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