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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 29/11/15 17:42, Roman Ovseitsev
wrote:<br>
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cite="mid:CABjyLDwW3A6nsSX=n7U4i7WdiaOi8+MkEhcJctX6aAy9x5OyHA@mail.gmail.com"
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<div dir="ltr">If you need 3 external monitors on top of the
internal, without discrete GPU the only option is a Skylake
based laptop. It can pull off up to 5 monitors through HDMI/DP
according to the spec. AFAIK older architectures support only 3
monitors.<br>
However since it just got released only a couple months back,
there probably not that many laptops to choose from yet. If any
at all. Mobile CPUs with better GPU are still not released so
most vendors probably waiting for them.<br>
As far as Linux support for Skylake there are still some issue
which you might want to be aware of if you decide to go down
that road:<br>
ACPI doesn't work with some motherboards. Not an issue though if
you don't mind disabling it in the kernel. Graphics drivers work
properly only starting with 4.3 kernel.<br>
<br>
As for the laptop, I've been using ThinkPad T 14" line for years
and overall the build quality, Linux support, repairability, and
port selection are rather good. Although I think the latest
models have eSATA port removed and come with only 3 USB ports,
but I haven't checked.<br>
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Actually, my latitude also doesn't have eSATA. I think USB3 is fast
enough to not really require eSATA any more.<br>
<br>
Shachar<br>
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