haven't installed Linux on a new computer (as opposed to reviving an old computer for testing) as the only OS before this and I haven't looked back. I love the user repairable of the Framework and this offsets the higher cost as I can repair if needed or upgrade without tossing whole thing.
@@buildyear86 Most everything I've tried works on the first go around. The fingerprint scanner took some command line magic (I found what I needed in the Framework info). I don't think there is any problems with Cinnamon desktop, I just started using XFCE on my older machines since it has a lower resource requirements and I kind of like the way it works.
The customizable ports are only one of the two major selling points of this laptop. The other is that literally every component has replacement parts available and even inter-generation upgrade options (i.e. display, webcam, cpu/mainboard package)
9:46 "Do you know how long it takes to install Windows, with all the stupid screens and bypassing the account creation stuff?!! No one has time for that!" Wow, I have seen Windows being insulted in every way, but this one really tops them all! (I agree too) Nice review, I was wondering when you'd make one for the Framework laptops! I wouldn't be surprised if you managed to get sponsorships from them :)
yeah; last time I installed windows on a machine I'd just built, it literally took days due to all the updates that needed downloading, installing, and separately rebooting from.
@@under6075 yes, days. Admittedly, this was back towards the end of the windows 7 life cycle, but back then every update was sequential, so you had to download the updates, install them, and reboot before repeating for the next batch of updates, rinse and repeat until all the updates are installed. On a 1mbps connection, this took two whole days. Edit: I don’t know if windows updates are still sequential, but thankfully internet speeds are at least faster. Still, installing arch and getting it set up as I wanted it took me maybe two hours tops.
No everything works fine. I just had to learn which packages to install and how to configure fingerprint in the terminal. But now it's exactly like in fedora :) the arch wiki was helpful
Love my Framework 16 and I treat it like a gaming laptop with Bazzite I had to replace the fan because it died (over exposure to cat hair) and it was quick and easy, any other laptop would not be easily recoverable
Be careful about the placement of the usb-c ports. In the configuration you did in the video it uses way more battery power. They have a guide on their website for this
I think one thing they did that was super cool was making a usb-c motherboard module that is a 1tb ssd. I use it as a dedicated back-up via Dejadup. I never have to manually plug in my external drive to my laptop all the time now to back it up. It also allows people the flexibility of being able to have a spare 'computer' on them at all times if they so wish to install an OS on the 1tb module.
I've been running the Intel version of the Laptop 13 for about 16 months with Debian 12, which was not officially supported, but works fine. I've had zero problems traceable to the hardware. Did have a weird glitch of it not recognizing a pair of off-brand Bluetooth headphones in Debian 12, but a recent update of Blueman fixed that completely.
My perfect dream Framework laptop will be, when they release a keyboard with included TrackPoint device! That would be an instant buy! Oh, and arrow keys like those on the Framework 16, and I'm even happier.
@under6075 I would be fine with a ThinkPad but then I couldn't change the mainboard, if I want to upgrade and had to buy a whole new laptop. I wouldn't have the same flexibility with the ports. A Framework might even be a bit cheaper, especially over time, if upgradability persists. So, there are differences.
Earlier this year, I was looking for a laptop to switch away from macOS to Linux and both the Framework Laptop 16 and the ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 were my top two picks. I opted for the Framework due to the modularity, official support for Fedora, upgradeability and repairability... plus the DIY version was cheaper, since the P1 isn't available without Windows and its tax. I didn't get the GPU expansion bay since I don't game on my laptop and I don't need GPU power for anything else.
The thing woth Framework is that the base price is rather hefty but if you want a lot of storage and RAM the DIY edition is actually pretty worthwhile. Also its a lot easier and cheaper to fix if something fails
Sorry but I disagree completly with your take that frameworks are more expensive than other laptops. The Ryzen 7 has a big price increase compared to the ryzen 5. I bought the framework 13 with ryzen 5 7640u and 64gb RAM and 2tb SSD for 1300 Euro (vat included) . Show me any laptop with a ryzen 5 zen 4 cpu or better, a good keyboard, a good aspect ratio and quality screen with 64gb RAM and 2tb SSD for 1300. The competition is not cheaper. You save so much money by buying the ram and ssd yourself. Compare that to the soldered Ram of the competition that charges way more.
But is it cheaper than a refurbished thinkpad ? That's the reason why i can't afford a framework with a 300€ budget. But now that i have spare parts (ram, ssd and wifi) i should be able to buy a framework soon
This isn't up for debate. It just is more expensive. Maybe you are making the mistake of looking at the MSRP of other laptops? Other laptops are almost never sold at MSRP, there are always great sales. To say that framework laptops are not more expensive is disingenuous and requires a lot of mental gymnastics. And I say that as the owner of one.
I've been driving Framework 13 for about six months. Apart from the occasional Black SOD, love it. I upgraded the screen when it was available. I ran Linux from 99-09, then switched to Apple because "I got lazy." But Apple's market behavior persuaded me to return. Framework made the transition painless.
you forget, in case that you change the internals, you can buy (and 3D print) a case for puting the old motherboard and us it as a desktop computer . (I've got mine for 2 years already, I think it's a really good computer)
I'll buy a Framework laptop once they got a black or gunmetal variant, and a mechanical switch keyboard. I really like what they're doing for forward compatibility, repair, and upgrades. I feel like most laptop keyboards are mushy and terrible to type on, but I really like the mechanical keyboard (Which they partnered with Cherry to make) on my Alienware laptop. This wouldn't be bad to use on Linux if fan control support and RGB support was basically barebones or non-existent for recent AW hardware.
They've stated that they do not like dyed annodization due to the pretty bad waste it causes. I don't think mechanical keyboards will ever be first party available from framework, but I've seen a few projects in the forums!
I own two Framework 13 laptops. The first one was from the first batch of their very first shipment, which I've now upgraded to AMD and the old motherboard is on server duty these days. Very pleased with the whole experience
My Framework16 laptop arrived about 4 months ago, and I absolutely love it! The only thing I would do differently is instead of getting the LED matrix modules, I would go for the macropad module. The LED matrix modules don't really do much other than make it look pretty, and they are a bit difficult to configure in Linux.
