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MNT Reform: Open‑Source Hackable Laptop Review

Key Points

  • The MNT Reform laptop is deliberately designed for hackability and full hardware openness, offering schematics, 3D CAD files, and the ability to swap components like the keyboard, trackball, CPU module, or even individual battery cells.
  • It comes with a relatively high price tag (~$1,200‑$1,500), featuring an A311D 6‑core processor, 4 GB RAM, a 1 TB NVMe SSD, a trackball, and a modular, metal chassis that is considerably thicker (≈40 mm) than mainstream ultrabooks.
  • Its open‑source nature allows users to replace or upgrade virtually any part—including swapping the “banana” board for a Raspberry Pi or an IMX module—making it more of a developer/enthusiast platform than a mass‑market MacBook or Chromebook replacement.
  • While the build quality is solid and the mechanical keyboard feels premium, the laptop’s size, cost, and niche focus mean it’s aimed at a specific audience interested in repairability and customization rather than competing on price or sleekness.

Full Transcript

# MNT Reform: Open‑Source Hackable Laptop Review **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DA0Jr4WH-4](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DA0Jr4WH-4) **Duration:** 00:13:12 ## Summary - The MNT Reform laptop is deliberately designed for hackability and full hardware openness, offering schematics, 3D CAD files, and the ability to swap components like the keyboard, trackball, CPU module, or even individual battery cells. - It comes with a relatively high price tag (~$1,200‑$1,500), featuring an A311D 6‑core processor, 4 GB RAM, a 1 TB NVMe SSD, a trackball, and a modular, metal chassis that is considerably thicker (≈40 mm) than mainstream ultrabooks. - Its open‑source nature allows users to replace or upgrade virtually any part—including swapping the “banana” board for a Raspberry Pi or an IMX module—making it more of a developer/enthusiast platform than a mass‑market MacBook or Chromebook replacement. - While the build quality is solid and the mechanical keyboard feels premium, the laptop’s size, cost, and niche focus mean it’s aimed at a specific audience interested in repairability and customization rather than competing on price or sleekness. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DA0Jr4WH-4&t=0s) **MNT Reform: Open-Source Hackable Laptop** - The reviewer evaluates the costly, fully modular MNT Reform laptop—designed for open‑source customization, interchangeable parts like batteries, trackball, and CPU—and notes its appeal to tech enthusiasts rather than as a mainstream MacBook or Chromebook alternative. ## Full Transcript
0:00this laptop was made to be hacked but 0:02not like hackerman getting all your 0:04secrets no this laptop's design the 0:06components everything is open source and 0:09if iix it did a tear down they'd 0:10probably give it an 11 out of 10 I mean 0:13you can replace individual battery cells 0:15some people with these laptops hacked in 0:17their own speakers added more internal 0:18Ethernet or even swapped out the CPU 0:21itself does that mean I think you should 0:23buy it no probably not it's expensive 0:26and it's built for a certain type of 0:27person it's not going to replace a 0:29Macbook or a cheap Chromebook but why 0:31does this exist and why am I still 0:33excited about it we'll get to that this 0:36is the MNT reform and this unit was sent 0:38to me for testing it's going right back 0:40after I'm done making this video they 0:42haven't paid me anything and they have 0:43no input into this review and let's get 0:45specs out of the way quickly this 0:47version with a banana pcm4 pre-installed 0:50costs around 1,500 bucks the base model 0:52is closer to 1,200 but this one has a 6 0:55core a311d S so which I've tested before 0:58it's a bit faster than the compute mod 0:59module 4 but a bit slower than the RK 1:013588 in top-of-the line armed sbcs like 1:04the rock 5 model B it also has 4 gigs of 1:07RAM a 1 TB nvme SSD a track ball yeah 1:11and they sent along a few premium 1:13add-ons like this white pinch sleeve and 1:15a printed handbook but you can change 1:17literally everything not only can you 1:19pop out the keyboard and use it 1:20separately you can also swap out the 1:22track ball for a trackpad and you can 1:24swap out the banana pie for a Raspberry 1:26Pi or you can stick with a slightly 1:28slower but more IO capable IMX instead 1:31hackability is the name of the game I 1:33mean even individual battery cells could 1:35be replaced if you want but going along 1:37with the theme of repairability 1:39everything about this laptop from the 1:40motherboard to the track ball module is 1:42open-source Hardware that means there 1:44are schematics 3D CAD files pretty much 1:47every little detail is available for 1:48download meaning if you don't like the 1:50keyboard or track ball layout you could 1:52build one of your own it's