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Seems like Lenovo Thinkpads are real popular here, can anyone say why exactly? I already like Lenovo and am using one right now, am considering looking for a Thinkpad of some sort on eBay but I don't really know if that's the best thing for me to do. I can spend up to about £500 but might prefer to spend less if I can still get something good
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 00:29 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 08:36 |
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Skandranon posted:They are not. With a larger drive, you may run out of space less. And some drives, like the Intel 750 PCIe, arrange their chips differently between the 480gb and 1.2tb versions that result in increased speeds, but this is not a function of size, but of differences between models. I believe I've read here before that a 250GB is faster than a 120GB SSD due to using more memory channels.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 00:30 |
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Paperhouse posted:Seems like Lenovo Thinkpads are real popular here, can anyone say why exactly? Relatively durable, good keyboards, trackpoint, good parts ecosystem.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 00:37 |
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Are the screens on their business laptops still a loving embarrassment though? And if not, when did they finally start getting better?
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 01:11 |
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Butt Savage posted:Are the screens on their business laptops still a loving embarrassment though? And if not, when did they finally start getting better? They're an embarrassment unless you buy the IPS upgraded versions. To compensate for finally offering better screens they started putting shady stuff on the laptops and the trackpad got worse.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 01:22 |
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Butt Savage posted:Are the screens on their business laptops still a loving embarrassment though? And if not, when did they finally start getting better? late 2013, early 2014 but it doesn't stop IT directors from being cheap and buying lovely screens.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 01:22 |
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Wilford Cutlery posted:I believe I've read here before that a 250GB is faster than a 120GB SSD due to using more memory channels.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 01:31 |
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havenwaters posted:They're an embarrassment unless you buy the IPS upgraded versions. Oh yeah, I read about Mr. Fish, alright. I expected that poo poo from Acer or Asus or maybe even Dell (they sorta did, though, didn't they?), but from Lenovo and on their business line of all things? loving incredible. Calidus posted:late 2013, early 2014 but it doesn't stop IT directors from being cheap and buying lovely screens. It's just outright pathetic considering there's a $300 chromebook with a respectable screen out there and yet Lenovo can't be bothered to do that for their $700+ machines without paying a premium. I'm probably gonna pick up a refurb T-series some time next year just to dick around with, so hopefully I can get one with the better screen.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 02:08 |
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Lenovo charges $60 to upgrade to the 1080p IPS. It's not much of a premium.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 02:35 |
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Mu Zeta posted:Lenovo charges $60 to upgrade to the 1080p IPS. It's not much of a premium. The problem isn't cost, it's that many enterprises still rely on software that won't scale and 1080p is just too much for a lot of users even on a 15" laptop (let alone a more common 12 or 14" model)
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 03:00 |
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Butt Savage posted:Oh yeah, I read about Mr. Fish, alright. I expected that poo poo from Acer or Asus or maybe even Dell (they sorta did, though, didn't they?), but from Lenovo and on their business line of all things? loving incredible. Dell's was stupidity rather than malicious, and a fairly easy fix. They left a default certificate in the Windows install that made their laptops wide open to man-in-the-middle attacks because it would pass all security certificates without checking them.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 03:06 |
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This looks really great for the money. The only thing I'm really struggling with is determining if I'd be able to install a 2nd HD inside.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 18:33 |
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A few reviews mention a free SATA bay, though apparently no screws. 2.5", obviously.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 19:12 |
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Aphrodite posted:A few reviews mention a free SATA bay, though apparently no screws. 2.5", obviously.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 19:43 |
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Fukkin christmas shopping. I'm looking at folding 2-in-1s and trying to find something small with good build quality and battery life. I'm very interested in finding something more economical than a Surface Book that nonetheless shares its squarer aspect ratio, and if you like listening to grognards for some reason, I would be happy to complain about the market preponderance to "widescreen" for you. I'm aiming for a moderate resolution (1680x1050 or so), and as long as it has an SSD, I'm not worried about the computational specs unless they are aggressively awful. Right now I'm kind of dialed into the Yoga 3 11", but since it's a Lenovo, I'm curious about its build quality. I could drop a couple hundred more on the pro model if that would ensure a more solid machine. They also make a Thinkpad version, but since this is lenovo-original design and there would be basically zero inherited engineering from the IBM days, I can't imagine the name is worth anything on its own. Interestingly, the Yoga 2 Pro is also still relevant, purportedly having the same battery life and a better (non-mobile) processor while being only moderately heavier than its successor. I've read the past 20 pages and it seems that, pertaining to this sort of machine, nobody has any of the solid, dictatorial authority that I usually like seeing in recommendations for Goons. Nonetheless, I'm hoping to hear your opinions.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 23:00 |
