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1<!DOCTYPE html> 2<html lang="en"> 3<head> 4<meta charset="UTF-8"> 5<title> 6GNU/Linux on the Microsoft Surface Go 7</title> 8<link rel="stylesheet" href="/static/style.css"> 9<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> 10</head> 11<body> 12<header> 13<nav> 14<ul> 15<li><a href="/">Home</a></li> 16<li><a href="/projects">Projects</a></li> 17<li><a href="/index">Index</a></li> 18<li><a href="/about">About</a></li> 19<li><a href="https://roundabout-host.com/roundabout">Roundabout-host</a></li> 20</ul> 21<ul> 22<li><a href="mailto:root@roundabout-host.com" id="mail-link">root@roundabout-host.com</a></li> 23</ul> 24</nav> 25</header> 26<main> 27 28<h1>GNU/Linux on the Microsoft Surface Go</h1> 29<div id="article-date">2024-11-27, 00:00:00</div> 30 31<article class="content-area"> 32<p>Interestingly, the best GNU/Linux tablet is actually made by Microsoft. The 33Surface Go (first generation) is a tablet released in 2018. The performance is 34nothing amazing, but unlike most tablets, you can actually make use of the 35performance it does have; it doesn't feel slow for normal tablet tasks either. 36Besides that, it has a 10" screen, front and back cameras, a kickstand, stylus 37support and a detachable keyboard — but the latter two are sold separately. 38</p><p>There are five models, and I've got the middle one: 39</p><ul><li><p>4 GB RAM, 64 GB eMMC, no mobile data 40</p></li><li><p>4 GB RAM, 128 GB NVMe, no mobile data 41</p></li><li><p>8 GB RAM, 128 GB NVMe, no mobile data 42</p></li><li><p>8 GB RAM, 128 GB NVMe, LTE 43</p></li><li><p>8 GB RAM, 256 GB NVMe, LTE 44</p></li></ul><p>All of them use the 45<a href="https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/122697/intel-pentium-gold-processor-4415y-2m-cache-1-60-ghz.html">Intel Pentium Gold 4415Y</a> 46CPU; you can read the details yourself, but we're not focusing on raw 47performance here. An upside to this weak CPU is that the Surface Go is fanless 48and completely silent. 49</p><h2>Design</h2><p>The tablet itself weighs 0.52 kg and it's 8.3 mm thick. The whole body is 50magnesium; it feels like a quality product. The screen bezels are a bit thick, 51but that's not a problem for me and it also allows the screen to be fully 52rectangular. The kickstand is very useful and stable. 53</p><p>A minor issue is that it only has one USB-C port, but there's also a proprietary 54magnetic charger port, a headphone jack and a microSD card slot, which is hidden 55under the kickstand. You can also charge over USB using any regular phone 56charger. 57</p><p>The keyboard cover is made from some sort of fabric which is interesting, and 58mine had broken edges, but I don't mind. It's good, I'm not very used to it yet, 59and it's smaller than a laptop one. It's still very useful and it also has the 60arrows and function keys. The trackpad is what you would expect, but I prefer to 61use the touchscreen or stylus as it's faster. A mouse would be the fastest, but 62I'm not going to carry one around. In case you don't want to use it, but still 63want to keep it attached, folding it behind the tablet automatically disables 64it. 65</p><p>The stylus is good. I'm not very experienced with styli, but it's thick, which 66I like, has 4096 pressure levels, a button on the side and another one on the 67top, which is also an eraser. It runs on a AAAA battery. 68</p><h2>Compatibility</h2><p>I used Linux Mint 22 MATE, and after installing the 69<a href="https://github.com/linux-surface/linux-surface">linux-surface</a> kernel using the 70provided instructions, everything worked. Krita recognised the stylus, including 71the eraser end, out of the box. 72</p><p>Scrolling with the finger on the touchscreen works very well in GTK apps and in 73Chromium, and you can hold to select. The stylus always selects text like the 74mouse. However, scrolling by swiping isn't possible in Firefox, Electron or Qt 75apps, where you must use the trackpad, scrollbar or arrow keys. 76</p><p>Otherwise, it's what you'd expect from a regular GNU/Linux system. The battery 77lasts about 4-6 hours of normal use which is more than I expected. 78</p><h2>Recommended software</h2><ul><li><p><a href="https://krita.org/">Krita</a>: for painting 79</p></li><li><p>Chromium: web browser, better touchscreen support 80</p></li><li><p><a href="https://github.com/JoseExposito/touchegg">Touchégg</a>: touchscreen and trackpad 81gestures 82</p></li><li><p><a href="https://launchpad.net/onboard">Onboard</a>: a fine on-screen keyboard 83</p></li><li><p>Everything else Linux Mint comes with 84</p></li></ul><p>I have yet to find a good stylus notes app. 85</p><h2>Conclusion</h2><p>If you want a portable machine with GNU/Linux, this is probably one of the best 86options for now. The advantage to being made by Microsoft is that it's a 87polished, quality product, which is more than a developer's toy. 88</p> 89</article> 90 91</main> 92<footer> 93<p>Page generated on Friday, 27 December 2024 at 11:25:53</p> 94<p xmlns:cc="http://creativecommons.org/ns#" >This work is marked with <a href="https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/?ref=chooser-v1" target="_blank" rel="license noopener noreferrer" style="display:inline-block;">CC0 1.0 Universal</a> (🄍). No rights reserved.</p> 95<p>Hosted at <a href="https://roundabout-host.com/roundabout">Roundabout-host</a> using the static site service, and generated with <a href="/projects/ampoule.html">Ampoule</a>.</p> 96<a href="#">Back to top</a> 97</footer> 98</body> 99</html>