Well ... as soon as I need to replace my current Fujitsu notebook (2.5 yrs at this time) the framework approach is something I'll take into consideration for sure. As you emphasized already if they keep thier promise it might be a sustainable choice ! On the question of connectability: I for my own run my notebook using a USB mini dock with both LAN and HDMI at home and without these things when I'm abroad. Works very well for me. And it should work with the framework notebooks as well.
you could probably do that yourself... they use standart display components. There's also a marketplace so maybe check there if there's already a 3ed party selling what you need.
100%! The touchscreen is the option I wait for as well. However, both of us don't have to wait. It's the Framework, remember? You can buy a touchscreen separately once it's available.
A touchscreen is the sole reason my friend who also uses an iPad can't get a Framework. Here's to hoping that they can find a compatible touchscreen for the device like they found the high end screen upgrade.
The 13 is a very nice machine, but I wish I had the same smooth experience with the 16. Many support tickets, and I am now getting several graphical artifacts and screen flickering. It does look like the 13 is a fully ready and refined product for now, but the 16 needs time in the oven still
Wdym? Mine works just fine. Although I'm getting a bit impatient for a better dGPU, especially since Nvidia wants nothing to do with Framework and AMD lacks anything that is more powerful.
Also worth nothing that the AMD Framework 13 has experimental support for Coreboot, with full support on the horizon. Big selling point for FOSS enthusiasts.
Good that we are having more linux laptops, looking forward to it, got a used dell latitude 7390 for around 300 usd , core i7 8th gen, similar bezels as on this framework 13 and it is running fedora 40 flawlessly
i have the amd framework and it's a truly dream. running fedora 40 (will soon update to 41), i haven't had any heardware issues! (some stuff does like to break tho lol)
I have an 8 year old HP envy that is still doing what I need it to, and when I need to upgrade it will probably be a framework but I need to be able to feel the keyboard before I can concretely say it will be a framework for sure
This is my work laptop. It's running elementaryOS 7. I've taken it to a conference. I've presented from it, both in person and over video calls. I do software development from it. I use it to remote into other systems and to manage cloud infra. It's perfect. Completely stable, literally everything worked OOTB. This is in stark contrast to my _last_ work laptop, an HP running Windows, and the one before that, a Macbook Pro. Both were a pain to install software onto, with both I needed to jump through hoops to develop and run data science workflows, and while both cost more than the Framework, neither was nearly as capable of running analyses locally.
I had this latop for about 2 months, i was hesitant because of the price but after buying it and getting it 5 day later (from Taïwan, its insanely fast) i am satisfied. The only grudge i have with it is the >> absolute garbage default display
Awesome video (even though, something's wrong with the audio...)! Well what do you know, I complain about fingerprint readers missing from Linux laptops, and presto! there's a fully working one on the next laptop presented by Nick! 😂(if we count Framework as a "Linux first-OEM", which at this point, I find justified!) It would be super interesting to know in this context if Framework made a conscious decision to ignore the current security problems that Tuxedo cites as their reason for not including fingerprint readers, OR if they're trying to remedy the problem, maybe by contributing to the library? Or trying something new, hardware-wise?
Just a little note, the rear (closer to hinge) ports on the AMD FW 13 are the high performance ones, you really shouldn't have the HDMI adapter there. It messes with idle power dissipation, by a watt or so. Nothing that would ruin your tests, but your battery life would probably have been just a little bit better. (This is actually in the docs, but I know you said you didn't look at them.)
That CPU can chew through AV1 encoding like a champ by the way. I have a different brand laptop but with the same CPU... and I can usual get 150-200 FPS on 1080p video re-encoding to av1/opus.
I've been running Arch on my AMD Framework for a year now and it's just a joy. If they keep on the good work they will be my goto brand in the future (as long as my case is still fine and I just need to upgrade the board that's a no brainer anyway).
10:50 Do I remember correctly, that you have to install some packages from rpmfushion to have hardware acceleration working properly under fedora (because fedora was "scared" of licensing of codecs)?
@@TheComputadude No. Risc-v is currently popular in the embedded world only because it is brand new and the easiest way to start playing with a new cpu architecture is through embedded. It does not mean that it's just an embedded thing.
Fingerprint scanner working on Linux is such a rarity that I'd say it's worth the extra only for that if this is a priority for you. But personally, I just can't justify it. It'd be one thing if the company had local operations and representation, so I could have a better idea of local price difference, have a proper warranty, and costumer service. But as it stands, the company simply does not sell here. Same problem with Steam Deck... I'd have gotten one a long time ago, probably even before the OLED refresh. But they don't sell it here, and because of currency exchange rates plus taxes, paying for laptops, portable pc devices and whatnot is ultra expensive, so I'm not ready to go grey market route to import those without warranty, costumer service and whatnot. It's not the fault of those companies, it's just how sh*tty my country is. Protectionism is the death of innovation. We are doomed to always be left behind on tech because of this sh*t. If people in the US wants to see how awful the situation is when you have overburdening tariffs on your back, just look down south. You will see what happens. It's not only about you not caring about paying a little extra on imported products because it'll "protect local industries". The real effect this has on a society at large scale is far more disastrous than most people think. In the end, I'm trapped with brands who took huge risks to establish an official presence here. Which means only big brands - Asus, Acer, Dell, HP and the like. And their prices for newer tech is crazy as well. Give you an example - if I wanted to buy an Asus ROG Ally X right now, it's around half a year of minimum wage. Yes, that's right - half a year of full minimum wage. Not half a month, not 100 hours of work or something like that - half a year, 6 months of work, 8 hours a day, at minimum wage. The Framework laptop in the video would be closer to a full year of minimum wage work, after currency exchange and taxes. So whenever I'm prepared to take the financial hit of upgrading hardware, I need an absolute guarantee that I have a place to go if something doesn't work, or something is wrong with my order, at least with those prices. What I end up doing is buying cheaper stuff for lack of money and options. I very much support and respect the ideas behind Framework to make a repairable and upgradable laptop, and I wouldn't mind paying more for it. But ultimately, the priorities here are completely different. Doesn't matter how much you wanna support and pay for the ideas that are more aligned to what you want as a consumer, if you don't even have the choice to do so.
I was considering Framework, but the price just killed me. I would have to pay twice as much as for Tuxedo laptop and still have less in terms of hardware plus repability and upgradeability. As much I love and support the idea, it was out of my price range and Tuxedo won.
