HP Dev One – A Great, Well Engineered AMD Ryzen Linux Laptop Review



Earlier this month the launch of the HP Dev One was marked by an interesting collaboration between HP and System76, a laptop optimized for Linux developers and System76’s Ubuntu-based Pop! _OS is for running the operating system. It’s a very interesting laptop and well thought out for Linux use with an AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 5850U SoC and integrated Radeon graphics to meet the preferences of many Linux developers with a fully open-source driver stack. I like it. Thanks in large part to HP’s manufacturing, it’s a competitively priced Linux laptop compared to many Linux laptops from smaller vendors that are based on Clevo or other white box laptop designs.

The HP Dev One isn’t HP’s first foray into the Linux laptop space, but in the past it has offered systems like the HP ZBook Studio G7 that came preloaded with Ubuntu Linux. They were not only pre-loading Ubuntu, but have experience with shipping various data science software pre-loaded from machine learning libraries to various developer tools and more. In a previous HP ZBook I test, HP shipped an “extra” of over 40GB of curated open-source software over its stock image.

With their Z by HP Data Science Software effort it was on an otherwise stock Ubuntu installation with a few cosmetic changes. To little surprise their former Linux devices were sporting Intel CPUs with NVIDIA discrete graphics focused on CUDA, RAPIDS, and other NVIDIA software packages, while focusing on data science. With the HP Dev One, they have taken a surprising turn by partnering with System76 and leveraging Pop!_OS for developer/enthusiast-oriented Linux laptops. They are targeting developers as a whole and thus don’t even have a large collection of curated software packages… which is fine for me, at least considering that most of the installations from apt/debian packages or flatpak Packages are just a command away. with Flathub

The HP Dev One costs $1099 USD for this all-AMD Linux laptop, which really strikes a good price point for a large spectrum of developers, rather than just the top-tier Linux developers at an elevated price point. Thanks for trying to target, pricing. HP’s on the scale compared to white box laptops traditionally offered by smaller Linux-focused vendors, and isn’t going much cheaper on the components that makes it a weakly powered developer machine.

For $1099 USD, the HP Dev One is powered by an AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 5850U 8-core/16-thread processor with Radeon Vega graphics, 16GB of DDR4-3200 memory, a 1TB NVMe M.2 2280 SSD, and a 1080p 14. -inch 1000 nit display. The specs are great and the Ryzen 7 PRO 5850U SoC is a great choice for this mid-range to higher-end developer-minded laptop. The only unfortunate area is 16GB of RAM is the only option, but it’s upgradable by the user to a maximum of 64GB of system RAM. Having 32GB would be a sweet spot, but for now at least HP has allocated just one SKU with 16GB of RAM and it’s up to users to upgrade the memory themselves if desired.



While just a laptop SKU, when buying the HP Dev One it offers accessories like the HP 935 Creator Wireless Mouse and the System 76 Launch configurable keyboard. The System76 keyboard and HP mouse were both included as part of our HP Dev One review Kit, kindly provided by System 76 and HP.

Page 1 – IntroductionPage 2 – HP Dev OnePage 3 – Thermals, Power DataPage 4 – Linux Laptop Comparison Page 5 – Linux Graphics/Gaming PerformancePage 6 – WebP, JSON Parsing, ZSTD Compression, RoPage 7 – Creator Workload, Video EncodingPage 8 – Code CompilationPage 9 – OSPRay Studio, Darktable, GIMPPage 10 – CAD, Python PerformancePage 11 – AI / Machine LearningPage 12 – Chrome + Firefox Web Browser PerformancePage 13 – HP Dev One is a great Linux laptop

Source



Related News

Why we can call 112 without a SIM card and other curiosities of the emergency telephone number

Within the so-called numbers of social interest, the best known is, without a doubt, 112, which in Spain is served by the Autonomous Communities. These three

Give an original touch to your Telegram group with these names

When you create a group on Telegram, one of the most important things is the name to place, but creativity does not always help us, and if you want an

WhatsApp msgstore file: what does it contain and how to open it?

The WhatsApp and backups is quite a drama. The messaging app is very restrictive with this topic, because Android users are only allowed to save a backup of

ECB’s Lagarde, Panetta View Digital Euros as More Efficient Payments Than Crypto Finance Bitcoin News

Top officials at the European Central Bank making the case for the digital euro have explained in a new article that unsupported cryptocurrencies are not an

Russia considers building Unity, Unreal Engine competitor

war ThunderA game developed by Russian studio Gaijin Entertainment Image: Gaijin Entertainment