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Chuwi Minibook X: the netbook we deserve

▲ 412 points 305 comments by thcipriani 3w ago HN discussion ↗

Pangram verdict · v3.3

We believe that this document is fully human-written

1 %

AI likelihood · overall

Human
100% human-written 0% AI-generated
SEGMENTS · HUMAN 4 of 4
SEGMENTS · AI 0 of 4
WORD COUNT 893
PEAK AI % 2% · §2
Analyzed
May 31
backend: pangram/v3.3
Segments scanned
4 windows
avg 223 words each
Distribution
100 / 0%
human / AI fraction
Verdict
Human
Pangram v3.3

Article text · 893 words · 4 segments analyzed

Human AI-generated
§1 Human · 1%

Netbooks are dead, but the Chuwi Minibook X scratches the same itch. The Minibook X is a 10.5″ x86_64 sub-ultrabook with 16GB RAM, a 512GB NVMe drive, and only one majorly annyoing Linux quirk. I needed a knock-around laptop, so I bought myself a Minibook for my birthday last year. The more I tote it around, the more fun I’m having with this ridiculous little computer.

Quick specs Much like the netbooks of yore, the Minibook is a budget machine. But it’s 2026, so even budget machines pack more oomph than I need from a utility laptop.

CPU 4-core/4-thread 3.6GHz Intel N150 Twin Lake 16 GB RAM – LPDDR5-6400 – soldered 😿 512GB NVMe – upgradable 10.51” IPS 2K 16:10 screen 28.88Wh Li-Ion battery Weight: 911g Ports: 2×USB-C (1×PD charging) Cost: $350

One oddity is that the Minibook comes bundled with a 12V/2A USB-C charger. I chucked the charger; I worried I’d fry some 5V SoC someday. The Minibook works fine with a PD charger.

I’d assume the 12V charger was a cost-saving choice, but it also creates some weird possibilities for DC/off-grid setups.

Linux and weirdness: sideways panels and kernel parameters

The fediverse told me that Minibook runs Linux “boringly well,” which was almost true. I tried Debian, then jumped to NixOS for kicks.

§2 Human · 2%

What works:

Camera/Microphone/Speakers Touchscreen Sleep/Suspend Hibernate Keyboard backlight USB-C HDMI Bluetooth (non-free blobs – Intel) Wi-Fi 6 (non-free blobs – Intel)

But on first boot, the screen orientation is 270° clockwise:

The Chuwi’s screen is a panel from a cheap tablet; the screen rotation issue is a hardware problem (the screen is mounted sideways). To fix the screen’s rotation, I had to tweak screen orientation at every software layer. Fixing this problem was a journey:

Bootloader – Switched from systemd-boot to grub, carrying some unmerged GRUB rotation patches on top. Initrd – Tell the Intel display driver about the panel orientation via a kernel parameter, and force the Intel driver to load in the initramfs. On NixOS: boot.kernelParams = ["video=DSI-1:panel_orientation=right_side_up"]; and boot.initrd.kernelModules = ["i915"]; (see Kernel docs for modedb default video mode support) Desktop environment – For X11, good ole xrandr --output DSI-1 --rotate right. Wayland picked this up from the DRM connector. This one was easy. Framebuffer – Ensure all TTYs have the proper orientation by adding fbcon=rotate:1 to kernel parameters boot.kernelParams = ["fbcon=rotate:1"]; (see Kernel docs for framebuffer console boot options)

Behold, the final result in all its glory:

Non-rotated system boot. Zero Cool's bootscreen courtesy of mainframed/Hackers-Plymouth

Size, weight, and build This computer is mind-bogglingly small. The build is sturdy and totable; it’ll hold up to a backpack jostling.

The laptop’s case is MacBook-esque: aluminum and good-looking. The MacBook Air’s dimensions dwarf the Chuwi’s, but the two laptops are about the same thickness.

§3 Human · 1%

A notebook that weighs more than a kilo is simply not a good thing – Linus Torvalds

The Minibook weighs in just shy of a kilo at 912 grams.

Perf, thermals, and power tl;dr: you get what you pay for. But battery life and cooling are better than I’d have guessed. The Minibook X was never going to compile the Linux kernel in record time. But the performance matches the specs, it stays cool, and it has enough battery life to run a movie marathon. Numbers:

Geekbench6 (a fun side-quest to get running on NixOS), better than I expected.

Single-core: 1295 Multi-core: 3332

Wi-Fi 6 speed: 424 Mbps, more than enough to stream a 4K movie. Power

Idle: 3.8W During benchmark: ~15W

Battery: When I left the 1995 classic film “Hackers” looping in VLC, the battery lasted about 6 hours. Heat: Running stress-ng for 10 minutes, the hottest part of the laptop chassis remained below 90°F (32°C):

What I dislike There’s so much to dislike about this laptop:

Screen is terrible – 2K? 50Hz refresh rate? Why!? Keyboard is terrible – it only registers keystrokes when you hit the exact center of each key. Touchpad is terrible – It’s a diving board-style, without physical buttons. Sound is meh – I can hear the tinny laptop speaker fine, but it’s underwhelming. I’ve never tried tweaking it in Pipewire, though; it’s possible it could be better.

But “terrible” is in comparison to the nicest modern laptops in existence.

§4 Human · 0%

Everything I listed here works fine. I’m honestly blown away when I tune my expectations to the sub-$400 laptop range.

Verdict In The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Jane Jacobs wrote, “new ideas require old buildings”: cheap spaces let people try risky ideas. The Chuwi Minibook X is an old building. I can brick the Minibook and have a normal Monday on my serious work laptop. Nothing has to work, which makes it perfect to try out new Linux desktop stuff:

NixOS – I’ve been using Debian for 15 years+, figured I’d try joining the NixOS cult for a while. RiverWM – I’m on a quest to find the Wayland version of XMonad; River is pretty close. KDE Plasma – I’ve used a tiling window manager for over a decade. What’s it like to use a desktop that Just Works™? Steam – Never been much into games, but I decided to give Steam a try since, well, why not?

Cheap, weird computers like the Chuwi make it safe to play. And playing with computers is still fun.

Playing Melatonin on Steam on the Chuwi