Technology

Linux laptop vs MacBook Pro: Tuxedo wins

Linux laptop – Misryoum compares Tuxedo’s InfinityBook Max 15 with a MacBook Pro, highlighting standout screen, keyboard feel, and trade-offs.

A Linux laptop just flipped the script against a MacBook Pro in a head-to-head everyday test.

Misryoum spent time with Tuxedo Computers’ InfinityBook Max 15. a premium machine built around Linux that targets people who want a refined laptop experience without leaving the penguin ecosystem.. The pitch is clear from the start: strong build quality. an eye-catching high-refresh display. and enough performance for daily work. not just tinkering.

The hardware impresses immediately.. The matte black aluminum chassis feels sturdy. the hinge holds firm without being stiff. and the weight lands in a practical range for a 15-inch-class system.. But the most obvious “wow” comes from the display: it’s bright. smooth. and notably easier on the eyes in glare-heavy settings. which is the kind of detail that can make a laptop feel better every single day.

After that, the testing results become more nuanced.. In Misryoum’s trial. AI workloads using Ollama weren’t the laptop’s strongest suit. with the graphics setup struggling when the tasks leaned hard on local AI.. Meanwhile, productivity software told a friendlier story, with DaVinci Resolve performing especially well in that specific workflow.. In short. it doesn’t behave like a brute-force powerhouse. but it does show real competence where creative and work-focused apps matter.

For readers choosing their next Linux daily driver, the key is matching expectations to the configuration you buy. A Linux laptop can be excellent at the work you actually do, but local AI and heavier GPU tasks will reward careful spec choices.

That bargain-with-benefits vibe fades a bit when it comes to battery life and sound.. Misryoum found battery performance varies heavily based on power profiles: switching from full performance to a cooler profile significantly changed real-world runtime. while the most aggressive power-saving mode extended endurance at the cost of sustained responsiveness.. Audio also came up short versus the MacBook Pro experience. lacking the punch you might want for music. even if video playback in a quiet room was perfectly fine.

The keyboard and trackpad, though, are where the InfinityBook Max 15 makes a strong impression.. The key feel is praised for its solid. dependable action. and Misryoum found the trackpad gestures set up in Linux to be smooth and usable.. The catch is familiar for anyone buying regionally configured hardware: the keyboard layout may not be US-standard. which can force a brief adjustment period before you stop thinking about where each character lives.

In the end. Misryoum’s takeaway is simple: the InfinityBook Max 15 is a compelling premium Linux laptop when you prioritize build quality. display performance. and a comfortable typing-and-tracking experience.. Its compromises in battery behavior. audio character. and heavier AI suitability are real. but they’re the kinds of trade-offs that can be worth it if you pick the right configuration for how you plan to use it.

This matters because Linux hardware is no longer just about compatibility; the best machines now compete on feel and daily usability. When that happens, switching from macOS becomes less about “can it run my stuff” and more about “will I want to use it every day.”