So far I keep finding workarounds for things that require too many system resources. It's been kind of a funny experience in that way. I really, really like that it's forced me to slow down and think.
It's a similar situation with my 2012 MSI Wind netbook, which runs Puppy Linux and is surprisingly capable with Falkon, Geany, Puppy utils, nim, Object Pascal, etc. I feel like I should be getting rid of this machine but it can really do a lot.
T420 Dislikes: It's heavy. The screen is terrible in terms of viewing angles. It doesn't show the color orange properly, so when I use it for graphics or illustrations, I have to check my work on other devices. The speaker volume isn't loud enough. The DVD drive randomly springs open every so often. I can't stand the way the trackpoint gets in my way when I go to type the B key. The literal LED lamp that shines onto the keyboard is annoying but at least it's there. There are 3 dead pixels.
This computer also dual-boots Windows 10 so I can run the sketchy software that has come with about 20 different Chinese ham radios. Thanks to the Chirp team for making this easier.
All in all I am pretty happy with it. Of course if you can't stand Apple this is not the machine to get, but if you can deal with that it is a good way to get a Unix machine that you don't have to spend too much time setting up and most of time it works.
Desktop - AMD, 24 cores, 32 GB Ram, 2x NVME, 12x spinning rust, 3x 4k monitor - No issues - Debian
Desktop for when at home, laptop otherwise. Both have 4k displays. I seriously overestimated my eyesight when I bought these.
Other than that my personal laptop is a ThinkPad t440.
I like both, but frankly if the dell had the TrackPoint I'd throw my ThinkPad in the trash can and I would get an exactly equal machine for private use.
Solid laptop and great for travelling as small and light, thought docked mainly these COVID days.
Thinking of getting something with a bit more grunt next time. I seem to flip between better specs vs light each purchase or 2. Generally I've found lenovo to be most reliable.
Still have my 2014 15” MBP that’s still going strong, which is for personal use.
I still do local Jupyter stuff on the i9, but... less and less as my clients are happier to have me spin up instances on AWS for dev work. Suits me fine. :)
I go for weeks without turning on my MBP for those few programs that have no Linux equivalents.
my home desktop is a windows 10 machine with 64GB of RAM, 32 cores and a GPU. It's nice to be able to run servers and Cyberpunk at the same time- they don't bother each other, even though I've got a few renders going on in another window.
my server is a linux box that is 10 years old and still runs great.