Maybe for other watcher who wants to buy one, i can recommend to buy the DIY version without RAM and Storage, because for me i saved there 100€ and both the same RAM and Storage, with same i mean really the same product for half the price on amazon. So here is a some potential to save money! I both the 12gen Intel (2gen Framework) with that saving and linux didn't worked out of the box with kubuntu 20.04 and 22.04 (will try now 24.10) only the fingerprint sensor made some problems but on Windows it was a bit more complicated because you need to download first a driver package and install. Maybe in 2-3 years i can buy a new Mainboard with RAM and Storage to have it easy and cheaper then a complete new device
That's the main reason I really wanted a Framework laptop (and was finally able to get hold of one a few months ago) - so long as Framework don't go out of business, and they don't seem to be in any danger of that, this will probably be the last new laptop I ever buy for myself (unless I end up getting one of the 16" models in the future for the fact it can have a GPU).
In '21 I got a Framework Laptop 13 with 11th gen Intel, it's worked great the whole time, and I've been upgrading this and that since then, no problem. I think i'll go for a ryzen 7000 board next.
Running Ubuntu 24.04 LTS has been a nice stable experience. 23.10 and Fedora not so much. Though my Fedora experience was marred by BTRFS going bad. But I am really happy with how it runs with 24.04
@@cameronbosch1213 I am not exactly sure what happened. But the result was the boot partition was lost or corrupted so my computer wouldn't boot. So when I managed to boot to bios, I decided to change to ext4 which I've never had an issue with.
I bought the AMD Framework 13 last month! My 2015 Macbook Pro was in spicy pillow territory, and I was determined that my next laptop would be a Linux powered Framework. No regrets!
I have an 11th gen i5 and a Ryzen 7 with the lower-resolution screen (the higher-res screen was not a thing then) and I really like the laptops. It feels quality, and while I don't have a new Macbook to compare it to, it is at least a similar build quality to a 2012 Macbook Air that I have laying around (although obviously the internals are much more advanced on the Framework).
Oh hey! That's the same laptop I have. (With different parts of course) Also I use that with Davinci resolve and works fine. Currently use it in Windows but planning to give it a try on Linux soon now that I know why it wasn't working the first time.
Keep it keep it. Then in say, three years time, you could try and get I don't know, motherboard upgrade, or Thunderbolt plug-in or whatever is new and hard-to-find at the time. Let us all see if that adventure worked?
3:11 Ribbon cables are fragile __generally__ Thats was my only concern about the assembly process, i lost the count of times i have to replace a ribbon cable after apply too much force.
Guys I bought a lenovo ideapad with amd ryzen 8845hs 2 weeks ago and first thing you should do is install tlp on it. With power-profiles-daemon which comes out of the box in most distros i only got 4 5 hours sometimes less even on power save mode. After tlp i get like 7 8 hours maybe more which is crazy and no performance difference either.
Wish I could get a framework in Brazil, sadly we live in the dark ages when it comes to tech here. Glad to see the their products are good! I hope upgradeable laptops become more common.
LMAO, I was cracking up at how heated you got over the Windows 10 thing, rightfully so, but was still funny. When those people pipe up, you can identify the non linux gamers.
Thanks for the review! I'm thinking about buying the Framework and it's o cool that even the fingerprint scanner works out of the box. I have a couple of questions: Did you have any issues with suspend/hibernate? Is peripherals state preserved on reboot? I.e. disable wifi and bluetooth, reboot, will they still be off? I'm asking because I'm having these exact problems with AMD laptop (Huawei D14). With my other Intel one (Xiaomi 13) I had no issues and everything was smooth out of the box.
I like the direction , but its hard to beat my ThinkPads. Its the same with the Tuxedo laptops, good idea just not there yet. Plus I am hooked on the trackpoint.
Wow. I have a Tuxedo Stellaris, and it's great, but I feel a little bad that after so many ads you've had with them, you may have just completely lured me away from them for my next upgrade!
12:36 now that i think about it, couldn't they possibly create modules that have 2x usb-c ports in one module? There seems to be enough space, and those are just a simple pass-through. It would probably cut the bandwith in half if you use both ports on the same module for data transfer, but possibly not interfere with the speed if you use a charger in one port and a storage device in another port? That would be really nice, and would make me think about switching from my 9-port Thinkpad T14 G2 AMD. On a linux note, latest firware update for my ThinkPad enabled wifi 6e, as it was previously disabled in bios. It works very well after the update, on Fedora 41, with the Qualcomm NFA765 DBS wifi card. (How ironic, qualcomm carad working flawlessly on linux :D )
Some Qualcomm wi-fi cards do work well under Linux. It's RealTek wi-fi/bluetooth cards, Broadcom wi-fi/bluetooth cards (don't use Broadcom, just don't), and MediaTek wi-fi/Bluetooth cards below 6E that don't work great under Linux. Broadcom is literally unusable on Linux.
Early (Batch 7) Framework 16 adapter here -- I love it. I bought top of the line: Ryzan 9, running 1 stick of 32 Gig memory, 1T SSD -- it runs Ubuntu lickety-split! I will upgrade to Ubuntu 24.04 in a couple of days and try sit out with a docking station. I'll bet that I can run three screens off this baby. Any takers?
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This is the worst notebook I have used in my entire life. It's just junk. I tested it and I was so dissatisfied I threw it out the window
This is not a review you are doing here, but rather advertising. As if the notebook has no weaknesses at all. Can you also address weaknesses? What's wrong with you?
Framework 2 years ago: We're not _officially_ supporting Linux, but we won't make it a pain
Framework now: We added a Super key, mock Windows on social media and send one to every Linux UA-camr
I mean, honestly the target demographic for their product is way more likely to be familiar with, if not comfortable with Linux...
not making it a pain/not getting in its way is more than enough linux "support"
Framework has officially supported ubuntu and fedora since at least April 2022
windows has nothing to sell anymore, their new updates only add more spyware on your system while still having the same issues they never fixed since windows xp (cough cough getting to desktop while a game runs in fullscreen mode, still a thing that doesn't work on windows 11). Linux desktop arrived at the stability of windows these days and has all the critical software, namely a browser and things like telegram, watsapp. If they manage to make games support officially linux, then that will be game-over for windows, as that is the only relevant use-case these days.
@@D4no00 no need for games to have linux builds either, the translation layers are good enough, the problem is stuff like anti-cheats that don't work, either intentionally or not, on proton/wine
I have a lot of respect for Framework. I do not own one of their laptops at this time, but they are on the short list when I need to purchase a new one.
For me too, but I'd like 6 ports at least and yes: I *do* use these simultaneously. It would also pair very well with my Fairphone.
