No personal experience but I have read good things about Dell XPS developer edition. Other choices include Dell Precision laptop brand. I guess any laptop lines that are made for businesses rather than consumers should be fine. Other options include System76 (search keyword).
I still use maxed out spec HP EliteBook 8560W workstation notebook from 2012 for most of my work, love the keyboard and solid magnesium case. Runs Xubuntu and 2 VMs fine. I also use Ubuntu on clients' Dell Latitude from time to time, they have very good battery life. For mobility I would try Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga - got older Yoga 13 and it was very comfortable, haven't tried Ubuntu there though.
I use Ubuntu on an X1 Carbon at work and it's been a delight! Long long battery life (I can leave my charger at home any day and it's not a problem). All important development software works on it. You're closer to the environment your servers run on, which is a plus if you are doing web dev.
Probably a used IT laptop (Thinkpad, Elitebook, etc) from eBay. OS is pretty much up to you either way (Windows and Linux like usual, with Hackintosh installs being possible on a variety of models).
Definitely the Dell XPS 13 Developer Edition. My sister has had two (one of 2014 vintage, the second one purchased just weeks ago) and they are rock solid, svelte, impressive machines with flawless Linux support.
Looking at the dell website I can't find any difference between the new xps 13 and xps 13 developer edition. Besides the regular edition having 8gb RAM instead of 4gb.
If they're the same price, why would anyone pay the same for less RAM and pre-installed Ubuntu?
Legitmetly curious what other differences there are.
My guess is the convenience of having Linux pre-installed instead of having to go through a new installation yourself?
I don't own either, so I wouldn't know for sure, but I think it's somewhat valid that not every high level developer nowadays want to deal with installing Linux OSes. Having Ubuntu preinstalled is welcoming for a lot of the dev userbase who comes from a Macbook world expecting things to be plug and play.
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[ 5.2 ms ] story [ 46.2 ms ] threadAnd, what about graphics/adobe suite?
System76, especially the Galago pro
If they're the same price, why would anyone pay the same for less RAM and pre-installed Ubuntu?
Legitmetly curious what other differences there are.
I don't own either, so I wouldn't know for sure, but I think it's somewhat valid that not every high level developer nowadays want to deal with installing Linux OSes. Having Ubuntu preinstalled is welcoming for a lot of the dev userbase who comes from a Macbook world expecting things to be plug and play.