After I made the decision to move away from #apple at least for my laptop, I decided to get an Asus and go all in on #linux for daily driving. I’ve been using various Linux distros at work for years, but rarely as an end user in a desktop environment.
I’ve had my #asus #Zephyrus #ryzen now for a few weeks. I’m running @fedora #auroradx and it is really well thought out. Lots of great quality of life features that are very Mac-like, and I’m happy with the distro. The performance is great. I can game. I’m happy with that side of things.
That said, the sooner we all make the switch to ARM, the better.
I’ve been running an M3 #MacBookpro for work for several months. I knew, in spite of the positives, there were going to be some migration pains moving to Linux full time.
The biggest drawback that I wasn’t expecting? Battery life.
My M3 can run for *days* on a single charge, under medium use. Under heavy use (gaming, k8s, etc), I can still *easily* get 6-7 hours.
My brand new Asus? Just under 3. And that’s with the display set to low brightness and eco performance mode in the OS. And I’m even running AMD, so I can only imagine how terrible Intel would’ve been.
That hurts.
It was incredible to just rarely have to worry about battery. Even when you hit 10% battery, you often still have a solid 45 minutes to an hour before you even have to worry.
It is really disappointing to go back to the background irritation of always needing to know where my power cable is.
x86 can go ahead and pass into the history books. Kthx bye.