@@LarixusSnydes usb c hub
@@LarixusSnydesYou probably already know this but their larger laptop has 6 ports exactly (though one of them is lost if you want a 3.5mm jack).
@@jackwoodheadYes, I do and I do want the 3,5mm jack. To be fair, when I'm on the move I only need a USB-A port for my RF-mouse and a micro-SD card reader. At home I can easily use a port replicator.
@@LarixusSnydes They've got a 16" model that has six ports (in addition to the mentioned optional gpu).
The AMD Framework Laptop 13 without sacrificing an ARM or a leg!
Ba dum tsss
Its also not particularly RISC-Y
ba dum tss x2
Ah, it's the way you In-tel 'em!
Ba dum tsss x3
Let's go!! Framework and AMD was a dream. Now it's a reality 💪
Truly. This is the machine I have been waiting for. I was bummed when framework was exclusively selling intel laptops, but had yet to find an amd manufacturer that matched the ethos and affordability of framework.
Now we need RISCV!
Those “hot-swappable” ports are simply USB-C dongles, in a specialized form factor! Pretty clever design, really, turning dongle life from a hassle into a fully integrated user experience.
And just remove them if you need another usb-c! 👍
@@mrcvry You’re really not supposed to use the USB-C ports on the motherboard directly, because the pressures of insertion/removal could cause problems. On laptops you go out and buy, the outward facing port is on a small ribbon to the motherboard, both to absorb the physical shocks and so it could be replaced (yes, even from Apple). The direct USB-C modules for the Framework serve a similar purpose.
@ ok!
@@erickleefeld4883Iirc, they sell USB C pass through modules
@@erickleefeld4883 Sadly not all laptop manufactures follow that rule. I recently learned at work that the main charging/docking USB-C port of the Lenovo X1 Carbon G8 is directly soldered to the mainboard, so if you wreck that port the whole MB has to be swapped...
But yeah, I guess Framework really avoids issues like that with the modules since they are guided to always slot in correctly which should minimize stress for the "internal" USB-C ports.
Two things: Framework has ALREADY kept their promise and release several generations of updated mainboards, display, mic/webcam, chassis, etc.
Perhaps worthwhile to mention that they already have a good track record.
So the crappy mic and webcam can be replaced by decent parts?
@bennypr0fane they are slowly releasing webcam+mic upgrade, but I haven't been able to get my hands on it yet. People say it's better, but I am yet to see a good comparison
@@bennypr0fane They released a second version with a new webcam sensor.
@@bennypr0faneWhy cares about mic and webcam so much on a laptop?
@@YLprime why would the fact that it's a laptop change anything? Hell, I'd go as far as to say that it could make it even more of an issue, as if you want higher quality webcam/mic, it's more of a nuisance to carry external devices for a laptop on the go than if it were a desktop.
Love my AMD framework 13. Fedora 41 KDE plasma works like a dream on it.
For those on the fence, I have a gen2 framework that I've been using daily for the past 3 years. They're very good machines. Since then acorss their releases: the battery, hinges, screen, speakers and webcam modules have been updated, besides the mainboard. To know that I can upgrade individually any of those components as I need is simply a dream come true. And a huge win for sustainability.
The device is well made and very functional, I've been very happy with it myself.
Also worth noting the screen bein 2/3 gets you a little extra height for the same 13inch size in width, which is nice for text, websites and some productivity apps.
Can't wait for them to offer a touch screen at some point so than I can actually put them into consideration when buying laptops!
If the webcan/mic has been updated, but they're this terrible quality shown in the video, then I find it disappointing. Or can you actually get better ones than the ootb parts?
@@bennypr0fane The unit doesn't seem to be using the new microphone / camera board as the video quality is average indeed. Same on my unit, it's enough for people to see my face, that's as far as it goes.
Regarding Mic quality I have not had any issues or heard anyone on calls complain about mic quality. Shame this review doesn't have a sample audio test recorded.
Dunno why framework didn't send a unit with the new screen and camera installed, seems counter intuitive to me.
Correction, the mic doesn't seem different, only the camera is upgraded.
You can see sample tests at the end of this video. It's deccent but nothing stellar indeed.
ua-cam.com/video/k6AsIqAmpeQ/v-deo.html
@@Pumpkinwaffle I'm getting a bit confused if you're talking about the unit reviewed by Nick or your own. I think calling the video quality demonstrated here average is putting it nicely - and more so considering the price. So you're saying there's a more recent, better cam/mic released by Framework that didn't make it into this build?
@@bennypr0fane I would guess so considering he got the 1080 screen instead of the upgraded one.
Just watch the end of the video I linked, you'll see a comparison between old and new camera modules. around 19min mark
It's up to you where you see value or not, no machine is perfect, this one isn't either. The tradeoffs here are for the sake of upgradeability and repairability. If those are not priorities for you, you will indeed get better specs for the same price on non repairable laptops. Depends on the use case. Mic and camera are average, like any laptop that's not a macbook pretty much. Was not a dealbreaker for me based on my needs. Depends what your needs are on your end.
To me personally the device is worth it and I think I will recup the premium I paid when I upgrade and get a new motherboard instead of having to buy a whole laptop. But granted that's not to everyone's tastes. For eco friendly / sustainable laptops there are only so many options, and framework is the best one currently, swapping out a mainboard and keeping old functional components is about as good as it get to limit e-waste. (oh and motherboard is designed to work standalone outside the laptop, so can create a smart TV or whatever out of your old mainboards.)
The framework laptop makes me wish i had a reason to own a laptop.
The only reason you need is that you want one... actually afford it on the other hand, I'm with you there
Same dude, I'm not a person that had a good experience with laptop on the past
Heat+bad battery+using the igpu instead of dedicated one made me a no go for laptops in general, maybe I can give framework a shot if the time comes by
And then there's me - super impressed with the Raspberry Pi 5 as my main desktop computer!
@@ArifGhostwriter I tried once but I kept running into issues where websites wouldn't load properly on any browser i could get to run on it. like it kept loading the mobile version of everything and then not working right
About the Price: You can buy storage and RAM yourself. If you take a look at a price comparison site you can easy safe 100-200€.
