An inexpensive 10" laptop to run Linux.
-
For those needs, an old used thinkpad off ebay would be pretty ideal. Affordable, well built and reliable.
-
Netbooks, haven’t seen them in a decade. They were sluggish at best even running linux. The screens were awful. Seriously, I can’t recommend. A refurbished 10” tablet with a bluetooth keyboard would work 10 times better.
-
You don't really need one that is specifically Linux based, as you can format a windows box to Linux at will. Really any 10" laptop you find on cragslist or ebay should do.
-
Asus EEE models were around 10” screens. Should work in CLI. Desktop environment might struggle a bit
-
Lenovo Flex 3 Chromebook
-
I got a $12 10 inch Asus eeepc 1005ha that I have NetBSD with i3 on and it's perfectly usable, so something similar to that would probably be fine for linux cli stuff as long as a 32 bit cpu is okay
-
Thinkpad made 10" models?
... I found the Thinkpad 10, which is a tablet computer and a bit ridiculous for OPs intentions (or mine, for that matter, I'm looking for me too, lol).
-
For programming?!
-
Find an old chrome book that has an x86 cpu and can do core boot. I got mine for $10.
-
Define cheap. 11" Dell 3140's in new condition with Intel N200 processors, 8GB RAM, wifi, SSD and a decent keyboard have been coming up on Ebay and Woot every few weeks for $170 or so. Debian 12 detects all hardware immediately on installation.
-
No one is making 10" models. You'd need to buy a used netbook from 2010 to get a 10" screen. Get a normal laptop please.
-
@waspentalive theres some cheap intel n100 devices that you can get...
-
Maybe check your local Craigslist or e-waste recycler? Someone on Craigslist near-ish me has a 10" Dell Inspiron laptop for $25. There's also a HP mini 110 that the seller is asking way too much for, lol.
That size of laptop/netbook has kind of fallen out of fashion and it seems to be touchscreen tablet-likes in that size now. You'll want to keep build quality in mind with the older machines because a lot of stuff is soldered together at that size and age, I had a HP Stream 11 and the hardware recently failed - it was e-waste when I bought it but it ran Linux well until it died.
-
Firstly, yes, what OP wants is absolutely feasible in principle. I've used fanless low-powered laptops as my only device for years now, for same use case as OP - terminal plus browser. First was an 11in Asus netbook, right now a Celeron-powered model with fully 8GB ram. Neither have been "slow" at all, in fact probably faster than some of the Windows machines I've used in the past for work. HD video runs flawlessly, which is as much as I'll ever need. For both of them I paid as little as you'd expect - in the low hundreds, new. To be honest I often get the feeling many people are buying super overpowered laptops. If you're on Linux and not gaming or doing CAD it's a complete waste of money to spend 1000 bucks on a laptop. That's my opinion, backed by very deep experience.
In response to the question, the problem is that the netbook niche is now occupied by Chromebooks. Which are a PITA to get working with Linux due to the bootloader lockdown - although OP seems to have the secret for making that easy. Otherwise you need to go up to around 350 bucks for the lowest-end Wintel devices which are not bulky with horrible fans, or else buy second-hand as others are recommending.
-
I use a 2013 macbook air for this kind of thing. It works great!
-
Yeah, This sounds like the thing.. I really have to limit the cost to "Recycle cans and bottles" money because we (wife and I) recently bought me parts for a mini-ATX workstation ~$500.00 i5 8gb memory and an SSD I already had.
-
Is coreboot that system where the machine basically boots into a FORTH interpreter that has vocabulary words to read and boot from various media. That would be sweet - Forth is a hoot once you get used to it.
-
I would not be running a gui - this is strictly for text stuff unless I can do pixel/plot graphics in some BASIC or other language (a framebuffer?)
-
too small, no keyboard - I tried using my phone with a USB keyboard and a OTG adapter and most keys work but for some reason escape did not.