Hey everyone, I wanted to give my feedback with Linux on a new CoPilot laptop.

I just got a new generation Dell Inspiron 14 2-in-1 Touch laptop (Model: i7445-7326BLU-PUS, SKU: 6576720). It has the new AMD 8840HS and is a new Windows CoPilot branded laptop (with key unfortunately).

I tried booting and logging into Windows once for the heck of it and here’s what happened. It wouldn’t let me log in without joining an internet network first. So I successfully give it my guest network credentials. It said connected and secured. Then I hit next, next, etc. and it restarts and then would update, still prior to me being able to login. However it restarts and says oops the internet had an issue and please reconnect WiFi. It sends me back to the WiFi credential page to login again but it auto connects as my credentials were correct. So I hit next and it gives me the same problem again.

I then say screw it and proceed to install Linux.

I proceed to install Fedora Kinoite 40 via USB and have absolutely zero issues. It works flawlessly with every feature including the fingerprint scanner and when flipping the laptop keyboard over into tablet mode it even auto disables the keyboard and touchpad but leaves the touchscreen working! The only thing that doesn’t seem to work is the CoPilot key. When pressed it doesn’t do anything. I tried assigning it as a shortcut key for Konsole where it registers as “Meta” and gets created as “Shift+Meta” but it doesn’t actually work still. I didn’t change a single thing in BIOS, Secure Boot is still enabled, and I don’t see any code displayed during boot or shutdown. Besides the CoPilot key being useless I couldn’t be happier with how it all turned out and proved to be better than Windows yet again.

Edit: I played around some more with the CoPilot key. Like I said the shortcuts default to “Shift+Meta” if only pressing the CoPilot (Meta) key. That won’t launch anything. However if you add another key into the mix it will work. I created “Shift+K+Meta” to launch Kcalc and it worked, kinda. I may have to either press the combo multiple times or press and hold it for a few milliseconds longer than a normal key press and then it launches the program, but not once, it opens Kcalc multiple times all at once and the amount of times it opens seems random.

  • rotopenguin@infosec.pub
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    7 months ago

    Huh, I thought that the initial run of Copilot systems were required to use a Qualcomm processor (with advanced NPU technology).