Ask HN: Best Windows/Linux developer laptop in 2025
62 points| edtech_dev | 1 year ago
* Macbook is not an option
* I go through phases and switch between Windows and Linux as my primary OS.
* Want to be able to mess around with some local LLMs.
* I travel frequently, so portability is somewhat important. Currently own a 13 inch, but 14 inch should work too I think.
Notes:
* My current laptop is a 6yr old Dell XPS. It has generally served me well.
* I bought an Asus Zenbook for a family member and I have been impressed with how well it has worked out. Anyone with any recent experience with Asus laptops for development?
* I have had bad experiences with Lenovo twice, which makes me wary of Thinkpads, but willing to consider it if it makes the most sense.
* Framework look very appealing but I have heard mixed reviews.
FlyingAvatar|1 year ago
* Macbook is not an option
* Want to be able to mess around with some local LLMs.
Your choices for a Window laptop that can run a local LLM is either to get a large amount of system RAM and have it be abysmally slow, or to run a very tiny model on a discrete GPU which will (a) not be very good due to its small size and high quantization and (b) evaporate your battery life.
If you want to run local LLMs on a laptop and actually have them be useful, a Mac is currently the only real choice.
That said, with the money you save buying a Linux laptop instead, you can pay for a lot of tokens for whatever hosted LLM you want and it will be higher quality than what you could potentially run locally on a Mac.
specproc|1 year ago
I've not tried local LLMs on Windows, but I do loads with 'em on a three-year-old Legion running Arch.
That said, whilst small local models are nice for some use-cases, I'm leaning more towards APIs these days. I like the better selection of models and the ability to use them without bringing my machine to a halt.
kokada|1 year ago
Not really now that we have the AMD Strix Halo: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/02/review-asus-rog-flow....
The only available SKU right now is the above one that is a weird gaming tablet/laptop that seems to not be good in either (too heavy for a tablet, too cramped for laptop usage), but the performance is definitely there (similar performance of RTX 4060 for laptop, using a similar TDP of only the GPU for the whole APU) and you also have 32GB of unified memory for LLMs. Also, the chipset itself supports up to 128GB of RAM, so technically in future we could have an even better SKUs for LLMs (but nothing announced yet AFAIK).
antifa|11 months ago
What I can do with localLLM on my MacBook is not worth paying extra for an x86 laptop that be heavier, hotter, louder, and less battery (especially if you're not going to play games).
johann8384|1 year ago
https://www.adlinktech.com/en/pocket-ai-with-nvidia-rtx-a500...
edtech_dev|1 year ago
giantg2|1 year ago
calmbell|1 year ago
d3Xt3r|1 year ago
Specs aside, this machine can also run Linux well [1], which makes it worth buying, IMO. And if it can run Linux well, then using it for development should be a breeze.
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8_hSzuJlSU
juujian|1 year ago
jamesliudotcc|1 year ago
I agree that MacBook is not an option. I have a work MacBook and it has better silicon, ok, but I hate being on a Mac. Just not for me.
I'd wait until more manufacturers announce what they will do with that AMD SOC.
LorenDB|1 year ago
j45|1 year ago
- Framework reviews are important to figure out the current generation. I tried one out and it had few issues other than me not having the time to tweak it how I wanted. Hardware was great, battery wasn't great at that time (needed simple software optimizations), but Framework now has larger batteries too that seem to have resolved that. The folks I know with them have mostly switched from Mac or X1 Carbons to Frameworks and quite happy with it.
- Specifically for travel, the recently announced Framework 12" looks really inviting if travel looks like the way to go.
To run an LLM on either, some amount of extra ram might help, depending on the model... if you want something heavier it might be cheaper to run a model privately in the cloud as needed, or use an eGPU and plug it in when you want. Local LLM use seems to be fun, but having something at home running it so it's accessible seems serviceable too.
jscohn85|1 year ago
Coming from a Surface Laptop Go 2, and a Surface Pro 8 before that, the build quality on the Zenbook Duo feels worse. Even a Zenbook 14 OLED (2024) that I purchased around the same time seems like it has better quality at half the price.
The Bluetooth is finicky, it has no Miracast support, and the wireless keyboard battery seems to have degraded considerably in just a couple of months, to name a few issues.
