TheCochese
Banned
Apologies if there is already a what computer should I buy thread, I didn’t see one. Because of what I’ll explain, it doesn’t fit into any one manufacturer thread. This is also going to be fairly long.
Inspired by a comment in the Chromebooks outsell Mac thread, I am in need of some suggestions for a new laptop. I am indeed one of the rare few that are cross-shopping the $250 Chromebooks all the way to the $2000 MacBook Pros. As such, I could use some suggestions on what laptop I should get for my use case.
I currently have a HP ProBook 4540s. 15.6”, 1366x768 matte screen, Core i5 3210M, 8GB RAM, 750GB HDD, Win10. It’s fine, and the only upgrade I’d do to it now is swap in a SSD. The battery life does suck, though, around three hours if I’m lucky. This laptop is however going to one of my offspring for general use, so I am in need of a new one. I want a premium experience, or close to it. Something with a good keyboard (backlit, if possible), a good trackpad (glass, if possible), good to great battery life (6+ hours), easily portable with a good screen (1080p or better).
The primary need for this would be to function for work, when needed. I work from home auditing medical records, and 95% of the time I do that at my desktop. Dual 24” screens (one for work, one for play) make things nice and easy to see, and it’s my preferred choice. Using Win10, I open IE and use the built-in ActiveX capability to remote into my work computer, a Win 7 headless terminal. I get the full experience this way. I also get that experience on my laptop, obviously though I have to switch back and forth if I want to look at something through the laptop as opposed to the VPN. I'd need to use it for work when I went out of town, or want to take my kids to the park during office hours. Outside of work needs, I don’t do much besides do some writing for my website, watch some YouTube, and browse the web. I don’t really PC game, but having Steam capability would be nice. It certainly doesn’t have to be a spec whore. I use Office 365 apps, but I can use those on just about anything. I am pretty platform agnostic.
At first glance the choice would be to go with another Windows laptop, and I’m not short of choice there. However, since I can use Citrix Receiver, I can access a modified version (low-res menus, etc) through a variety of different means. I’ve tested on Android and a Xubuntu laptop and I could work just fine. This brings into play Chromebooks (Citrix available on Chrome OS and soon Android compatibility). Obviously I can also use a MacBook with Citrix, or I can run Parallels or Boot Camp.
The advantage to Windows is that it is a known entity. Being in healthcare, reliance on Windows isn’t going anywhere. I could easily remote or do anything I needed. The price range is all over the place, but the low end is filled with middling hardware, and the top end is a bit overpriced. Disadvantage is that a lot aren’t well made, and sticking to Windows is honestly not exciting.
The advantage to Chrome is the price. I can get a fairly nice one for $250-$300. If Citrix works like it should, then compatibility isn’t a big deal. Disadvantage is lack of native storage, reliance on web-based computing for the most part. Screen size trends to smaller than I want.
The advantage to OSX is the unknown. I haven’t used an Apple computer regularly since the IIc days, but they’ve been appealing for a while. Everything is premium, including the price, unfortunately. I’m waiting to see what WWDC brings for 2016 before I would buy one, but have been considering the current models if I could score a discount ($300) like what tempted me before. I could run Windows on the side, or use Citrix. Plus the screen, keyboard and trackpad are really good from what I’ve tested in-store. Disadvantage is price.
I’ll list what I have my eye on. I know I don’t want to go any lower than 13”, so I think the Surface line is out unless someone can make a good case. Touch screen is an extremely low priority. I already have a Win 10 8” tablet and a Nexus 7.
Chromebook: Toshiba Chromebook 2, Acer Chromebook 14
Windows: Dell XPS 13 (Amazon link)
Apple: MBP 13” or 15”. 13” Air would be a consideration, but I might as well spend a bit more for the Pro.
Inspired by a comment in the Chromebooks outsell Mac thread, I am in need of some suggestions for a new laptop. I am indeed one of the rare few that are cross-shopping the $250 Chromebooks all the way to the $2000 MacBook Pros. As such, I could use some suggestions on what laptop I should get for my use case.
I currently have a HP ProBook 4540s. 15.6”, 1366x768 matte screen, Core i5 3210M, 8GB RAM, 750GB HDD, Win10. It’s fine, and the only upgrade I’d do to it now is swap in a SSD. The battery life does suck, though, around three hours if I’m lucky. This laptop is however going to one of my offspring for general use, so I am in need of a new one. I want a premium experience, or close to it. Something with a good keyboard (backlit, if possible), a good trackpad (glass, if possible), good to great battery life (6+ hours), easily portable with a good screen (1080p or better).
The primary need for this would be to function for work, when needed. I work from home auditing medical records, and 95% of the time I do that at my desktop. Dual 24” screens (one for work, one for play) make things nice and easy to see, and it’s my preferred choice. Using Win10, I open IE and use the built-in ActiveX capability to remote into my work computer, a Win 7 headless terminal. I get the full experience this way. I also get that experience on my laptop, obviously though I have to switch back and forth if I want to look at something through the laptop as opposed to the VPN. I'd need to use it for work when I went out of town, or want to take my kids to the park during office hours. Outside of work needs, I don’t do much besides do some writing for my website, watch some YouTube, and browse the web. I don’t really PC game, but having Steam capability would be nice. It certainly doesn’t have to be a spec whore. I use Office 365 apps, but I can use those on just about anything. I am pretty platform agnostic.
At first glance the choice would be to go with another Windows laptop, and I’m not short of choice there. However, since I can use Citrix Receiver, I can access a modified version (low-res menus, etc) through a variety of different means. I’ve tested on Android and a Xubuntu laptop and I could work just fine. This brings into play Chromebooks (Citrix available on Chrome OS and soon Android compatibility). Obviously I can also use a MacBook with Citrix, or I can run Parallels or Boot Camp.
The advantage to Windows is that it is a known entity. Being in healthcare, reliance on Windows isn’t going anywhere. I could easily remote or do anything I needed. The price range is all over the place, but the low end is filled with middling hardware, and the top end is a bit overpriced. Disadvantage is that a lot aren’t well made, and sticking to Windows is honestly not exciting.
The advantage to Chrome is the price. I can get a fairly nice one for $250-$300. If Citrix works like it should, then compatibility isn’t a big deal. Disadvantage is lack of native storage, reliance on web-based computing for the most part. Screen size trends to smaller than I want.
The advantage to OSX is the unknown. I haven’t used an Apple computer regularly since the IIc days, but they’ve been appealing for a while. Everything is premium, including the price, unfortunately. I’m waiting to see what WWDC brings for 2016 before I would buy one, but have been considering the current models if I could score a discount ($300) like what tempted me before. I could run Windows on the side, or use Citrix. Plus the screen, keyboard and trackpad are really good from what I’ve tested in-store. Disadvantage is price.
I’ll list what I have my eye on. I know I don’t want to go any lower than 13”, so I think the Surface line is out unless someone can make a good case. Touch screen is an extremely low priority. I already have a Win 10 8” tablet and a Nexus 7.
Chromebook: Toshiba Chromebook 2, Acer Chromebook 14
Windows: Dell XPS 13 (Amazon link)
Apple: MBP 13” or 15”. 13” Air would be a consideration, but I might as well spend a bit more for the Pro.