I am looking for a new computer and am considering a Tuxedo Laptop. Do you know how easy they are to repair and upgrade? I enjoy my Fairphone too much to her an unrepairable Notebook.
I am looking for a new computer and am considering a Tuxedo Laptop. Do you know how easy they are to repair and upgrade? I enjoy my Fairphone too much to her an unrepairable Notebook.
Alright, so. I bought a Tuxedo Pulse 15 Gen1 2.5 years ago.
Hardware-spec wise it’s a great machine.
The build quality is…let’s say I have seen a lot worse. But still…
When I got the machine, the spacebar had an issue that the leftmost and rightmost cm wasn’t registering a key hit. That was a known issue for a batch and they replaced it for me (although I was without a laptop for a week,)
The keyboard typing feel is… okay. not great, not terrible
The keyboard design is a giant crumb and hair trap. be prepared to clean it constantly. if you manage to do it (because crumbs will easily go underneath the key caps.
After I somehow managed to get a single drop of coke on a key, it was sticky. I wanted to remove the keycap to clean the machanism. Watched their official video about it and carefully removed the key. The problem came when I wanted to put it back and the suuuuuper thin (half a mm or so) clip the keycap uses to atach to the mechanism snapped off. Luckily they sent me a new keycap without a problem.
The touchpad has a 50/50 chance of not recognizing a right click on the first try
When the laptop was 1.5 years old or so, the bottom cover suddenly came off on a corner. Turns out, the screws aren’t holding the cover itself, but a super thin piece of plastic that is glued to the cover. and that piece broke off, making the screw not hold the cover anymore. Here I also got a replacement cover without any trouble
now after over 2 years, the corners of the laptop are showing small cracks in the plastic
I am using the hardware gently. But I walk around with it a lot in my apartment and used it every day. I expect some wear&tear, but I have not seem such a degree of wear on a thinkpad, for example.
Basically: their support is great. The laptop was… okay. Better than most random electronics store laptop.
Now I have a framework for a month, and I love it. As others have said, get a framework if you want repairability and upgradability
Haha, same here with an ultra fragile piece of plastic that snaps as soon as you touch it. Except mine was a connector socket soldered to the motherboard and they made zero effort to help me get it fixed.