You’re right about the price difference. My MacBook gave up the ghost and I’m looking for a good Windows laptop to install Linux. Do most Linux laptop users wipe Windows or dual boot? pros/cons?
I've been wiping windows since 2015, before that I did dual boot.
In part the gaming support has improved.
I don't know if it's possible to give an answer to "most linux laptop users".
Nowadays you can find very detailed compatibility for arch on the arch wiki. There are some footguns like s3 sleep. It's better documented and many laptops will do pretty well.
The t480 recently got rudimentary coreboot/libreboot support (which is somewhat incomplete because of thunderbolt quirks as of today) but will hopefully be supported better in the future.
They are like 200 EUR on ebay for some 8GB RAM model where you can still replace the SODIMMs with 2x32GB ones.
Also use LUKS encryption, ecryptfs sucks and has a character limit of 122 characters per file, which happens more often than you might imagine.
Wipe. Dual booting sucks. The reality is you'll spend the vast majority of your time using one OS.
Do try to get a Linux laptop first, though, otherwise you're paying the Windows tax and not sending the right signals to manufacturers. Dell have made Windows-free laptops for years. Unfortunately the last one I bought (15 years ago) did have ghastly "Windows keys", but maybe it's better now? I scratched mine off.
>Do try to get a Linux laptop first, though, otherwise you're paying the Windows tax and not sending the right signals to manufacturers
Why do I care about "signals" ?
You have to go where the market is at. Linux is a niche. You buy a Linux laptop you end up paying more for less hardware.
The only thing is you shouldn't buy the absolute latest hardware since Linux can lag a few months in support. Microsoft more or less gives out OEM keys. They make very little off the OS itself.
I typically dualboot. A lot of applications ( games) still don't run well on Linux. Bios updates are often handled by OEM software which only runs on Windows. You can seek out the bios files, but that's an entire thing.
VMware workstation for Linux and Windows supports running a VM with specific partition(s) from your boot disk. This allows you to launch your "other" OS when needed, but still directly boot it on hardware if desired.
Right now, I am on Linux Mint on a ASUS Vivobook 16 that wasn't even $500. I got this specifically because of the Intel graphics in the event I didn't want to use Windows. I don't think I made it past the Windows setup before wiping it out.
From my personal experience, it's best to find a windows laptop that supports two m2 nvme slots. Get another cheap ssd and install linux exclusively on it. I have this setup on my laptop and didn't have to deal with wiping anything.
That's a very personal question. Do you plan on frequently using windows? If so, dual boot might make sense (don't forget about virtual machines and wine).
Yep, I've wanted to explore this route for a while. I had some issues with Linux on Lenovo Legions, so this might be a nice way to keep using both OSs.