Linux Laptop Experiment 2025
I was blessed to be able to get a used HP laptop in practically new condition with decent specs for free, so I installed Linux on it and I'm going to try using it as my primary personal computer for at least the rest of 2025 – about six weeks.
Specs
Model: HP Laptop 14-dq2053cl Released: November 2021 CPU: Intel Core i3-1125G4 @ 2.00GHz x 8 RAM: 8 GB Graphics: Integrated Storage: 256 GB SSD
Believe it or not, even though it's four years old this month, this is now the newest and most powerful computer I own.
My next-best would be my streaming PC – a HP Z240 Workstation desktop PC with a Core i7-6700.
In terms of processing power, the laptop actually edges out the desktop in PassMark CPU benchmark scores at 9282 vs 8050. Being five generations newer really does make that much of a difference.
Despite being only an i3, the laptop CPU is a quad-core with hyper-threading, so the OS actually sees eight cores. Nice!
I haven't popped the back cover yet, but I believe I can upgrade the RAM and SSD eventually, too. But the current specs should be more than adequate for my experiment.
Distro
The Linux Distro I chose is Pop!_OS 22.04 LTS. I keep going back and forth between Pop! and Linux Mint, and Mint has been my go-to for at least a couple years now, so I want to give Pop! another good shot. Both of them are often mentioned in conversations about best all-around Linux distros and best distros for beginners. I don't mind using a terminal when I have to, but I want the least hassle possible.
Installation was a breeze – except when I tried to install some UEFI firmware suggested by Pop!_OS. It just showed up as a notification that a firmware upgrade was available, so I tried to install it and the laptop rebooted and then...nothing. I waited for an hour, still nothing. I forced a reboot, and still nothing. I ended up having to reinstall the OS. And this time, it said the firmware update was already installed. Alrighty, then.
Use Cases
I'll be using my old desktop as a dedicated streaming PC for my Twitch and PeerTube live streams – it has all the USB ports and dedicated graphics (NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti) and is already configured for it. I'll keep using that as my streaming PC at least until extended Windows 10 updates end in October 2026. But probably even beyond that as long as all the software still works, since I won't be using it for anything but streaming.
I'll use this laptop for everything else. Here's an overview of what everything else looks like:
Web Browsing and Web-Based Apps
My current browser of choice is Vivaldi. Great performance. Features and customization for days. Cross-platform. No crypto or AI garbage. Firefox is a backup.
Web searches, email, banking, Google Drive, etc.
Watching Video
I watch a lot of Twitch. Not gaming, mostly DJ streams and musicians. And a little scam baiting. Oh, and for some reason Sumo. I feel the desire to quit Twitch both as a viewer and streamer, but I would really miss interacting with some good people there. I'm trying to figure that out. More on that in a future post.
I don't watch YouTube hardly at all anymore, but I'll check it occasionally.
I am currently subscribed to Amazon Prime Video and Paramount+ and will watch stuff on those services, too. Paramount+ had a crazy good deal – $40 for one year with ads (which I can block in a browser). I love Star Trek, and I wanted to watch Season 3 of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, so there you go.
Prime Video will be hard to cancel unless brick-and-mortar retail suddenly enjoys a resurgence and we can reliably get more things we need locally in our area. I could probably live without it, but my wife would struggle.
Audio, Video, and Image Editing
Audacity, Kdenlive, and GIMP have been my go-tos for years. I don't anticipate any problems here.
Blogging
I'm writing this blog on it!
Messaging
I'm not a fan of Discord, but at least I don't have my own server on there anymore. There are some individuals and communities on there I value.
I also use Element. Probably not Signal Desktop anymore, though, after moving to Delta Chat.
Light Gaming
We'll see what runs on this thing! Valheim stuttered a bit in the 30 seconds I tested it, but I'm sure I can tweak the settings for smoother gameplay.
So far I have also installed Stardew Valley and plan to install Undertale, which I still have never played.
Other
There is an application called Tableau that I occasionally use for data visualization. It has no Linux desktop version and does not run in WINE. So I may have to install a Windows VM if I want to use that.
I'll be using the laptop quite a bit for church, too. I'm in the lay (volunteer) ministry and use the laptop often for Google Drive, notes, calendars, and proprietary web apps for administrative stuff.
A Small Act of Defiance
If I can't make a clean break from Big Tech, I can at least try to move in the right direction. Committing to using a Linux Laptop exclusively for any amount of time is just one small act of defiance of Big Tech and the tech bros trying to control and monetize us.
One thing I will greatly miss is the ability to send text messages from my laptop like I can on my old MacBook Air 2017. I loathe thumb-typing on glass slabs (#BringBackBlackBerry). I'll also miss GarageBand – a pretty great app for a music nerd like me.
But I have to be willing to make some compromises and sacrifices if it means living truer to my values. It's a balancing act, and it's never as clear or easy as one thinks. But I have to try.
#100DaysToOffload (No. 106) #tech #laptop #Linux #FOSS