There’s also questionable design choices, like not making the pop-out stand run edge-to-edge the way Surface does, and not including any way for the keyboard’s top portion to anchor itself when placed on the secondary screen, among others.
It’s like a beta product at a premium price, but the form factor is definitely what appealed to me. Sadly, there’s not many other choices in that area, except for the Yoga Book 9i and maybe a MacBook with an iPad anchored atop the screen.
linuxhansl|1 year ago
It's not cheap and rather heavy, but very powerful. You can get it with lots of RAM, a powerful graphics card (for LLMs), and a CPU with 24 cores (32 threads). And you can get it shipped with Fedora or Ubuntu (although wiped it immediately and installed my own Fedora).
Curious what the bad Lenovo experience was. I've had various Thinkpads since the early 2000's and they all worked for me.
shae|1 year ago
attendant3446|1 year ago
Since I'm in the EU, I ended up with 2 possible options: ThinkPad T14 (non-s model), Gen.5 or newer. Or Framework 13 AMD.
System76 also make some interesting laptops, but it's just too expensive to get one in Europe.
mariusor|1 year ago
gerdesj|1 year ago
Your backend box can be as ugly as you like whilst your front end laptop is good enough for normal usage.
beala|1 year ago
breadwinner|1 year ago
mlacks|1 year ago
matteotom|1 year ago
giantg2|1 year ago
edtech_dev|1 year ago
cod3rboy|1 year ago
Quantized LLMs upto 8b parameters can be easily run on above specs. Quantized models are getting better and better. I use them for code suggestion and code gen.
jensens|1 year ago
Instead of Dual Boot they also offer a preinstalled VM with a licensed Windows. Tuxedo OS Linux is a slightly modified Ubuntu optimized for their Hardware.
caleblloyd|1 year ago
gessha|1 year ago
I was hoping Dell would come through with their new lineup but it hasn’t even been released yet and honestly their website is garbage at marketing it.
I might just bit the bullet and get a Mac but I’d hate the lock in. Alternatively, I can just stick with my current setup…
annguyenfoss|1 year ago
Franework is nice but no Nvidia option which is a no-go for LLM.
Thinkpad P1 Gen 6 with RTX 4090 is a solid one. Older generation but Thinkpad seems like no longer slapping top GPU into its notebook.
Other laptops with 4090/5090 are too huge (Titan, Raider, Vector, Strix Scar 18,…)
I’m using Arch on the Thinkpad above.
Hope this helps
alsobrsp|1 year ago
gjsman-1000|1 year ago
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43269129
ivcha|11 months ago
I was just researching this for my own use.
jckahn|1 year ago
e-brake|1 year ago
Am4TIfIsER0ppos|1 year ago
adabyron|1 year ago
Running LLMs on a local mobile device doesn't make sense to me. Sure it sounds great but at what cost & what trade-offs? This goes for laptops & phones.
You can have the best of both worlds by setting up a separate computer in your local network or rent one on the cloud if data privacy & messing around with LLMs is important to you. Then you don't sacrifice the mobile advantage of a great laptop. It'll be cheaper & can be more focused too.
edtech_dev|1 year ago
poisonborz|1 year ago
Thinkpads are reliable and great QA/support, but the HW is underwhelming, bad thermals, dim screens, and just too expensive.
diddid|1 year ago
ofcourse2025|1 year ago
gjsman-1000|1 year ago
I would pick a Framework over a Clevo, any day. And Framework has tons of paper cut issues - I’m not leaving my MacBook for high security work with Framework’s track record for firmware updates.
nwah1|1 year ago
gjsman-1000|1 year ago
animex|1 year ago
dismalaf|1 year ago
bo1024|1 year ago
tombh|1 year ago
mmh0000|1 year ago
And, while I applaud all the efforts of the Asahi developers, many hardware components do not yet work(1)
Macs are great if you can live happily within the confines of Apple’s expensive walled garden. But leave that garden and soon the moats, mines or sniper towers will get you.
(1) https://asahilinux.org/docs/M2-Series-Feature-Support/#m2-pr...
devilsdata|1 year ago
LorenDB|1 year ago
aboardRat4|1 year ago
carlosjobim|1 year ago
LorenDB|1 year ago
grigio|1 year ago