DeepComputing built the first RISC-V laptop designed to run Ubuntu Linux

Alfonso Maruccia

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Forward-looking: Despite some setbacks and general uncertainty about the future, the RISC-V instruction set architecture (ISA) is slowly growing its presence in the open-source market. Now, there's a new RISC-V laptop based on Ubuntu, one of the most used Linux operating systems.

Hong Kong manufacturer DeepComputing introduced a laptop built around the RISC-V ISA. The DC-Roma RISC-V Laptop II expands the hardware capabilities offered by the previous generation and is touted as the world's first RISC-V laptop capable of running the Ubuntu Linux operating system.

The DC-Roma RISC-V Laptop II system uses the K1 SoC developed by Chinese company SpacemiT, while the previous "Roma" model used a JH7110 SoC created by StarFive. The K1 architecture includes eight 64-bit RISC-V CPU cores running at up to 2 GHz, good enough to deliver "enhanced performance" and energy efficiency.

The new RISC-V laptop specs include up to 16 GB of LPDDR4X RAM, a 1 TB SSD, a 1080p display, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth 5.2 connectivity. Total battery life is estimated to be 8 hours, and its 8-pin interface for add-in cards is designed to provide developers with an easier way to compile and test their code.

The Roma will ship with Ubuntu desktop 23.10 pre-installed, which DeepComputing claims offers a more stable and efficient working environment in one of the most well-known user interfaces in the Linux world. The laptop's chassis is a "full-metal" design that should increase heat dissipation and robustness against external (mechanical) stress.

Preorders open for the DC-Roma "2.0" in three days. However, DeepComputing has not provided pricing specifics. Ubuntu and the Hong Kong manufacturer boast about the new laptop's features and "powerful AI capabilities." DeepComputing claims the K1 is the first SoC in the world to support RISC-V high-performance computing RVA 22 Profile RVV 1.0 with a 256-bit width.

Canonical said RISC-V is becoming a competitive ISA in "multiple markets." Porting Ubuntu to RISC-V would make it the reference platform for early adopters and developers. Despite winning approval from some high-profile chipmakers, RISC-V still has much to prove against competing ISA technologies such as Arm or x86. The DC-Roma RISC-V Laptop II could be an intriguing (hopefully inexpensive) introduction to open-source ISA for Linux-based developers.

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Too bad that Ubuntu isn't what it once was. Many people in the Linux community are going for a more "pure" Debian experience. Funny thing is, Ubuntu is pretty much everyone's first experience with Linux.

Now there are better Distros for new users that make switching from windows to Linux easy, but I'm glad Ubuntu is still around. It has an active community that is relatively easy to get support from.

I'm not a big fan of these products but I'm always happy to see activity in the Linux community. Especially now with the direction windows is going. The Linix community has calmed down a lot as far as the toxic elitistism.

Products like these are for the more technically adept users. I don't seeing this as attracting a massive user base, but it is am interesting product.
 
I wonder why China still marches on their own grown CPU when there is OpenRisc architecture to which they can contribute and also take to the same level as x86 with their smart people.
 
Nonsense. Ubuntu is better than ever.
I'm not disputing that, I'm talking about the third party interests that they accepted funding from that made the non-purists dispurse into other distros
What I would like to see is the Linux Mint folks take on this platform.
As a Linux Mint folk, I'm happy watching this platform develop from an ad-free youtube video.

Ubtunu is still a wonderful platform and one of the better out-of-the box experiences, but it feels like everyone is going towards a purerer Debian experience. Ubuntu repositories will continue to be invaluable for years, but people looking to switch OSs don't want to think about who has the best repositories. They just want an OS that does what they ask them to.
 
Nonsense. Ubuntu is better than ever.
Ununtu is trash worse then windows, thanks to snaps, it takes 5 seconds to launch a notepad or a calculator apps even on 5000€ desktop powerhouses, hate people praising linux on this website when it's actually a worse user experience than windows, linux mint is fine distro if you use your pc only for web browsing, watching movies or listening to music, thats all folks!
 
Ununtu is trash worse then windows, thanks to snaps, it takes 5 seconds to launch a notepad or a calculator apps even on 5000€ desktop powerhouses, hate people praising linux on this website when it's actually a worse user experience than windows, linux mint is fine distro if you use your pc only for web browsing, watching movies or listening to music, thats all folks!
Spoken like someone who has not used any of the Ubuntu series of Linux distros. Your statement has zero validity.
 
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