Tech
The Best Linux Laptops (I Install Linux on Every Laptop I Test) (2026)
Here’s a list of its ports: 1 × USB 4.0 Type-C, 1 × USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C, 3 × USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A, micro SD Card Reader, HDMI 2.0, 2 x Type-C w/ DisplayPort 1.4, and a headphone/Microphone Combo. The webcam is a 2MP 1080p, which gets the job done, but is looking a little long in the tooth at this point. Otherwise, though, this is a great option for AMD fans.
Best for Performance
The Kubuntu Focus Zr 1 (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is a powerhouse, but at 15 inches by 12 inches, over an inch thick, and weighing in at 8 pounds, it’s not a laptop you casually cart around. But if your work requires serious computing power though, be it machine learning (running TensorFlow), local LLMs, big data crunching workflows, or high end video editing, the Zr Gen 1 delivers power in spades.
Inside, the Zr Gen 1 features an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX with 24 cores, an RTX 5090 graphics card, 24 GB GDDR7 RAM (expandable up to 192 GB), two SSDs, one 1TB, one 2TB (you can have up to 4 drives, one of them being a PCIe GEN 5×4 NVMe). Along with the discrete GPU there’s an integrated one as well, which means you can turn off the discrete card to maximize battery life. I spent about 90 percent of the time with the discrete card off and just turned it on when editing photos and video.
The screen is a gloriously large 18-inch LCD display (2560 x 1600 pixels, 168 DPI density) with a max brightness of over 500 nits and matte finish that makes it easy to use even in bright light. It’s one of the better LCD panels I’ve used lately, and gamers will be happy to see the 240 Hz refresh rate. You can also plug in up to 4 external displays. Thanks to the size of the Zr, there’s plenty of room for a full size keyboard with a numeric pad. The keyboard is user-configurable and features a 65,536-color LED backlight system that you can tweak to your liking with the Focus tool.