I recently purchased a Framework 13 (AMD) laptop to replace my 7 years old Razer Stealth as my travel companion and wanted to share my first impressions after taking it on a trip and using it for about a month.
My main criteria for a travel laptop is that it must be light, but as I've gotten older I've added a few more things to look for:
- Display must support good scaling. As displays have improve their resolutions, everything shown has gotten smaller so I have to scale it up for it to be comfortable for my eyes.
- Replaceable battery. As evident from using my previous laptop for 7 years and still not feeling the need to upgrade, I tend to keep my laptop for a long time especially since I don't rely on my laptop to be my primary driver. While most parts of a laptop are capable of lasting awhile, batteries are a different story. I've had to replace the battery on my Razer twice because they started to swell. This is not exclusive to Razer as I've had it happen on Macbooks and Pixelbooks as well.
- Linux support. I mostly use Linux especially for development so I'm most comfortable with it, but I occasionally do have use for Windows (some games the family plays, camera apps, etc.). They key reason, though, is that Windows is commercial and I don't want to be forced to pay to upgrade if it is not necessary. The Razer Stealth ran Windows 10 and Microsoft says it's not compatible with Windows 11 so I either have to live without security updates or try to install Linux when Razer doesn't support Linux in anyway. Having good Linux support is a way to future proof the laptop somewhat.
Given these criteria, I settled on the Framework. It is lightweight (1.3 kg/2.9 lb) with a 13.5" 2880x1920 120Hz 2.8K matte display (the uniqueness of Framework is that it is modular so you can have different displays even if new ones are released in the future) that is a 3:2 ratio which allows better scaling especially with Linux.
The battery is replaceable (nearly everything on the Framework is replaceable/up-gradable) and it fully supports Linux (Ubuntu and Fedora being the officially supported ones but seems like most Linux distributions will work) even the finger print sensor.
First Impressions
Ordering the Framework, especially the DIY version, presents you with more choices than the typical ordering process. Not only do you pick how much disk storage you want, you have options for what brand/specs you want and this is for all the major components: display & bezel, keyboard, CPU,memory, storage, memory, ports. If you're familiar with computer components, most of the parts are understandable from the description but for the keyboard it didn't explain what the difference is between US-English, International-English Linux and International-English (International English has the Euro key and Linux swaps out the Windows key with a Super key).
I was impressed how quickly the laptop shipped and arrived given it that it comes directly from Taiwan (where it was manufactured) and that each order have different sets of expansion ports (although I did pick a pretty standard set of ports). It arrived faster then the 5-7 business days it listed when I ordered.
The packaging was nicely done to prevent anything from shifting during transit and everything is recyclable. The packaging include a screw driver needed to assemble all the components.
It took about 20 minutes to put everything together and the instructions were good. A lot of people can probably figure it out even without the instructions, but the instructions really prepares you. It suggests putting on the bezel starting at the bottom first and that definitely allowed it to fit better without fidgeting and it warn that the first boot will take longer so you don't worry about whether it not immediately starting up meant that you did something wrong.
It gives pretty good instructions on installing the operating system. For Windows, it anticipated that you might not want to use a Microsoft account so it tells you how to bypass it and how to deal with the fact that during installation the laptop drivers aren't there so how do you get pass the part where Microsoft wants to have networking working just to complete the installation. For Linux, the instructions was decent but maybe a little outdated especially with the screenshot. Although Fedora is one of the two officially supported distributions, the Ubuntu guides seemed more comprehensive. They also favor Gnome in their instructions.
You can get the Framework with either an Intel process/motherboard or AMD processor/motherboard and although the general sense that the AMD version performs better there's more information on the Intel stuff.
The display looks very nice with good contrast and brightness. It's very comfortable to the eyes and scaling in Linux was not a problem. No complaints about the touch pad and it worked with Linux out-of-the-box. The keyboard is comfortable with good travel and spacing. It wasn't too squishy. If the Thinkpad is the bar, this isn't as good as that, but better then the last Macbook Pro I used .
The fingerprint sensor worked out-of-the-box as well, but if you aren't using Gnome, you need to use the command-line tool, fprintd-enroll, to register your finger print.
It's not clear whether Framework thinks you should run tuned-ppd to manage power profiles for both Intel and AMD or whether that's just for Intel and to stick with power-profiles-daemon for AMD. On Fedora 41, if you install power-profiles-daemon then each time it wants to change the profile (such as when you plug/un-plug the power) SELinux will block it and give you a warning.
Although I had no problems with WIFI, the wifi chip it comes with always seem to have a weaker signal than other devices. I think some people swap it out with the one that comes with the Intel board so it's something I'm watching out for.
I've been pretty happy with the laptop so far and hope it'll last a long time. I like the company's mission and hope they continue to succeed with their vision of modular, sustainable and environmentally friendly laptops.
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