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Episode: 3943
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Title: HPR3943: Why my Dell does it better on Linux.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3943/hpr3943.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 17:43:16
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,943 for Wednesday the 13th of September 2023.
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Today's show is entitled Why My Dell Does It Better On Linux?
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It is hosted by Nightwise and is about 12 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Nightwise talks about how he uses his Dell XPS-15 with Linux.
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Hey there Hacker Public Radio, this is Nightwise from the Nightwise.com podcast and I wanted
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to send in a quick show about my experiences on running Ubuntu on my Dell XPS-50.
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I've been a Linux user since about 2000 and have often on always had at least some form
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of Linux in my life.
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I'm a cross-platform geek which means that I jump around from Windows to Mac, to Linux
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on a daily basis and I love to have multiple operating systems at my fingertips just to geek
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out and get some variety.
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Basically however, I've had a little bit of a rough time getting my hands into the Linux
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desktop because quite frankly, I was too busy to tinker.
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I needed machines that would work for me, that would really get things done and I didn't
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have a lot of time to poke around.
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So I ended up spending most of my time on my Windows machine and on my Mac.
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I run my own business, I work as a freelance consultant.
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So that means that sometimes I need to use production machines, sometimes I need to use
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the client's machine.
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So I didn't really have time to get around and play with Linux and I say play because
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it has been that at least from the desktop side of things for the last years.
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Working around with the operating system, installing it, getting it done, but not really
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using it in anger.
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As an experiment during Corona, during the COVID era, I, because was working from home
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predominantly and the client at that time allowed it, worked from a Linux workstation full
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time.
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So I was using Linux for a living and in my cross-platform journeys from operating system
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to operating system, I managed to get everything done on any machine that I would open up.
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Now, of course you say, that's not really hard to do, you basically just need the cloud
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and that's about it.
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And if you would say that, you're right, it didn't always used to be like that.
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That's the 20 years of podcasting, but it pretty much comes down to the fact that if you
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can install your favorite browser and you run your favorite web apps, you can almost
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do anything that you want to do.
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So why did I pick up the Dell XPS 15 and started to play with Linux?
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Well, that is an interesting story because it is not really for the reason that you want
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to think about it, but you might think about it.
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I'm working for a large IT company as a consultant for a couple of days, and they gave me one
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of their workstations that is completely managed.
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It's, I think, some kind of HP laptop, I don't know what it is.
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It is made from aluminum, it is razor sharp, it is a two in one, which is absolutely useless
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when it comes out to Windows 11, and it has a terrible, terrible screen.
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It's one of these hard plastic screens, you know, for use as a touch screen, and it is
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very small and it is very reflective.
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That would not be a problem since I'm mostly when I'm working for home, I'm working indoors,
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I hook it up to my dock and I work from there.
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But being, it being summer, I also got a little frustrated that I couldn't really work from
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outside.
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I couldn't do anything outside, I had to sit indoors all day because I couldn't sit on
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my porch work from that laptop because I couldn't see squats.
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I had thought because they mostly work from a cloud environment to use my own machine,
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my Windows machine, or my Mac to use it as my bring your own device.
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But because of this company's quite aggressive policy when it comes to mobile device management,
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when I tried it out with my iPad, I noticed that the iPad almost got onboarded into their
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MDM.
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And now dear friends, I love my clients but I don't love them enough to give them governance
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over the machines that I use for my own company and personally.
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So when I thought about giving it a try to do a little bring your own device for this
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customer and using my Mac or my Linux machine to connect to their environment, I thought
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like maybe not, maybe not these.
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Maybe I can use something that they have a harder time onboarding and that gives them
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only a browser to play with.
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And that of course would be Linux.
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So I installed Ubuntu and I think it's 22.04 or even later up.
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I can't remember it's the latest long-term support distro that's on there.
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And I installed that on my Dell XPS.
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Now I have to admit something.
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Windows on the Dell XPS 15 that I own is not the operating system that gives me the
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best experience.
