My Lenovo Thinkpad's battery and it's internal battery are both dead or close to dead and I think possibly the power supply connector maybe dodgy too, so I was in the mood for an upgrade. I found this Dell Latitude 7300 on eBay from a reputable seller. It has a 8th gen Core i7 CPU and 24GB of RAM (8GB+16GB modules) which is more than any other machine I have, including my main desktop which only has 12GB of RAM. Cosmetically the only noticeable wear I have noticed so far are the long rubber feet it sits on are hanging off a bit, just needs gluing back on at some point.
I had a good look through the settings In the BIOS and only needed to enable SMART reporting for drives. I noticed lots of useful settings in there, you can disable the webcam, mic, change backlit keyboard settings, enable boot from SD card etc. That's the optional MicroSD card reader, which is nice, though for me a full size one would have been more useful, but I suppose they went for that to save space, which is also obviously why Ethernet is missing too. I may buy a USB C Ethernet and card reader adaptor for it at some point. With slightly less ports than I am used to it does mean that the 7300 is very light compared to my old Thinkpad. Obviously having no optical drive also saves a lot of space and weight, it's not something I use often other than on my desktop machines. There's a USB 3 port on each side, a HDMI port and USB C for charging, alongside the old barrel connector for the old style power supply. And apparently you cannot damage the machine by plugging in both at the same time. This one came with a fairly compact LITE-ON USB C power brick. There's the usual Kensington lock connector, and also a Smart Card reader which I doubt I will ever use. This is the first laptop I have ever had with USB C charging, which I like because my phones use it too, so it makes things easier.
The 7300 came with Windows 10 on it's 128GB NVMe SSD but there was no way I was keeping that garbage on this. I thought about upgrading the storage but just wanted to get Linux on it as quick as possible, I think 128GB should be fine anyway.
I wiped out everything and installed KDE Neon. Everything went smoothly but I advise not leaving it long enough during the live session for the screenlock to kick in, because for some silly reason it requires a password, yet the Neon live user does not have a password set. If this happens, wait long enough for the install to have finished, then shut it down, or CTRL+ALT+F2 to a terminal and reboot it form there, that's the simplest solution.
Anyway, the install didn't take long and upon reboot I had a nice crisp fresh KDE Neon install. And KDE really does look crisp on the 1080P LED screen, it's pin sharp, and feels much sharper than the one on my old Thinkpad, and has much better colours, the black actually look black! I switched the global theme to Breeze Dark as I find dark themes are easier on my eyes. And lastly I put the main panel at the top and a dock-like panel at the bottom of the screen.
I installed yakuake terminal VLC, Audacious, kubuntu-restricted-extras, gimp, wxMp3gain, krdc (remote desktop client) soundkonverter, synaptic (alternate package manager). KDE reports the battery health as at 69%. I have also installed lm-sensors as per usual and all temperatures are just fine under light usage though I did get a bit worried at one point while Dropbox was downloading loads of files and with a few tabs in Chrome, temperature on one core went up to just over 70, though that's still in acceptable figures according to Dell's site, and it hasn't happened again. It usually hovers around the 30 to 40 C area. I have also changed the updates in Neon to the non-bundled variety, as it should be. To disable offline updates, edit the config file /etc/xdg/discoverrc - for example using nano - and set it to off. Another tweak I do is add the 'Show Logout' and 'lock screen' options to the desktop right click menu.
Everything works out the box as with most Latitudes I have had, the keyboard and trackpad are decent, much better than on my old Thinkpad and is in good condition too. The backlight works fine, it's something I feel I cannot live without on a laptop or desktop these days. If you need to change the Fn key behaviour, pressing Fn + Esc toggles the Fn lock, allowing you to use the F keys without the Fn key.

For many minutes I thought there was something wrong with the webcam, but after a bit of googling I discovered that there's a simple little slider switch next to the webcam to enable and disable it. Although there are some KDE specific webcam tools, I find the app called Cheese is the best standalone Linux webcam app, it's very simple to use. It's not great quality compared with a smartphone camera of course, and not something I will use much, but it's nice to know it works.
One slight annoyance is Discover keeps nagging me about a UEFI dbx update, and every time it supposedly updates, it still comes back again on reboot. I have tried updating on the commandline but I get an error, and I've searched online and not found a solution yet.On one cold boot it even did a firmware update but that has not made a difference.
Another bit of strange behaviour I had was when I closed the lid, it did not suspend/sleep, and continued to run as if the lid was never closed, which, if left for awhile, made the fans go full blast trying to keep it cool. After a bit of Googling I discovered that the previous owner had disabled the Lid Switch in the BIOS.
Also one time when I manually Suspend I came back to find it had shutdown at some point, despite having plenty of battery left. I had just done some updates on KDE Neon so that could have caused that issue. When it does suspend and resume, it does so very quickly.
Overall I am very pleased with the Latitude 7300, it has a very nice bright screen, nice backlit keyboard, decent touchpad, and it's the first laptop that I have had that is significantly faster than my main desktop, in every way except possibly in graphics card power. It has twice the RAM and a much newer processor. The only thing of course is I do prefer the dual monitors on my desktop, though I could attach a monitor through HDMI. I've mostly been using it for all the usual stuff I would do on my desktop, web browsing, image editing in GIMP, and bit of video editing in Kdenlive. It's been particularly useful n the very hot weather when I don't want to run my main desktop machine. Hopefully it should last me awhile, and it runs so quickly I feel like I need to get a new workstation to match it!
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