David Heinemeier Hansson on the Framework 13 Laptop
Speaking of fascinating perspectives, here’s David Heinemeier Hansson, who recently switch from Mac, on the Framework 13 laptop:
Those are all the good parts, but there are plenty of drawbacks
too. Compared to a modern MacBook, the battery is inferior. I got
6 hours in mixed use yesterday. The screen is only barely
adequate to run at retina-like 2× for smooth looking fonts. Linux
is far less polished than macOS. But somehow it just doesn’t
really matter.
First of all, 6 hours is enough for regular use. If I’m doing more
than that in a single stint without getting up, I’ll be paying for
it physically anyway. And the somewhat cramped resolution has made
me fall in love with full-screen apps again, like I used to do
with that 11” MacBook Air.
Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, the Mac-vs.-Wintel rivalry was the tech rivalry. Other rivalries came and went, like Netscape-vs.IE, Word-vs.-WordPerfect, Quark-vs.-Pagemaker, C-vs.-Pascal, but the main event was always Mac-vs.-Wintel. When the smartphone revolution occurred that rivalry was eclipsed by iPhone-vs.-Android. But it’s still there.
I’m fascinated following DHH’s switching saga. And my personal devotion to and reliance upon MacOS is such that, if the best-available MacOS-running laptop I could find got me only 6 hours of battery life, I’d accept it. I certainly remember getting less than 6 hours of battery life with a PowerBook. I specifically remember when it was dicey whether you could get through a coast-to-coast flight using a fully-charged Mac laptop. I lived. But nowadays, I wouldn’t fret boarding a coast-to-coast flight with my MacBook Pro only half-charged.
Apple silicon has spoiled me. I don’t even turn the display brightness down when running my MacBook Pro on battery power. I literally just don’t worry about it. It’s like two competing alternative universes when it comes to performance-per-watt. Presumably that’s what Microsoft seeks to change with Windows-on-ARM and these imminent new Surface laptops based on new chips from Qualcomm.
★
Speaking of fascinating perspectives, here’s David Heinemeier Hansson, who recently switch from Mac, on the Framework 13 laptop:
Those are all the good parts, but there are plenty of drawbacks
too. Compared to a modern MacBook, the battery is inferior. I got
6 hours in mixed use yesterday. The screen is only barely
adequate to run at retina-like 2× for smooth looking fonts. Linux
is far less polished than macOS. But somehow it just doesn’t
really matter.
First of all, 6 hours is enough for regular use. If I’m doing more
than that in a single stint without getting up, I’ll be paying for
it physically anyway. And the somewhat cramped resolution has made
me fall in love with full-screen apps again, like I used to do
with that 11” MacBook Air.
Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, the Mac-vs.-Wintel rivalry was the tech rivalry. Other rivalries came and went, like Netscape-vs.IE, Word-vs.-WordPerfect, Quark-vs.-Pagemaker, C-vs.-Pascal, but the main event was always Mac-vs.-Wintel. When the smartphone revolution occurred that rivalry was eclipsed by iPhone-vs.-Android. But it’s still there.
I’m fascinated following DHH’s switching saga. And my personal devotion to and reliance upon MacOS is such that, if the best-available MacOS-running laptop I could find got me only 6 hours of battery life, I’d accept it. I certainly remember getting less than 6 hours of battery life with a PowerBook. I specifically remember when it was dicey whether you could get through a coast-to-coast flight using a fully-charged Mac laptop. I lived. But nowadays, I wouldn’t fret boarding a coast-to-coast flight with my MacBook Pro only half-charged.
Apple silicon has spoiled me. I don’t even turn the display brightness down when running my MacBook Pro on battery power. I literally just don’t worry about it. It’s like two competing alternative universes when it comes to performance-per-watt. Presumably that’s what Microsoft seeks to change with Windows-on-ARM and these imminent new Surface laptops based on new chips from Qualcomm.