So the gap gets a bit closer
still way pricey though in comparison to others with better specs
That's what I did
@@frankhuurman3955 True; the real problem here is that they're still a relatively small company that isn't yet able to take advantage of economies of scale the way companies like Acer can. It's less the cost of the parts, more the cost of assembly because the fewer machines you can build at once, the more expensive each individual one becomes to build - and even the DIY kits have to be fully assembled in order to test them and make sure they actually work before then disassembling them for use as kits.
@@frankhuurman3955 better specs in a crappy body with repair parts that are "what repair parts? Lmao!" I know this for a fact because I groan whenever someone brings in an ASUS or Acer for hardware repairs.
@@Ebalosus The price is still unacceptable. For the same price I got an asus with better cpu, better build quality, better screen, better battery life. Being "repairable" is not an excuse to overprice your products
One note on price: you can bring your own SSD and NVMe, which brings down the price a good bit; On top of that, if you compare with something like a Lenovo T or X series, Dell XPS or Apple MacBook, suddenly it is cheap for the price
Absolutely. I bought it with 2*32 gb ram Kingston fury impact
and 2TB ssd for hynix Gold.
The ram and ssd upgrade are really compatible and much more cheaper than apple macbook air🤡.
Earlier this year I bought one of these for my children, knowing that if they did anything to it, I'd be able to get parts and fix it. Super impressed with what Framework have done! So much so, I bought myself one! Yes, it is a compromise from a hardware perspective; but that's a good tradeoff for upgradability! Oh and the excellent Linux distro support (yeah the Windows support is good too).
I like the idea that when I want to upgrade the motherboard, there are 3rd party cases to mount the motherboard into, superb!
@peterjackson6228 Yes, the upgrade-ability is for real. My personal 2021 FW13 has been upgraded from the original 11th gen Intel mainboard to the Ultra Series 1 mainboard, and the 11th gen mainboard went into one of the Cooler Master cases, resulting in a second very portable computer!
Something to think about when considering the price of a Framework: it’s competing with business grade semi-repairable laptops like Dell Latitudes and HP EliteBooks, not consumer laptops. Those business laptops are priced a lot more similarly to Framework’s devices, but without the upgradeability path.
Thanks, that's an excellent point. I'm keen on the upgrade path over time, but I'm also aware that a mainboard+CPU will entail new memory and storage. But other components like battery, wi-fi, etc can be upgraded, and being able to adapt various expansion ports for video, USB, etc is nice. Not having to replace the whole unit is a significant difference. Now imagine an organisation that doesn't have to totally replace every device every two, three or four years, but can cycle through an upgrade process.
My purple bezeled Framework Laptop 16 has been better on Linux than any of my Windows laptops have been on Linux. The fingerprint sensor works, the system has offical Ubuntu and Fedora support, and it's much better in terms of build quality and screen quality and aspect ratio than Linux-first laptops. And it has US ANSI keyboard layouts, unlike Tuxedo and Slimbook at the time.
Also, the expansion card system isn't the _only_ reason to buy a Framework Laptop, the official Linux support, right to repair focused design, and another level of upgradability are all reasons as well.
14:10 you forgot to mention the camera is replaceable with a new module 🤓
That fingerprint reader works out of the box because myself and a bunch of other people on the 13th gen Intel one ran into an issue with their new rendition and they started flashing the new firmware on those fingerprint readers before they leave the factory.
To get mine working, I had to load up a Windows VM, pass through the fingerprint reader, and update the firmware. They fixed that problem now.
Fedora 41 was a massive upgrade for these laptops because switching from the power profiles daemon to the Red Hat-tuned service got me about two extra hours of runtime just for changing my power management service.
o7 Thank you for your service!
The mini-breakdown and rush of frustration on people saying you installed Windows to fake benchmarks is beautiful.
Love the entire prospect. I'm completely broke and running over 20 years old thinkpad (s) with debian, Linux mint, and freebsd.
I got my DIY Framework AMD 13 almost a year ago and installed Linux Mint on it. I had to get the OEM kernel to get the video resolution correct, but by the time Mint 21.3, I just use the release kernel now. I haven't installed Linux on a new computer (as opposed to reviving an old computer for testing) as the only OS before this and I haven't looked back. I love the user repairable of the Framework and this offsets the higher cost as I can repair if needed or upgrade without tossing whole thing.
I dont quite understand: does it work with linux mint cinnamon ? What exaxtly dies not work?
@@buildyear86 Most everything I've tried works on the first go around. The fingerprint scanner took some command line magic (I found what I needed in the Framework info). I don't think there is any problems with Cinnamon desktop, I just started using XFCE on my older machines since it has a lower resource requirements and I kind of like the way it works.
Got it! Thank you! Helps a lot!
The customizable ports are only one of the two major selling points of this laptop. The other is that literally every component has replacement parts available and even inter-generation upgrade options (i.e. display, webcam, cpu/mainboard package)
Watching this in an AMD Framework 13, Ubuntu 24.10 :) Totally pleased! Finally they started selling in Portugal and that was the trigger for me.
9:46 "Do you know how long it takes to install Windows, with all the stupid screens and bypassing the account creation stuff?!! No one has time for that!"
Wow, I have seen Windows being insulted in every way, but this one really tops them all! (I agree too)
Nice review, I was wondering when you'd make one for the Framework laptops! I wouldn't be surprised if you managed to get sponsorships from them :)
yeah; last time I installed windows on a machine I'd just built, it literally took days due to all the updates that needed downloading, installing, and separately rebooting from.
@@Parker8752 days?
@@under6075 yes, days. Admittedly, this was back towards the end of the windows 7 life cycle, but back then every update was sequential, so you had to download the updates, install them, and reboot before repeating for the next batch of updates, rinse and repeat until all the updates are installed. On a 1mbps connection, this took two whole days.
Edit: I don’t know if windows updates are still sequential, but thankfully internet speeds are at least faster. Still, installing arch and getting it set up as I wanted it took me maybe two hours tops.
@@Parker8752 Oh ok and I'm pretty sure Windows updates are not sequential anymore
Installing Windows 11 takes more time than even installing Arch from scratch, and you end up with a lot of telemetry, spyware, bloatware, etc.
I am using the AMD Framework already for a year now with Arch Linux + Gnome and I am more than happy! (switched from a MacBook Pro M1)
Any issues setting up fingerprint scanner in Arch?
No everything works fine. I just had to learn which packages to install and how to configure fingerprint in the terminal. But now it's exactly like in fedora :) the arch wiki was helpful
no issues here as well. it's basically just fprintd and some pam edits to get it to work everywhere. arch plasma wayland and sddm here
You use arch btw.
how about Arch+KDE?