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And that's something I didn't expect because I've been owning laptops for the longest
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time and I've been playing around with Linux for the longest time.
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And over the last couple of years ago I got myself a Dell XPS 13, I really liked it.
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And I thought I was going to bite the bullet, I was going to run Linux on this thing.
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So I ordered it OEM with Linux on it.
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Along the hold it was not the best experience.
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The Bluetooth Flash Wi-Fi card just wasn't supported under Linux.
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So I could have Wi-Fi but I couldn't get any Bluetooth device to connect.
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I ended up opening up my Dell laptop which was OEM shipped with Ubuntu, swapping out
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the Bluetooth Flash Wi-Fi card and putting in another one from another brand in order
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for it to work.
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So I was a little bit disappointed at that.
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So when I got my hands on this second-hand Dell XPS 15, I thought like, well, let's
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not do the Linux thing, just give it plain Windows.
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So I gave it Windows 11 with all drivers and all the updates and everything that Dell
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tells you to install.
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So I thought this is an OEM install of a Dell machine like it's supposed to be, only
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to end up with a hovercraft.
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Under Windows, the Dell XPS 15 that I own makes an enormous amount of fan noise for absolutely
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no reason.
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What if the machine is idling, the fan is active now.
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I've been owning fan list machines for a couple of years now, I've got a MacBook Pro M1
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and a Surface Pro X which all have passive cooling.
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And that to me was, wow, what is this, this thing makes noise, why machine do you make
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noise because it's not doing anything.
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So I tinkered around with it and I faffed around with it and I found like, no, it's not
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really getting any better, it's just the way it is.
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So I decided to give Linux a go.
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So I installed the latest version of Ubuntu.
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I installed a proprietary drivers because there's an Nvidia card on there that I want to
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use.
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I don't see why I want to use the discrete graphics of that stupid Intel that makes
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my display look all, I don't know, cheap.
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So if there's a great Nvidia graphics card in there, why not use it?
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So I decided to go that way.
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And I ended up with a machine that was surprisingly fast that had a very good graphics display because
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of the Nvidia graphics card driving the visuals.
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And that was hard to manage by some kind of Windows Intune MDM environment.
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So I gave it a try yesterday.
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I took Chromium, a browser that I don't use for any of my other projects because for
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my private stuff I use Firefox and for everything that's to do with my company, I do use Edge
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and decided to install everything on there.
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Hooked up with the clients' cloud environment and well, their little Intune MDM didn't really
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get its claws into my machine, now did it.
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And ended up spending the entire afternoon working outside using the beautiful matte display
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that I have on the Dell XPS15, the Nvidia graphics card that gives a great video resolution
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and Linux as my operating system to basically do what I needed to do.
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So in the end results, I am very happy with my little setup and if ever you need to work
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for another client that wants to do some remote management on your machines and you don't
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really trust it, this might also be something that you can do.
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And on the other hand, it really gives a feather in the cap of what Linux is all about.
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You don't want to have your machine managed and doing things in the background.
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You want your freedom.
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And here for the first time in a real situation, I can vouch for Linux as being the operating
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system that does protect my freedoms and my privacy and that kind of guards my own personal
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digital environment without being prone to whatever runs in the back.
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A sandbox, maybe a firewall between corporate and what I am doing, I don't know, or maybe
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just a plain good OS to run on that Dell XPS15.
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Runs better, battery life is super, graphics card is well supported, although with proprietary
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drivers, display is fantastic.
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I love the Dell's 15-inch matte display.
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I hate glossy displays with a passion and it gives me the privacy that I need to separate
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whatever I do for one customer with the things that I do for the other customer.
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Another yay for Linux.
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If you also have an open source or just plain geeky story to tell, record a show, send
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it to HPR, be part of the community, and inspire everybody else.
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Until next time, this was Nightwise from LinNightwise.com podcast, see ya guys.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, and Hacker Public Radio does a walk.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, click on our contribute link to find out how
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easy it really is.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by Anonsthost.com, the Internet Archive, and
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our Sync.net.
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On the satellite status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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