-Pyromaniac-
Member
it's all dependent on budget because there definitely is. But are you willing to pay that much?Is there a laptop which ticks these boxes:
- fast
- decent battery life
- good design/form
- decent gpu (eg 960M)
it's all dependent on budget because there definitely is. But are you willing to pay that much?Is there a laptop which ticks these boxes:
- fast
- decent battery life
- good design/form
- decent gpu (eg 960M)
it's all dependent on budget because there definitely is. But are you willing to pay that much?
xps 15 is obviously great. The bigger brother of the XPS 13 that everyone is recommending here. Also check out the Asus Zenbook Pro for beast specs at a similar price point. I think. Not sure how things are priced in the UK TBH.What price are we talking about? My budget is roughly £1,000
I've been searching around and found this:
http://www.dell.com/uk/p/xps-15-9550...p/pd?ref=PD_OC
Dell XPS 15. Seems to be pretty good. Worth a shot or anything better?
I actually like the price of the Inspiron 15 (http://www.dell.com/uk/p/inspiron-15...p/pd?ref=PD_OC) but the laptop looks bulky as feck. The battery life is superior to the XPS 15.
While the track pads are not quite as good as a Macbook, they're pretty close.
Macbooks are solid, with the biggest advantage being the trackpad.
Rumor on Macrumors today says the new MBP update won't come until Q4 but it will be pretty significant.
What price are we talking about? My budget is roughly £1,000
I've been searching around and found this:
http://www.dell.com/uk/p/xps-15-9550-laptop/pd?ref=PD_OC
Dell XPS 15. Seems to be pretty good. Worth a shot or anything better?
I actually like the price of the Inspiron 15 (http://www.dell.com/uk/p/inspiron-15-7559-laptop/pd?ref=PD_OC) but the laptop looks bulky as feck. The battery life is superior to the XPS 15.
depends what your definition of good is.
xps 15 is obviously great. The bigger brother of the XPS 13 that everyone is recommending here. Also check out the Asus Zenbook Pro for beast specs at a similar price point. I think. Not sure how things are priced in the UK TBH.
Is there a laptop which ticks these boxes:
- fast
- decent battery life
- good design/form
- decent gpu (eg 960M)
MacBook Air is outdated and currently EOL.Life is too short to not spend money on Macbook Air
Oh man, thanks for this link. My girlfriend desperately needs to get a new laptop as she goes into her final two years of her Elec. Engineering degree. I think I might get this for her - it looks absolutely awesome for this price. Loaded.I bought this Acer Aspire E 15 last week from Amazon and I absolutely love it.
$550
-6th Generation Intel Core i5-6200U Processor (Up to 2.8GHz)
-15.6-inch Full HD Display, NVIDIA GeForce 940MX with 2GB GDDR5 VRAM
-8GB DDR4 Memory, 256GB SSD
-Windows 10 Home; Backlit Keyboard
-Up to 12-hours Battery Life; 6-cell Li-Ion (2800 mAh) Battery
I mainly bought it for school, but it's definitely a capable gaming machine as well. Perhaps too capable, because I keep getting distracted from my studies >.>
Have you considered Clevo?
http://www.xoticpc.com/sager-np3240-clevo-n240ju-p-8800.html
The N240JU is a nice 14" that doesn't break the bank. I trust Clevo way more than I trust Dell.
Dell XPS 13 or 2016 Razer Blade 14
If you are cross shopping from $250-$3000, you should spend the extra money for speed and quality as you have mentioned. I can recommend the latest Razer blade only as it has gone though several revisions and it gold now.
Like, not shit.
I'd argue that it's challenged by heat management, as all thin and light laptops with powerful graphics cards are. That might change this fall with the new process, which could be a game changer for that subcategory.
By reading the op, it's clear that he's doing the same kind of thing I see all the time on this forum: namely judging a lower end windows laptop against a premium priced Mac, then saying that the Mac is nicer. If the user judges macs against competing windows machines at the SAME price point there are options with excellent build quality and internals that can challenge (and in my opinion beat) the Mac equivalent. The dell xps and hp spectre series are awesome for example, and could also look at the surface pro.
problem is all decent non chromebook laptops in that range are going to have some crippling flaw or just be shitty in general. Up that to 600 or so and you'd be wayyyy better off. I tried finding one but they're all varying degree of shit. More of a pick your poison kind of thing.
See that Acer Aspire E posted above for 549. Light years better than anything available at 400.
I bought this Acer Aspire E 15 last week from Amazon and I absolutely love it.
$550
-6th Generation Intel Core i5-6200U Processor (Up to 2.8GHz)
-15.6-inch Full HD Display, NVIDIA GeForce 940MX with 2GB GDDR5 VRAM
-8GB DDR4 Memory, 256GB SSD
-Windows 10 Home; Backlit Keyboard
-Up to 12-hours Battery Life; 6-cell Li-Ion (2800 mAh) Battery
I mainly bought it for school, but it's definitely a capable gaming machine as well. Perhaps too capable, because I keep getting distracted from my studies >.>
What would be the best laptop for the following use
- browsing, email, office, video/netflix
No games or other demanding stuff.
But good screen and battery life.
Chromebook maybe?
What's the screen footprint of the latest XPS 15? I know the XPS 13 is around 11 inches due to the infinity display, ago presumably around 13 inches?
Going to follow this, my current one is on its knees. Seems you can only get Chromebooks and £800+ mega monsters.
Just a general laptop question. What time of the year is the best to buy a new laptop?
i got a macbook pro 13 there maybe 8 months ago. had disliked os x for no reason for years just because apple, but i absolutely love my MBP, best laptop I've ever had or used and transitioning to os x was fine.
I'd argue that it's challenged by heat management, as all thin and light laptops with powerful graphics cards are. That might change this fall with the new process, which could be a game changer for that subcategory.
By reading the op, it's clear that he's doing the same kind of thing I see all the time on this forum: namely judging a lower end windows laptop against a premium priced Mac, then saying that the Mac is nicer. If the user judges macs against competing windows machines at the SAME price point there are options with excellent build quality and internals that can challenge (and in my opinion beat) the Mac equivalent. The dell xps and hp spectre series are awesome for example, and could also look at the surface pro.
Apple make nice laptops, but most people I know who have one have encountered some kind of serious hardware issue (with either the laptop or the charger) within 3 years.
They are nice machines, but I'm not convinced they are built to last.
Obviously this is just anecdotal evidence.
Mid-level laptops just don't make much sense anymore.
Almost all light computing tasks can now be handled in the browser, where ChromeOS excels. There's plenty of mid-tier and high-end computing that still requires a powerful machine (gaming, video editing, etc) but most mid-level laptops aren't going to give you enough horsepower for that.
Unless you have specific needs like, "the only game I play is League of Legends" or "I don't do much computing, but I need full Excel for certain functions/iTunes." Then sure. You're also going to find a lot of hefty bricks with bad battery life and traditional hard drives. After you try a slim machine with an SSD, it's hard to go back. Paying a few hundred dollars extra is worth it.
Funny this thread comes up... I'm actually thinking of getting a Chromebook to replace my 2012 MBA. I literally just have this thing hooked up to my monitor and power plug 24/7 to run Plex. Might as well just get a cheap desktop to do that and run with a Chromebook since it'll pretty much be able to do everything I need once they all run Android apps.
You just get a cheap Plex-compatible device like the Roku stick, Fire Stick, etc.