like 1:53Frameworks laptop except it's truly open 1:56and hackable Hardware since MNT isn't 1:58playing in Intel s sandbox they have the 2:00freedom to open up a lot more of their 2:02stack including their firmware that 2:04comes with some downsides though like 2:06look at how thick this thing is closed 2:09it's about 40 mm tall that's fighting 2:11with 25-year-old laptop designs in terms 2:13of overall thickness it's a nice metal 2:16body though so it doesn't have much flex 2:18and the mechanical keyboard hearkens 2:19back to a time when laptop keyboards 2:21actually felt nice a MacBook Air this 2:24ain't it's just not built to compete in 2:26that market or with things like 2:27Chromebooks to demonstrate that and more 2:29I'll jump right into my experience using 2:31it to be honest this bottom is so pretty 2:33with that clear acrylic cover I almost 2:35don't want to touch it but touch it I 2:37must because the first step in setting 2:39this thing up is connecting the 2:40batteries if you don't want to get your 2:42hands dirty and take full ownership of 2:44your laptop the MNT reform is not for 2:46you one thing to note the sleeve feels 2:48nice and premium and it should for over 2:50100 bucks but it was a bit hard to get 2:52on and off it's a tight fit at least 2:54brand new and like the thickness it 2:56hearkens back to when computers came 2:58with nice dust jackets but honestly I 3:01throw my laptop in a bag with a built-in 3:02sleeve anyway so I don't know if I'd put 3:04down the 150 bucks or so for this sleeve 3:07MNT sent over a trackpad and a compute 3:09module 4 Kit in separate little boxes 3:11and I'll get to installing both of those 3:13soon they also sent along a sticker 3:15which will now feature on my sticker 3:16board back here so thanks for that the 3:18power supply they ship is a meanwell so 3:20it's a quality adapter and it's rated at 3:2260 WTS which is probably a bit generous 3:25I don't think this system would ever 3:26pull that much but better safe than 3:28sorry there's a 4 amp fuse by the power 3:30plug so this thing couldn't pull more 3:32than 48 WTS for more than a few seconds 3:34anyway one thing I found slightly 3:35annoying was there's no indication on 3:37the top or side that you have it plugged 3:38in it'd be nice if there were a tiny LED 3:40showing whether the laptop's plugged in 3:42and charging as it is there's just this 3:44Amber LED hanging out under the wireless 3:46antenna you could get the information 3:48when it's booted up but I like having a 3:49visible indicator on the outside that's 3:51a minor gripe though let's get this 3:53thing boot it up and booting it up is a 3:55little different too you press the 3:57circle key then the little OLED above 3:59the keyboard lights up from here you can 4:00turn on power turn off power and get at 4:03some other basic utilities like checking 4:05individual battery cell voltages but I 4:07wanted to boot it up so I chose that 4:08option the b os the reform ships with is 4:11already pretty complete it comes with a 4:13ton of software built in and two 4:15different graphical environments in my 4:16case sway or gnome and they actually 4:19just change things up and move to wfire 4:20but I'll cover gnome here but before 4:22that let's take a peek on the command 4:24line now I already know how to do things 4:26like install neofetch and check out the 4:27specs or set up ierf 3 to test the 4:30network speed but if you don't the first 4:32thing you see after logging in is this 4:33nice page of help topics I like how they 4:35do that and they also have a whole 4:37section on Linux basics in The Operators 4:39manual doing that helps people who might 4:41know a little bit about Linux but never 4:42actually used it before and dumping you 4:44into the command line kind of forces the 4:46issue too it's not like you just boot 4:48right into a web browser like a 4:49Chromebook you have to learn how to do 4:51that in Linux but gome it is I spent 4:53some time getting used to the reform and 4:55the little a311d chip is fast enough for 4:57at least casual use I could play 4:59playback YouTube videos at 1080p though 5:01the 10 built-in speakers won't hold a 5:03candle to my MacBook to move in and I'm 5:05going to show you everything including 5:07the wmount network rack I just set up in 5:09the back but if you want to solve that 5:10just plug in some headphones the 5:12built-in amp sounds great on my at m20s 5:15But there again there's a little 5:17annoyance that's not a big deal but it 5:19is different than most other modern 5:20devices when I plugged in my headphones 5:22I also had to go into the sound settings 5:24and switch outputs I don't have to do 5:26that on my Mac or pretty much any PC in 5:28the past decade or two but there might 5:30be a way to hack Linux a bit to get that 5:32automatic output switching to work but 5:34that's kind of the theme with this thing 5:35it gets very close to what I'm used to 5:37but it's just a tiny bit