
"Naturally, when Tuxedo Computers asked me if I wanted to give one of their latest a spin, I happily accepted, and the had me giddy with anticipation. I'd already reviewed the InfinityBook Gen9 model and found it to be an outstanding Linux-first laptop. This time around, I tested the Gen 10 model with some updated hardware: namely, a 16-core AMD AI 7 350 CPU, 32GB of RAM, and integrated AMD graphics."
"I ran my usual test on the Infinity Pro 14: install a local AI and see how well it stands up to the high demands required. For this test, I used Alpaca and the Qwen 2.5 coder LLM to have it write a Python script that would accept input from users and write it to a file. I've been using this test for some time now, and always find that it can reveal"
The Infinity Pro Gen10 ships with a 16-core AMD AI 7 350 CPU, 32GB of RAM, and integrated AMD graphics. The keyboard arrived in a German layout, required tactile adaptation, and felt excellent; the trackpad was smooth and responsive. The chassis presents a standard-looking build that belies the internal performance. Tuxedo OS uses the KDE Plasma desktop environment, which looks polished and runs smoothly. The powerful CPU and ample RAM allowed desktop effects without performance loss. A local-AI test installed Alpaca and Qwen 2.5 coder LLM to generate a Python script that accepts user input and writes to a file.
Read at ZDNET
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