Some apps don’t respect GNOME’s large text setting (Alacritty)
125% scale
Most apps look blurry (Picard, Firefox, Spotify, Alacritty)
200% scale
Everything is way too big
Unusable
Plasma
100% scale
Nothing looks blurry
Everything is tiny
Unusable
125% scale + Apply scaling themselves
Nothing looks blurry
Most apps scale appropriate
Some apps can’t scale themselves and look tiny (Picard)
125% scale + Scaled by system
Most apps look blurry (Picard, Firefox, Spotify, Alacritty)
200% scale
Everything is way too big
Unusable
New display, 2880 x 1920 (3:2)
GNOME
100% scale
Nothing looks blurry
Everything is tiny
Unusable
100% scale + large text accessibility
Nothing looks blurry
Most apps scale appropriately
Some apps don’t respect GNOME’s large text setting (Alacritty)
Everything is tiny
150% scale
Most apps look blurry (Picard, Firefox, Spotify, Alacritty)
200% scale
Everything is way too big
Unusable
Plasma
100% scale
Nothing looks blurry
Everything is tiny
Unusable
150% scale + Apply scaling themselves
Nothing looks blurry
Some apps can’t scale themselves, but look a little better here? (Picard)
150% scale + Scaled by system
Most apps look blurry (Picard, Firefox, Spotify, Alacritty)
200% scale
Everything is way too big
Unusable
tl;dr
In the old display, GNOME at 100% + large text was the best compromise.
In the new display, Plasma at 150% + Apply scaling themselves is the best compromise.
Interestingly, Picard scaling itself looks super tiny in the old display, but in the new display it looks... better. It's still not correctly scaled like native Wayland apps, but it's better.
Warning
If you can't stomach moving from GNOME to Plasma, then 🚨 DO NOT BUY THE NEW DISPLAY 🚨. The new display is worse for GNOME.
Once again
I am once again begging Framework to just give us a damn regular DPI display that works! Without workarounds. Without forcing users on specific DEs. Without forcing users to stop using their favorite apps. This new display has basically all of the flaws as the previous one.
It's all right otherwise. Not phenomenal, but not crap. The specs you can get with other laptops. The hardware feel isn't as good as a Dell XPS or an X1 Carbon. The expansion card stuff is kinda cool, but other laptops have ports too. I've never swapped out the cards.
The main reason I bought this laptop is repairability. If that's not your main priority, then I probably wouldn't recommend this laptop.
If you want to use this laptop with Linux and not spend time fixing hardware compatibility issues, then I definitely would not recommend this laptop. Definitely get a Dell XPS for a Linux laptop that Just Works.
I agree with pretty much everything they've said, though I've gotten more use out of the swappable parts. I have a desktop I use for things I need a powerful system for, but being able to swap in the GPU when traveling is great.
When I'm at home I have basically everything on USB C and the empty expansion bay.
When I travel I swap in the GPU and add an HDMI port and some USB a ports.
If you don't have stuff set up like I do I agree it's mostly just a reparability / upgradeability thing.
This has not been my experience with my FW16. I also have an XPS for work, and had a Gigabyte Aero before that, but I would hands down take the the FW16 over the XPS 9510. While the XPS doesn't have any major issues running Linux (though I am unhappy with the trackpad), I haven't had any issues running Linux on the FW16 either, and I absolutely love having whatever ports I want available. I really missed the great port selection I had on the Aero, which made the XPS painful for me to use (I am so sick of dongles). I use my FW16 for a bunch of different requirements and have a ton of ports for it: ( 4x Ethernet, 3x USB-A, 3x USB-C, 2x HDMI, 2x DP, 2x MicroSD, 2x 3.5mm). Being able to reconfigure on the fly for whatever my workflow is for the day has been great.
Also, something that really galls me about working on the XPS series vs. the Latitude series, is that even though the XPS is supposed to be the premium line, the Latitudes are much nicer to work on. For example, Latitudes have captive screws on the back cover whereas the XPSes don't, and they also have razor sharp un-polished edges on the covers (always great to have to clean the blood off your motherboard traces before you can power it back on. )
As for the display issues, I can't speak to that because I use Hyprland and don't have a DE, but don't see any issues.
After spending a few months on the FW16, going back to a 16:9 laptop feels... wrong. Like there's a ton of vertical space missing. Everything except watching movies benefits from a little bit more vertical space.
If you want to use this laptop with Linux and not spend time fixing hardware compatibility issues, then I definitely would not recommend this laptop. Definitely get a Dell XPS for a Linux laptop that Just Works.