different you 5:39enough to be grading the first few hours 5:41while I'm using it like take the 5:43keyboard it has a split space bar layout 5:45and if you're like me and your muscle 5:46memory has you hitting the center of 5:48where the space bar should be you have 5:50to either adjust your muscle memory to 5:51hit one of the other parts or remap the 5:53keys to use spacebar there again and the 5:55same goes for the control key which is 5:57moved up to where caps lock would 5:58normally be for me I'm a weirdo and I 6:01remap that to escape but on this 6:02keyboard I have to remap control back 6:04down to the bottom left to get 6:06comfortable again I mean it's not super 6:08hard to do but this keyboard is pretty 6:10fussy like that I'd rather just have a 6:11standard North American cty layout like 6:13I'm used to otherwise though this 6:15keyboard's mechanical switches feel 6:17great certainly better than almost any 6:19other laptop I've touched it needs room 6:21for it meaning the laptop's a bit chunky 6:23but it is nice to type on this thing and 6:25moving down a bit you can go with either 6:27a track ball or trackpad I tried both 6:29and I had a couple gripes with both of 6:31the options while I do love track balls 6:34the old giant Kensington track ball was 6:35pretty awesome back in the day this one 6:37was a bit smaller and sunken down so far 6:40it was hard to control it really well 6:42even with the tracking speed set to Max 6:44it took far too much work to move around 6:46the screen with it having tons of 6:47mechanical buttons around it was nice 6:49too but I ultimately went for the 6:51trackpad instead and that's not without 6:53its quirks either though it it doesn't 6:54have any physical buttons so you have to 6:56use tap to click which I don't like just 6:58because it feels a little less precise 7:00to me also that means dragging things 7:02around or resizing Windows requires a 7:04little bit of a dance as you tap and 7:06hold with one finger while the other 7:07fingers do the moving Apple's trackpad 7:09is still my gold standard but at least 7:11with this built-in trackpad the tracking 7:13speed was nicer and two finger scrolling 7:15worked great the screen was great too 7:17and it's not a bad size for the HD 7:19resolution there's an external HDMI port 7:21but at least with the banana pie cm4 you 7:23can't use it yet it did work fine when I 7:25swapped in a compute module 4 though and 7:27I like that the software Demming 7:29controls work out of the box sometimes 7:30with these Linux laptops you can't 7:32adjust it to lower brightness or the 7:34power saving dimming function doesn't 7:35work but other Hardware integration into 7:37gome was a little wonky the battery 7:39indicator would work sometimes and other 7:41times it would just show as 0% whether I 7:43was plugged in or running off battery 7:45power there are some power commands you 7:47can run in Linux to get that info but I 7:49just wanted the time estimate or a 7:50percentage to show and I did run through 7:52one full battery cycle playing back this 7:54fireplace live stream on YouTube full 7:56screen and it ran for about 2 and 1/2 7:57hours so you can probably get get a bit 7:59more than that if you use it more 8:01conservatively it did shut itself down 8:03when the battery was exhausted though so 8:04it's nice to know that the power 8:06management is working behind the scenes 8:08even if the UI was a little bit rough 8:09Wi-Fi was also quirky and gnome I kept 8:11trying to connect to my network and it 8:13would say authentication required but it 8:15never actually popped a password 8:17dialogue this looks like a gnome issue 8:19though since I found other people with 8:20that same problem the fix was to connect 8:22to a hidden network even though mine 8:24isn't really hidden that got me online 8:26and it's nice to have both wired 8:27ethernet and Wi-Fi built into this 8:29laptop now as far as the physical 8:31Hardware is concerned the hinges are 8:33great and solid and there is a little 8:35magnet that holds the lid closed just 8:37enough tension here that you can get one 8:39finger to pull up the lid but I do 8:40wonder if like my ancient PowerBook the 8:42heavy screen will start to Sag after a 8:44few years with all that weight on these 8:46hinges the nice thing with the reform is 8:48everything and I mean everything is 8:51available on their store you can just 8:52buy a set of hinges if yours wears out 8:54that combined with the fact that things 8:56in this laptop are actually big enough 8:58to be repaired without breaking things 9:00is one of the main draws to this laptop 9:02what's a little less though is the 9:04thickness I measured it at about 40 mm 9:06for comparison my 25-year-old PowerBook 9:093400c is 65 so we're doing good against 9:12that but it's more than three times 9:14thicker than my MacBook Air a lot of 9:16modern bags and backpacks aren't made 9:18for thicker laptops like this it it fits 9:20in my