Love my Framework 16 and I treat it like a gaming laptop with Bazzite
I had to replace the fan because it died (over exposure to cat hair) and it was quick and easy, any other laptop would not be easily recoverable
Overexposure to cat hair is my new favourite reason for failure.
"Couldn't do the chores duet o overexposure to cat hair" xD
Be careful about the placement of the usb-c ports. In the configuration you did in the video it uses way more battery power. They have a guide on their website for this
I was just waiting for a 2024 review of the Framework, creepy
I think one thing they did that was super cool was making a usb-c motherboard module that is a 1tb ssd. I use it as a dedicated back-up via Dejadup. I never have to manually plug in my external drive to my laptop all the time now to back it up. It also allows people the flexibility of being able to have a spare 'computer' on them at all times if they so wish to install an OS on the 1tb module.
I've been running the Intel version of the Laptop 13 for about 16 months with Debian 12, which was not officially supported, but works fine. I've had zero problems traceable to the hardware. Did have a weird glitch of it not recognizing a pair of off-brand Bluetooth headphones in Debian 12, but a recent update of Blueman fixed that completely.
My perfect dream Framework laptop will be, when they release a keyboard with included TrackPoint device! That would be an instant buy!
Oh, and arrow keys like those on the Framework 16, and I'm even happier.
So you basically want it to be a ThinkPad?
@under6075 I would be fine with a ThinkPad but then I couldn't change the mainboard, if I want to upgrade and had to buy a whole new laptop. I wouldn't have the same flexibility with the ports.
A Framework might even be a bit cheaper, especially over time, if upgradability persists.
So, there are differences.
Earlier this year, I was looking for a laptop to switch away from macOS to Linux and both the Framework Laptop 16 and the ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 were my top two picks. I opted for the Framework due to the modularity, official support for Fedora, upgradeability and repairability... plus the DIY version was cheaper, since the P1 isn't available without Windows and its tax. I didn't get the GPU expansion bay since I don't game on my laptop and I don't need GPU power for anything else.
The thing woth Framework is that the base price is rather hefty but if you want a lot of storage and RAM the DIY edition is actually pretty worthwhile. Also its a lot easier and cheaper to fix if something fails
The price is definitely a problem for a lot of people, but the design concept is one that more manufacturers should adopt.
Just upgraded Fedora 40 to 41!
Yesss!
Sorry but I disagree completly with your take that frameworks are more expensive than other laptops. The Ryzen 7 has a big price increase compared to the ryzen 5. I bought the framework 13 with ryzen 5 7640u and 64gb RAM and 2tb SSD for 1300 Euro (vat included) . Show me any laptop with a ryzen 5 zen 4 cpu or better, a good keyboard, a good aspect ratio and quality screen with 64gb RAM and 2tb SSD for 1300. The competition is not cheaper. You save so much money by buying the ram and ssd yourself. Compare that to the soldered Ram of the competition that charges way more.
But is it cheaper than a refurbished thinkpad ?
That's the reason why i can't afford a framework with a 300€ budget.
But now that i have spare parts (ram, ssd and wifi) i should be able to buy a framework soon
This isn't up for debate. It just is more expensive. Maybe you are making the mistake of looking at the MSRP of other laptops? Other laptops are almost never sold at MSRP, there are always great sales.
To say that framework laptops are not more expensive is disingenuous and requires a lot of mental gymnastics. And I say that as the owner of one.
I've been driving Framework 13 for about six months. Apart from the occasional Black SOD, love it. I upgraded the screen when it was available.
I ran Linux from 99-09, then switched to Apple because "I got lazy." But Apple's market behavior persuaded me to return. Framework made the transition painless.
Forget the Apple event, we got Framework over TLE Let's gooooo!
LOVE to see Framework's support of Linux!
you forget, in case that you change the internals, you can buy (and 3D print) a case for puting the old motherboard and us it as a desktop computer . (I've got mine for 2 years already, I think it's a really good computer)
I'll buy a Framework laptop once they got a black or gunmetal variant, and a mechanical switch keyboard. I really like what they're doing for forward compatibility, repair, and upgrades.
I feel like most laptop keyboards are mushy and terrible to type on, but I really like the mechanical keyboard (Which they partnered with Cherry to make) on my Alienware laptop. This wouldn't be bad to use on Linux if fan control support and RGB support was basically barebones or non-existent for recent AW hardware.
They've stated that they do not like dyed annodization due to the pretty bad waste it causes. I don't think mechanical keyboards will ever be first party available from framework, but I've seen a few projects in the forums!
I own two Framework 13 laptops. The first one was from the first batch of their very first shipment, which I've now upgraded to AMD and the old motherboard is on server duty these days. Very pleased with the whole experience
My Framework16 laptop arrived about 4 months ago, and I absolutely love it! The only thing I would do differently is instead of getting the LED matrix modules, I would go for the macropad module. The LED matrix modules don't really do much other than make it look pretty, and they are a bit difficult to configure in Linux.
Waiting for LPCAMM2 to either come to System76 or Framework before I upgrade.
Ditto, and the fact that they aren't available (officially) here in NZ yet.
As a proud framework owner I'm happy to see your take on the laptop!
I’ve been using the Intel version for 3 years now. Super solid laptop. I run Fedora on it, too!
Love my framework 16.
Looking forward to upgrading the GPU later.
Well ... as soon as I need to replace my current Fujitsu notebook (2.5 yrs at this time) the framework approach is something I'll take into consideration for sure. As you emphasized already if they keep thier promise it might be a sustainable choice !
On the question of connectability: I for my own run my notebook using a USB mini dock with both LAN and HDMI at home and without these things when I'm abroad. Works very well for me. And it should work with the framework notebooks as well.
this might be my next laptop
I‘ll buy a Framework laptop the moment they release a touch screen and a pen for it. I am sick of my IPad.
you could probably do that yourself... they use standart display components. There's also a marketplace so maybe check there if there's already a 3ed party selling what you need.
@@DJDocsVideos the touchscreen is the smaller problem, we need a 360° hinge too
100%! The touchscreen is the option I wait for as well.
However, both of us don't have to wait. It's the Framework, remember? You can buy a touchscreen separately once it's available.
A touchscreen is the sole reason my friend who also uses an iPad can't get a Framework. Here's to hoping that they can find a compatible touchscreen for the device like they found the high end screen upgrade.
