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Being fed up with Yosemite, I decided to order the new [Dell XPS13 (2015 edition)](http://www.dell.com/us/p/xps-13-9343-laptop/pd?ST=dell%20xps13&dgc=ST&cid=79646&lid=2024370&acd=123098073120560) after reading a few reviews. I've installed Ubuntu 14.10 on it.

Installing Ubuntu was (as expected) straightforward:

-   you go to the BIOS (F2 when the Dell logo shows up on screen)
-   boot from an USB disk with Ubuntu (page to the instructions)
-   use an ethernet -> usb adaptor since the wifi doesn't work out of the box with the broadcom driver
-   select what ever you want for the disk setup (I went with dm-crypt / llvm / btrfs)
-   once it's installed and you're logged in as your user, install the wifi package (apt-get install bcmwl-kernel-source)

then at this point you have a “functional” laptop.

Sadly, there's still a few issues so far with Ubuntu 14.10:

-   no sound (I don't really mind for now, I use my phone/tablet to listen to music / watch youtube and stuff). There's a [ticket](https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1413446) to track the problem
-   as is the keyboard (there's a bug where a key can be repeated a few time)
-   the touchpad is ... touchy. I need to hold the button down for a second before it get registered, and there's some kind of issues where it get lost. But I think this is fixed with newer kernel (need to test).

  <script src="https://gist.github.com/franckcuny/70b6959eef1892d00197.js"></script>

But there's also the good stuff!

-   the screen! really awesome definition. The resolution was properly detected, didn't tweak anything
-   the keyboard is nice, however I'm looking for a solution to swap fn and control
-   the battery last, I get about ~7 hours of battery life with normal usage

Hardware
--------

The hardware is attractive. It's really small (smaller than the MBPr 13”, but probably a little bit bigger than the MBA 11”). It's light. There's 2 USB ports, 1 SD card (that's one of the reason I went with this model instead of the carbon x1).

My main complaint is the 8GB limit, I would have prefered 16GB. Not having a broadcom wireless card would have also been nice (maybe they will change this for the developer edition ?). But (and that's the main difference with Apple :), there's a [manual](ftp://ftp.dell.com/Manuals/all-products/esuprt_laptop/esuprt_xps_laptop//xps-13-9343-laptop_Service%20Manual_en-us.pdf) and instructions on how to replace the wireless card. The good alternaties seems to be the [Intel 7260ngw](http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00GUNZUG0/) (I might replace the card).

For the curious, here's the output of [dmesg](https://gist.github.com/franckcuny/02da991e4b4c6bcaabef) and [lspci](https://gist.github.com/franckcuny/bc9a486dc17e8c9acef1).

I'll update this page with more details / information in the next few weeks (I'm currently on a 3.16, I'll try the 3.18 during the weekend).

*Updates*

-   I've replaced the wireless card with the Intel 7260ngw. Opening the laptop is easy, but replacing the card was not that easy. Fixing the antenna is kind of a pain. However, the quality of the signal is way better now.