Review of Lemur Ultra Thin

I bought this computer a few months back and have been using it as my laptop since. I wanted to write a review after having used it for a while to avoid the type of review that goes like I got it out of the box and its shiny.

The Laptop

It is a very nice looking laptop. Not on the same league as Apple’s, but, in the PC space, it looks very good. When I take it out and show it around, it makes a good impression.

It is also surprisingly thin and light. I had previously owned an Eee because it was so light and got this one because I’d be using it as my primary computer when away from home. So, I do value a light laptop over raw power.

Speaking of raw power, this is a pretty responsive machine. Even editing images doesn’t feel slugish. The only time I wish for a faster machine is when editing video. Then again, if editing video is your primary usage, do get something other than a laptop.

It has a HDMI and a VGA output, which is essential. Even Dell now got the Apple bug and ships some laptops without a VGA output. Since one of my main uses for a laptop is to do presentations and there is almost no rooms equiped with an HDMI input, I didn’t want to have to put up with the Mac owners curse of carrying adapters everywhere. For such a thin laptop, having 3 USB plugs, plus a flash card reader, and an Ethernet port is very good.

The only negative is the trackpad whose buttons are too thin and slightly unresponsive. The power on button is also slightly unresponsive, but otherwise workable. The battery is not that impressive at 2 hours for regular usage. There is sometimes a flicker on the screen, which had me worried, but it only happens every once in a while.

The Linux Installed

It came with pre-installed Ubuntu (9.10 was current at the time, now it would ship with 10.04).

I was disappointed to find that it still required an extra step to install the drivers for the webcam and such. There is no reason why it shouldn’t all be pre-installed, no? This is the same with Dell’s preinstalled Linux stuff, but I had hoped that System 76 would do a better job.

The webcam worked once I installed the drivers and interfaced automatically with Skype. Wireless internet works, except when it doesn’t. I didn’t debug it, but at a friends’ house, I couldn’t connect to his wireless network even when I had the password. I just gave up, but not a 100% positive experience.

Hibernate and sleep work well as does CPU frequency scaling. I also got an external DVD writer and it works well for CD and DVD playing. I had to fiddle for a while with k3b’s settings to record DVDs, but I’m blaming k3b on this one.

Verdict

Overall, it is a nice computer. It is not the definite Linux-preinstalled laptop I would hope for, but better than any other experience I’ve had.

I would definitely buy again from System 76 (fortunately, I had no problems with the computer so I can’t comment on their support).

Follow me on twitter: @luispedrocoelho

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7 comments ↓

#1 Apopas on 09.15.10 at 10:14 am

2 hours battery life only? And I was thinking seriously to buy this laptop :(

#2 me on 10.03.10 at 3:58 pm

me too! the battery makes it worthless…

#3 Stephen Cuppett on 10.25.10 at 9:12 am

Am thinking about this laptop.

His purchase date pre-dates the launch of the current i3-330UM processor on here and I doubt he opted for the SSD. But, without his specs, it’s unknown. In addition, 10.10 is now what is installed and it could change the power usage.

Would be curious to hear how long the battery lasts with these technologies installed.

#4 Vishnu RAo on 11.05.10 at 5:14 pm

To all those complaining about battery life, they have a bigger battery if you are willing to shell out the extra$$. Will give you the battery life you are looking for. They wanted reduce the weight to make it ultra thin & light. Hence the smaller battery!

#5 Joe on 03.03.11 at 12:11 pm

Given that this is being compared to the macbook air 13 which fets 7+ hours battery life, the 2 hours or even 4 hours of the extended battery there is still something to be desired. Of course that machine has a core2duo as opposed to the i3 um, and it also costs $1300ish to the $700ish of the system76.

#6 Joe on 03.03.11 at 12:14 pm

Of course it’s not clear if people have used powertop and tried to optimize this, but the whole point of the system coming with the os you want is that you shouldn’t have to do that sort of stuff.

#7 Alan Aversa on 08.16.11 at 4:01 pm

And it is about a 1 pound lighter than the new 13″ MacBook Pro and can come with a 7200 RPM hard drive (only 5200 RPM for the Mac). I went for the UltraThin. It’s a killer deal.

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