Big minus that it probably has is that it doesn't have a AC passthough feature.
ive really wanted one of these laptops for a long time but its hard to justify the price when my current laptop still works fine. great review.
As always, great video with information to aid my computing choices
The 13 is a very nice machine, but I wish I had the same smooth experience with the 16. Many support tickets, and I am now getting several graphical artifacts and screen flickering.
It does look like the 13 is a fully ready and refined product for now, but the 16 needs time in the oven still
Wdym? Mine works just fine. Although I'm getting a bit impatient for a better dGPU, especially since Nvidia wants nothing to do with Framework and AMD lacks anything that is more powerful.
Also worth nothing that the AMD Framework 13 has experimental support for Coreboot, with full support on the horizon. Big selling point for FOSS enthusiasts.
Good that we are having more linux laptops, looking forward to it, got a used dell latitude 7390 for around 300 usd , core i7 8th gen, similar bezels as on this framework 13 and it is running fedora 40 flawlessly
i have the amd framework and it's a truly dream. running fedora 40 (will soon update to 41), i haven't had any heardware issues! (some stuff does like to break tho lol)
I have an 8 year old HP envy that is still doing what I need it to, and when I need to upgrade it will probably be a framework but I need to be able to feel the keyboard before I can concretely say it will be a framework for sure
This is my work laptop. It's running elementaryOS 7. I've taken it to a conference. I've presented from it, both in person and over video calls. I do software development from it. I use it to remote into other systems and to manage cloud infra. It's perfect. Completely stable, literally everything worked OOTB.
This is in stark contrast to my _last_ work laptop, an HP running Windows, and the one before that, a Macbook Pro. Both were a pain to install software onto, with both I needed to jump through hoops to develop and run data science workflows, and while both cost more than the Framework, neither was nearly as capable of running analyses locally.
I had this latop for about 2 months, i was hesitant because of the price but after buying it and getting it 5 day later (from Taïwan, its insanely fast) i am satisfied. The only grudge i have with it is the >> absolute garbage default display
Awesome video (even though, something's wrong with the audio...)! Well what do you know, I complain about fingerprint readers missing from Linux laptops, and presto! there's a fully working one on the next laptop presented by Nick! 😂(if we count Framework as a "Linux first-OEM", which at this point, I find justified!)
It would be super interesting to know in this context if Framework made a conscious decision to ignore the current security problems that Tuxedo cites as their reason for not including fingerprint readers, OR if they're trying to remedy the problem, maybe by contributing to the library? Or trying something new, hardware-wise?
Just a little note, the rear (closer to hinge) ports on the AMD FW 13 are the high performance ones, you really shouldn't have the HDMI adapter there. It messes with idle power dissipation, by a watt or so. Nothing that would ruin your tests, but your battery life would probably have been just a little bit better.
(This is actually in the docs, but I know you said you didn't look at them.)
That CPU can chew through AV1 encoding like a champ by the way. I have a different brand laptop but with the same CPU... and I can usual get 150-200 FPS on 1080p video re-encoding to av1/opus.
I've been running Arch on my AMD Framework for a year now and it's just a joy. If they keep on the good work they will be my goto brand in the future (as long as my case is still fine and I just need to upgrade the board that's a no brainer anyway).
10:50 Do I remember correctly, that you have to install some packages from rpmfushion to have hardware acceleration working properly under fedora (because fedora was "scared" of licensing of codecs)?
You can also use Bluefin, Aurora, or Bazzite to get codecs afaik.
RISC-V is the future!
the FAR future. There fixed it for you.
Posted from my HiFive P550.
@@DJDocsVideos The far future IS the future.
For the embedded world absolutely.
@@TheComputadude No.
Risc-v is currently popular in the embedded world only because it is brand new and the easiest way to start playing with a new cpu architecture is through embedded.
It does not mean that it's just an embedded thing.
@@AlfredNobel-u1u why not both worlds? ;P
If I needed a new laptop, I'd get a framework. I just don't need a new one right now, my current ones work just fine.
Fingerprint scanner working on Linux is such a rarity that I'd say it's worth the extra only for that if this is a priority for you.
But personally, I just can't justify it.
It'd be one thing if the company had local operations and representation, so I could have a better idea of local price difference, have a proper warranty, and costumer service. But as it stands, the company simply does not sell here. Same problem with Steam Deck... I'd have gotten one a long time ago, probably even before the OLED refresh. But they don't sell it here, and because of currency exchange rates plus taxes, paying for laptops, portable pc devices and whatnot is ultra expensive, so I'm not ready to go grey market route to import those without warranty, costumer service and whatnot.
It's not the fault of those companies, it's just how sh*tty my country is. Protectionism is the death of innovation. We are doomed to always be left behind on tech because of this sh*t.
If people in the US wants to see how awful the situation is when you have overburdening tariffs on your back, just look down south. You will see what happens. It's not only about you not caring about paying a little extra on imported products because it'll "protect local industries". The real effect this has on a society at large scale is far more disastrous than most people think.
In the end, I'm trapped with brands who took huge risks to establish an official presence here. Which means only big brands - Asus, Acer, Dell, HP and the like. And their prices for newer tech is crazy as well. Give you an example - if I wanted to buy an Asus ROG Ally X right now, it's around half a year of minimum wage. Yes, that's right - half a year of full minimum wage. Not half a month, not 100 hours of work or something like that - half a year, 6 months of work, 8 hours a day, at minimum wage.
The Framework laptop in the video would be closer to a full year of minimum wage work, after currency exchange and taxes.
So whenever I'm prepared to take the financial hit of upgrading hardware, I need an absolute guarantee that I have a place to go if something doesn't work, or something is wrong with my order, at least with those prices. What I end up doing is buying cheaper stuff for lack of money and options.
I very much support and respect the ideas behind Framework to make a repairable and upgradable laptop, and I wouldn't mind paying more for it. But ultimately, the priorities here are completely different. Doesn't matter how much you wanna support and pay for the ideas that are more aligned to what you want as a consumer, if you don't even have the choice to do so.
I was considering Framework, but the price just killed me. I would have to pay twice as much as for Tuxedo laptop and still have less in terms of hardware plus repability and upgradeability. As much I love and support the idea, it was out of my price range and Tuxedo won.
