I genuinely thought that this was a meme about stereotypes around how different countries name products for a second.
Well, “european”. But have to start somewhere.
Are they not?
Parts are not. Didn’t look more to see if assembled in the EU or just designed in
The brands are, yes.
Why are there no links here???
Edited, thanks !
American CPU, made in Taiwan, assembled in China, and somehow European tech?
Let me know when it’s a RISC-V laptop made at STMicroelectronics with memory made at GlobalFoundries in Dresden!
The post clearly says European brands.
There is no European-made x86 CPU available.Sadly GloFo has its headquarters in New York (state) and is owned by a UAE investor. So would you really call that European then?
Besides that it doesn’t seem to produce or be capable of producing DDR5 and focuses on logic instead.
Nothing is perfect.
I always like to throw in MNT. Haven’t had any experience with it though.
Man, I really miss when we had home computers to rival the Americans, like the ZX81.
Anyone knows how’s StarBook’s support and general quality? The Horizon looks pretty damn good, but is pricy, compared to Tuxedo’s Aura 14, and Tuxedo has a super cool support app built-in to their Linux distro.
Linux support? amazing, been running Debian on it no problems, everything working our of the box. Customer support? no idea, I had no need to contact them
How are they in terms of reparability?
I really like the ethos of framework… alas, they are from the US. But if you are going to buy any US tech, you can’t do better than them.
When you think about it, framework makes the perfect work laptop.
Why?
They are too overpriced to buy for personal use, but a company doesn’t care and will write it off in five years, at which point you can buy it for basically nothing, order a new mainboard, polish it up a little and you have yourself a brand new high end laptop for under a thousand. The system does not account for actually repairable electronics :)
Yeah, I would switch from my Framework to a Slimbook if they offered upgradability.
They could make parts that work to the Framework spec, that is open source, which would he awesome.
The biggest down side of my inifintity book is that my right shift key is a painful stretch. Because they use full sized arrow keys and the up takes up the useful half of the right shift.
So half the time i hit up instead of shift and start typing my sentence on the wrong line. Its fucking infuriating.
God knows why they made that choice but next laptop i will be sure to watch out for that
How is the experience importing from the UK these days? I have avoided the UK at all costs since brexit. As I didn’t feel like possibly having to deal with customs and delays, etc. Is it better now, including automatic taxes? Or best to still avoid it if there is a reasonable alternative?
TUXEDO is excellent. very happy with mine. they’re also on Mastodon
How long have you had it? No issues?
over a year. no issues. i’m running EndeavourOS.
Distribution support outside of the standard Ubuntu/tuxedo os was terrible for a long time. The fan support was essentially broken on my laptop except on the officially supported systems. Your can manually compile the (bloaty node.js) tuxedo control center, but instructions on GitHub are wrong and incomplete.
I recently saw that they now added support for Debian 13 though, so that might be worth another try.
There is also a community project tuxedo-rs but with limited device support. Doesn’t support fan control on my device but is much nicer than the original otherwise.
I would not use an unsupported OS on a laptop, of course you had trouble with it. Laptops have always been notorious for having worse hardware support in Linux.
This is not a ding against the laptop.
I have one running Arch. Works well, AUR has the tuxedo control centre and Tuxedo provides a short guide for Arch.
Add I said, some models are supported, if you have a different one good luck
Which one did you pick?
TUXEDO InfinityBook Pro 14 - Gen9 - AMD.
How’s the build quality? Is it all aluminium, or just parts of it? Is the touchpad glass/haptic, or regular plastic kind?
I’ve got a similar model. Build quality is pretty good. Although I have had issues with the speakers and one of the charging ports (there is redundancy here tho as it comes with 2 USBC). Chassis is all aluminium. Not sure exactly the touchpad material - probably plastic, with no haptics.
Overall the design is modelled on Macbooks with great screens and similar shape, but with handy extras like some actual ports.
They are just white-labeled from other companies so you might be able to find them cheaper, but overall they are sold at a fair price compared to mainstream brands.
It’s nice, mate. I dunno all that shiz. XD
Are these available in the US?
Very good list of recommendments, also my choices!
(To be fair, there are more good ones in that thread, but I’m not complaining).
edit: also, there’s Novacustom which is Dutch and lets you customise a lot of shit.
Actually had a terrible experience with star labs, not recommended
What happened?
Your link didn’t work for me. I had to wait several seconds for a redirect that then said “there’s nothing here.”
Weird, for me it says it’s a blahaj zone link and works
this one uses a feddit uk link - does it work?
Yes, thanks, that one works.
Which of them laptops have a track point and three mouse buttons so it can be actually used on the LAP?
sir, ebay is that -> way, we do not have old thinkpads. /s
honestly laptops are becoming the new phones, all look the same, and a reasonable priced ones can do whatever I want to do on a laptop.
so boring . . .
Just saying, they are not produced in Europe which is what this post is about. 99% of laptops are trash nowadays.
they ain’t even being produced anymore, so u are not supporting murica anyway.
now eBay on the other hand is prob not the best on the topic but each country got it’s alternative, here in Portugal it’s Olx.
Starbooks get assembled in the UK.
Tuxedo is manufactured in Germany.
Slimbooks get finished assembling in Spain.
Tuxedo is manufactured in Germany.
Assembled, not manufactured. If you look closely, you’ll notice that Tuxedo’s InfinityBook and Slimbook’s Evo have the same exact body.
They both source them from Taiwan.
I’d love that, but I’d also happily accept two mouse buttons and a normal touchpad over one giant buttonless panel.
I had that on my work ThinkPad. Never used them, tbh. Much easier to just tap and hold if I need to move something.
Wtf is starlaps?
Star Labs is a reputable manufacturer which even designs their own products.