old Case Logic shoulder bag but 9:22only barely the thing is if you're 9:24spending over a th000 bucks on a laptop 9:26with these specs you probably aren't 9:28buying it to be an ultral light it's 9:30much more reasonable as an open Hardware 9:32portable computer than a Sleek go 9:34everywhere laptop even though you could 9:36use it that way in a pinch overall the 9:38thing I love most about the hardware is 9:40the quality of all the finishes the ease 9:42of access to every part and the fact 9:44that I can get at everything and even by 9:47replacement parts if something breaks 9:48and that's what will sell certain people 9:50on this laptop not the specs and to 9:52illustrate just how flexible this design 9:54is I decided to swap in my own compute 9:56module 4 for the banana pie it wasn't 9:58hard and the printed guide that came 10:00with the upgrade kit had all the details 10:02and some nice illustrations you flip 10:03over the computer remove the acrylic 10:05bottom cover remove the heat syn unseat 10:08the B pi cm4 and plug in the pi now 10:10there are a couple extra things you need 10:12to do for the pi for one there's only 10:14one Wi-Fi antenna plug on the cm4 so you 10:16should really tape off the other one 10:18that's inside so it doesn't short 10:19something out on the motherboard and you 10:20also need to install this HDMI to 10:22display port adapter so the internal 10:24display works this was probably the most 10:26delicate part of the whole operation 10:28these tiny wires are a little fragile 10:30and you have to pull them to full 10:31extension to get it to plug in but I did 10:34get it back together oh and remember to 10:36reconnect the batteries before you put 10:37the bottom cover back on otherwise it 10:39won't do much it does run if you just 10:41have Wall power and no batteries which 10:43is nice but then it's not very portable 10:45when I booted it up the internal display 10:47didn't seem to be working with the 10:48compute module I did get output through 10:51the HDMI port but then I got this error 10:53saying the SD card didn't initialize 10:55correctly I tried three different micro 10:57SD cards even a fullsize SD s d card all 10:59with raspberry pios and got the same 11:01error so I finally switched over to an 11:04emmc compute module bypassing that 11:06external SD card slot that seemed to do 11:08the trick and to make sure it would boot 11:10properly I also had to follow a few 11:12steps and prep the pie with the right 11:13Hardware settings I wrote up my 11:15experience and exactly what I did to get 11:17it working in this GitHub issue so if 11:19you're trying to do the same thing go 11:20check that out for more but with all 11:22that out of the way I finally got 11:23everything to boot on the p and most 11:25things worked great the internal nvme 11:28slot doesn't work on the py though so 11:29you have to use a mini PCI to nvme 11:31adapter if you want to use the SSD with 11:33the compute module but it is cool that 11:35that's possible the reform has actually 11:37been around a while now and users have 11:39been hacking away at these things for 11:41over a year in fact some people made 11:43completely custom setups like jacelin 11:45with a fully custom keyboard or Autumn 11:47Reigns so quartz build MNT also has a 11:50pocket reform that's in final 11:52pre-production right now and they 11:53announced that they're working on MNT 11:55reform next a slimmed down version of 11:57the reform the sample unit runs an RK 12:003588 and it should be around 26 mm thick 12:03which is a lot more like a modern laptop 12:05than a brick and if Raspberry Pi manages 12:08to make a compute module 5 in the same 12:09form factor as the cm4 you could upgrade 12:12your reform to be even faster it's 12:14certainly been fun having this here for 12:15a few weeks and I'm a little sad to see 12:17it go it wouldn't be able to run as my 12:19daily driver since it can't quite handle 12:214K video like I need and it only has 1 12:23GB networking but it is a very cool 12:25project and I hope MNT research can 12:27continue getting the funing to build the 12:29hardware they're building their entire 12:31philosophy is open at the core and 12:33that's extremely difficult to find in 12:34the hardware space especially for 12:36actually working Hardware that ships 12:38I've seen many open Hardware startups 12:40come and go and I thought MNT would be 12:42too good to be true but they've been 12:44around enough time I have faith to 12:46launch the next and it'll be even better 12:48in the end though do I think you should 12:49buy one of these maybe but for most of 12:52you watching this probably not it's a 12:54little too expensive for the hardware 12:56you get but there's a certain type of 12:58person this laptop is perfect for and 13:00for you yeah get one it's refreshing to 13:03see Hardware like this in a sea of 13:05impossible to repair laptops with lock 13:07down firmware until next time I'm Jeff 13:10Ging