MNT Reform
Posted: February 3rd, 2024, 11:26 am
So a rather interesting laptop popped up on my YouTube recommendations about a week ago. Something called the MNT REFORM LAPTOP. And
needless to say I have my eyes on it
it'll take me a few months to get the money for it; Fall, maybe Winter 2024 before I can afford the USD$1,200 price tag
But, for a new laptop that isn't a BAD price, especially what all it is
So it's a laptop designed to be user serviceable, but unlike the FRAMEWORK LAPTOP, this one is as open source as a single device can be.
Everything from the board PCB design, to the architecture, the keyboard, and even the case designs are all open source. This means you can, for free, download all the files and reconstruct it yourself. And as someone who makes custom PCB's, this sounds like a fun thing to tinker with.
It DOES have some drawbacks, it isn't an x86 platform, so no Windows or Linux-based x86 programs. However that really isn't an issue for me, I can work around that limitation.
I've already downloaded the KiCAD PCB files, as I'd like to mess around and see how easy it would be to interface a custom CPU board. I also want to pick up THE PHYSICAL MANUALS next paycheck, read through those and see what I can learn about it. You can just DOWNLOAD THE DIGITAL ONES FOR FREE, but I get screen fatigue easily from trying to read PDF's, so I'd prefer the physical copies

it'll take me a few months to get the money for it; Fall, maybe Winter 2024 before I can afford the USD$1,200 price tag
So it's a laptop designed to be user serviceable, but unlike the FRAMEWORK LAPTOP, this one is as open source as a single device can be.
Everything from the board PCB design, to the architecture, the keyboard, and even the case designs are all open source. This means you can, for free, download all the files and reconstruct it yourself. And as someone who makes custom PCB's, this sounds like a fun thing to tinker with.
It DOES have some drawbacks, it isn't an x86 platform, so no Windows or Linux-based x86 programs. However that really isn't an issue for me, I can work around that limitation.
I've already downloaded the KiCAD PCB files, as I'd like to mess around and see how easy it would be to interface a custom CPU board. I also want to pick up THE PHYSICAL MANUALS next paycheck, read through those and see what I can learn about it. You can just DOWNLOAD THE DIGITAL ONES FOR FREE, but I get screen fatigue easily from trying to read PDF's, so I'd prefer the physical copies
