Over the past year the FreeBSD project has been making much progress on making it more viable to run this BSD operating system on laptop hardware. They have worked on better graphics driver support, improved power management / suspend, making sure audio is working, and even rolling out a KDE desktop option from the FreeBSD OS installer to ease the deployment on desktops. While that engineering work continues, they are also working now to make it easier to summarize laptop hardware working or not on FreeBSD.
The FreeBSD Foundation issued a call-for-testing of their Laptop Integration Testing project. They are looking to collect anonymized logs from those trying out FreeBSD on laptops to see what hardware components are covered by driver support and where driver support may be missing for FreeBSD. In turn the hope is to also make it easier for end users to find laptops that work well with FreeBSD.
With the volunteer community testing FreeBSD on their laptops, they hope it will be a more comprehensive compatibility matrix than existing solutions and with being GitHub-hosted an easier contribution process.
Those wanting to learn more about this FreeBSD Laptop Integration Testing can see the FreeBSD Foundation blog for all the details.
