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10 votes
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AMD vs. NVIDIA Vulkan ray-tracing performance on Linux with breaking limit
10 votes -
AMD officially confirms no more Windows 10 chipset driver and support for next gen Ryzen
26 votes -
First look at AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution 3
18 votes -
Zenbleed - Zen 2 hardware vulnerability
19 votes -
Secrets of a $182 billion chip maker: AMD's labs
14 votes -
Defective vapor chamber may be causing RX 7900 XTX overheating issue. A recall could be on the horizon.
9 votes -
AMD launches EPYC 9004 "Genoa" processors - Up to 96 cores, AVX-512, incredible performance
16 votes -
Introducing: AMD Privacy View
12 votes -
Mesa 22.0 released with Vulkan 1.3, many open source Intel & AMD driver improvements
5 votes -
Ray tracing performance deep dive: AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT vs. Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080
4 votes -
Microsoft reveals Pluton, a custom security chip to be built into Intel, AMD and Qualcomm processors
9 votes -
AMD to acquire FPGA-creator Xilinx in an all-stock transaction valued at $35 billion
15 votes -
AMD Ryzen 5000 and Zen 3 on Nov 5th: +19% IPC, claims best gaming CPU
16 votes -
AMD announces CPU and GPU events on October 8th and 28th
@AMD Gaming: Join us on October 8 and October 28 to learn more about the big things on the horizon for PC gaming. pic.twitter.com/9dy8Lt5MP8
14 votes -
AMD's Big Navi and Xbox Series X GPU 'Arden' source code stolen and leaked
6 votes -
Amazon's Arm-based Graviton2 Against AMD and Intel: Comparing Cloud Compute
4 votes -
New ThinkPads with Ryzen 4000 announced
13 votes -
AMD is Cloudflare's 10th-generation Edge server CPU
10 votes -
What I want to see from 2020 ThinkPads
18 votes -
The performance advancements of the Radeon open-source OpenGL/Vulkan drivers over 2019
8 votes -
Laptop review of Acer A315-42
So I bought this laptop mainly for web browsing, document editing, note taking and programming with perhaps light gaming although that's not something I've tried yet. So, really just for school...
So I bought this laptop mainly for web browsing, document editing, note taking and programming with perhaps light gaming although that's not something I've tried yet. So, really just for school work.
Specifications
Laptop Model : Acer Aspire 3 A315-42
Laptop screen : 1080p IPS (with matte finish?)
CPU : R5 3500U
RAM : 8GB DDR4 (6GB available because of iGPU)
Storage : 256GB SSD NVMe
Wireless : Qualcomm Atheros QCA9377
Wired : Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8111/8168/8411 (According to lspci)
2x USB 2.0, 1x USB 3.0, 1x HDMI port, Audio jack, 1x RJ45 Ethernet port
Battery : 36.7WhLinux compatibility
Everything worked out of the box, gotta modify TLP to not kill the touchpad and webcam. The touchpad seems to have a mind of its own when it comes to being detected, It seems to be a kernel bug, unsure what I'll do about it concretely but rebooting a couple of times makes it work. Nothing to install thanks to AMD's open source mesa drivers. Might need a kernel higher than 5.3 because of general Ryzen 3000 issues but I've not tried, it was already higher than that.
Operating system tested
Basically never touched Windows, directly installed Fedora 31 Silverblue.
My Silverblue configuration is :
● ostree://fedora:fedora/31/x86_64/silverblue Version: 31.20191213.0 (2019-12-13T00:42:11Z) BaseCommit: a5829371191d0a3e26d3cced9f075525d2ea73679bd255865fcf320bd2dca22a GPGSignature: Valid signature by 7D22D5867F2A4236474BF7B850CB390B3C3359C4 RemovedBasePackages: gnome-terminal-nautilus gnome-terminal 3.34.2-1.fc31 LayeredPackages: camorama cheese eog fedora-workstation-repositories gedit gnome-calendar gnome-font-viewer gnome-tweaks hw-probe libratbag-ratbagd lm_sensors nano neofetch powertop radeontop sysprof systemd-swap tilix tlp
Kernel : 5.3.15
Gnome : 3.34.1Body and Looks
The screen back has metal, I believe it feels quite sturdy. The rest is reasonable feeling plastic. The material used just loves to imprint grease / fingers which kinda sucks - the keys being the exception thankfully. There was also stickers on the inside which well, are somewhat standard but I thought they were pretty obnoxious so I removed them.
Typing experience
It's nothing amazing but it's good enough. I'm not really knowledgeable on keyboards so that's as much as I can say on it, really.
Performance
Everything feels quite snappy but I don't game at all on this machine so I'm not pushing it too much other than while I'm compiling or doing other things. The temperature does go up to 75°C and the fans get a little loud but it's not that bad. It's mostly the bottom getting hot so it's not something you notice too much while typing. It also cold boots quite fast, in about 10-20seconds I want to say but I've not benchmarked that. It's my first computer with an SSD so there's that.
Battery life
I get about 5hours with tlp installed doing web browsing, some programming occasionally, listening to music on the speakers and chatting. Personally I was kind of expecting more from this considering it's an APU but it seems to be what other people are getting on similar setups so It'll do.
Conclusion
Overall, I'm pretty happy with this laptop considering how I bought it for 575$ on sale. I made this review mostly because I wasn't finding much information about this laptop on Linux and well, I don't know, I guess I felt like it. If you have any questions, ask up!
11 votes -
AMD announces BIOS fix for Ryzen 3000 boost clocks, update comes September 10
7 votes -
AMD EPYC 7002 Series Rome Delivers a Knockout
11 votes -
Rome is the fulcrum of AMD's Datacenter Pivot
9 votes -
Help us test ACO, a new Mesa shader compiler for AMD graphics!
7 votes -
The Ballad of AM4: How AMD Stretched a CPU Socket from 28nm to 7nm
9 votes -
Mesa 19.2's Virgl Sees Huge Performance Win Around Buffer Copy Transfers
6 votes -
The Performance Cost Of Spectre, Meltdown, & Foreshadow Mitigations On Linux 4.19 with Intel & AMD processors
14 votes -
Interposers, chiplets and... butterdonuts?
4 votes -
AMD’s Epyc Return To The Datacenter Ring
5 votes -
AMD reveals Threadripper 2 : Up to 32 Cores, 250W, X399 Refresh
9 votes -
Speculative Store Bypass explained: what it is, how it works (new variant of CPU speculative-execution exploit)
4 votes