I did the same but not really pleased with the infinitybook pro, thinking about returning it and getting a fw instead
Maybe for other watcher who wants to buy one, i can recommend to buy the DIY version without RAM and Storage, because for me i saved there 100€ and both the same RAM and Storage, with same i mean really the same product for half the price on amazon. So here is a some potential to save money!
I both the 12gen Intel (2gen Framework) with that saving and linux didn't worked out of the box with kubuntu 20.04 and 22.04 (will try now 24.10) only the fingerprint sensor made some problems but on Windows it was a bit more complicated because you need to download first a driver package and install.
Maybe in 2-3 years i can buy a new Mainboard with RAM and Storage to have it easy and cheaper then a complete new device
That's the main reason I really wanted a Framework laptop (and was finally able to get hold of one a few months ago) - so long as Framework don't go out of business, and they don't seem to be in any danger of that, this will probably be the last new laptop I ever buy for myself (unless I end up getting one of the 16" models in the future for the fact it can have a GPU).
In '21 I got a Framework Laptop 13 with 11th gen Intel, it's worked great the whole time, and I've been upgrading this and that since then, no problem.
I think i'll go for a ryzen 7000 board next.
wow the concept of this laptop is so awesome, u get what you want.
I wish these were actually available when I needed a laptop last year.
Running Ubuntu 24.04 LTS has been a nice stable experience. 23.10 and Fedora not so much. Though my Fedora experience was marred by BTRFS going bad. But I am really happy with how it runs with 24.04
I've been hearing a lot about Btrfs going bad? What does that mean?
@@cameronbosch1213 I am not exactly sure what happened. But the result was the boot partition was lost or corrupted so my computer wouldn't boot. So when I managed to boot to bios, I decided to change to ext4 which I've never had an issue with.
ARM and us, patiently waiting our turn
Nice review.
We are not surprised that Fedora will work. In such devices - sharpened for Linux - you need to try to run Trisquel. Or something similar.
I bought the AMD Framework 13 last month! My 2015 Macbook Pro was in spicy pillow territory, and I was determined that my next laptop would be a Linux powered Framework. No regrets!
My brothers framework 13 and my macbook air are quite different, but both are very solid computers.
A laptop that doesn't have coreboot, but you can replace the mainboard with a RISC-V developer mainboard, which is really cool !
I have an 11th gen i5 and a Ryzen 7 with the lower-resolution screen (the higher-res screen was not a thing then) and I really like the laptops. It feels quality, and while I don't have a new Macbook to compare it to, it is at least a similar build quality to a 2012 Macbook Air that I have laying around (although obviously the internals are much more advanced on the Framework).
really like this approach.
Oh hey! That's the same laptop I have. (With different parts of course)
Also I use that with Davinci resolve and works fine. Currently use it in Windows but planning to give it a try on Linux soon now that I know why it wasn't working the first time.
Keep it keep it. Then in say, three years time, you could try and get I don't know, motherboard upgrade, or Thunderbolt plug-in or whatever is new and hard-to-find at the time. Let us all see if that adventure worked?
3:11 Ribbon cables are fragile __generally__
Thats was my only concern about the assembly process, i lost the count of times i have to replace a ribbon cable after apply too much force.
Id be down for a framework machine if you could slot oculink for a desktop eGPU
Guys I bought a lenovo ideapad with amd ryzen 8845hs 2 weeks ago and first thing you should do is install tlp on it. With power-profiles-daemon which comes out of the box in most distros i only got 4 5 hours sometimes less even on power save mode. After tlp i get like 7 8 hours maybe more which is crazy and no performance difference either.
Wish I could get a framework in Brazil, sadly we live in the dark ages when it comes to tech here. Glad to see the their products are good! I hope upgradeable laptops become more common.
5 mins in the video, and you already got my like! great video.
This is my next buy. Made a mistake and spent more on a Macbook Pro M3. Needed to run a VM for a class and no joy.
I love framework laptops!! i have the 16 and I like it so much I want to get the 13 too!
LMAO, I was cracking up at how heated you got over the Windows 10 thing, rightfully so, but was still funny.
When those people pipe up, you can identify the non linux gamers.
I want one of these so bad!
By the way, the 16" model has 6 swap-able ports :)
id be cool if Framework came out with a Tablet pc.. like the minisforum v3 :)
@@lyianx oh my goodness, I'd love that!
Thanks for the review! I'm thinking about buying the Framework and it's o cool that even the fingerprint scanner works out of the box. I have a couple of questions:
Did you have any issues with suspend/hibernate?
Is peripherals state preserved on reboot? I.e. disable wifi and bluetooth, reboot, will they still be off?
I'm asking because I'm having these exact problems with AMD laptop (Huawei D14). With my other Intel one (Xiaomi 13) I had no issues and everything was smooth out of the box.
I like the direction , but its hard to beat my ThinkPads. Its the same with the Tuxedo laptops, good idea just not there yet. Plus I am hooked on the trackpoint.
Wow. I have a Tuxedo Stellaris, and it's great, but I feel a little bad that after so many ads you've had with them, you may have just completely lured me away from them for my next upgrade!
12:36 now that i think about it, couldn't they possibly create modules that have 2x usb-c ports in one module? There seems to be enough space, and those are just a simple pass-through. It would probably cut the bandwith in half if you use both ports on the same module for data transfer, but possibly not interfere with the speed if you use a charger in one port and a storage device in another port? That would be really nice, and would make me think about switching from my 9-port Thinkpad T14 G2 AMD.
On a linux note, latest firware update for my ThinkPad enabled wifi 6e, as it was previously disabled in bios. It works very well after the update, on Fedora 41, with the Qualcomm NFA765 DBS wifi card. (How ironic, qualcomm carad working flawlessly on linux :D )
Some Qualcomm wi-fi cards do work well under Linux. It's RealTek wi-fi/bluetooth cards, Broadcom wi-fi/bluetooth cards (don't use Broadcom, just don't), and MediaTek wi-fi/Bluetooth cards below 6E that don't work great under Linux. Broadcom is literally unusable on Linux.
16:50 We have 5 Acer laptops in the family, they are pretty well built and long lasting computers, never had any problems with them. Just saying.
Thank you.
Early (Batch 7) Framework 16 adapter here -- I love it. I bought top of the line: Ryzan 9, running 1 stick of 32 Gig memory, 1T SSD -- it runs Ubuntu lickety-split!
I will upgrade to Ubuntu 24.04 in a couple of days and try sit out with a docking station. I'll bet that I can run three screens off this baby. Any takers?