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Eikre posted:I'm looking at folding 2-in-1s and trying to find something small with good build quality and battery life. Why? They're all far too bulky to use as tablets anyway so I don't see why you'd pick one over a normal laptop.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 23:04 |
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The screen size isn't happening. Your other option to consider is an HP Spectre.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 23:35 |
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dissss posted:Why? They're all far too bulky to use as tablets anyway so I don't see why you'd pick one over a normal laptop. Well, unlike detachables and flipcovers, folders retain a form-factor that is so close to an ordinary laptop that, in theory, you're not trading much away. The tablet configuration is inappropriate for banging around with for extended periods, but it's a pretty good alternative when you're using the machine over your crossed legs, or when you need to carry it over to show somebody something and would prefer not to cradle it awkwardly in a topheavy configuration. The "easel" configuration is also underrated: it is a very good way of drawing the display closer to you without the footprint encroaching on your workspace, and it provides a comfortable and angle-adjustable means of manipulating the touch-screen without suspending your arm over a keyboard. If you're actually bringing your laptop everywhere and expect to be working with it in places like the university laboratory or while you're seated in a vehicle, it begins to make a lot of sense. Granted, when you opt for this style of machine, you do limit your choices and probably pay a little more than you need to. If the intended recipient hadn't articulated a specific desire for one, I wouldn't be looking, but it's what she wants and I can certainly appreciate why.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 23:42 |
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Get her an XPS 13 with the QHD touchscreen and she'll be a lot happier instead of with a 2-in-1. I just got one in the last few weeks and it's finally a laptop that I feel like I could take anywhere that runs well, is light as hell and doesn't have a cripplingly short battery life. I tried the 2-in-1 formfactor myself and found it really awkward and uncomfortable in practice.
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# ? Dec 14, 2015 23:56 |
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Eikre posted:Right now I'm kind of dialed into the Yoga 3 11", but since it's a Lenovo, I'm curious about its build quality.
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# ? Dec 15, 2015 00:14 |
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Think I'm going to buy either a T450 or an X250 - given that their specs are nearly identical is it really just the size of them that would sway it either way?
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# ? Dec 15, 2015 01:23 |
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Eikre posted:Fukkin christmas shopping. Go look at the HP Pavilion x360. Make sure it's the newer model (x360 11t) with two swivel mounts instead of one long one. It's a tubby little bastard with decent battery life, quad-core, and an IPS display.
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# ? Dec 15, 2015 03:01 |
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Butt Savage posted:Oh yeah, I read about Mr. Fish, alright. I expected that poo poo from Acer or Asus or maybe even Dell (they sorta did, though, didn't they?), but from Lenovo and on their business line of all things? loving incredible. It was never in their business line.
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# ? Dec 15, 2015 07:27 |
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Hey folks, power supply question. I'm looking at getting a laptop that comes with a 1kg, 180w power supply. I *do* want to be able to move around reasonably and so I am happy to part with $100 or more for an adapter that is 0.2kg lighter (money comes from an expense account anyway). I'm looking at getting one of these http://www.pcspecialist.co.uk/notebooks/defianceII-15/ (don't worry about why, I have my reasons) does anyone know how to check and be sure about getting compatible power supplies? I know it voids the warranty. I'm happy to stay at 180w so long as I can be guaranteed there will be no monkey business. Inverse square fucked around with this message at 13:43 on Dec 15, 2015 |
# ? Dec 15, 2015 13:40 |
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Basch lives. posted:It was never in their business line. Superfish wasn't, but the Customer Feedback Program adware was.
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# ? Dec 15, 2015 14:48 |
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dissss posted:Why? They're all far too bulky to use as tablets anyway so I don't see why you'd pick one over a normal laptop. What's an iPad, 7 or 9 inches? Even an 11.6" 2-in-1 is a loving joke. Also 16:9 In all seriousness you can't have something like that that's good at two things. Unless you could just rip the keyboard off it and have a regular tablet. I'd compromise the PC part before the tablet part, IMO.
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# ? Dec 15, 2015 16:30 |
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He already said he doesn't want a tablet, he wants a laptop with a display that's more flexible for presentation.
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# ? Dec 15, 2015 16:38 |
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I am currently on the fence regarding purchasing a SP4 to replace my Asus Vivotab and my Yoga 2 pro. I used the Asus for taking handwritten notes and sketching at work until the digitizer stopped working (just out of warranty, naturally) and use the Yoga for presenting in meetings and doing work which our hilariously crappy and poorly configured corporate laptops cannot do (these things are restricted to running a locked down version of IE9 and even cannot use Lucidchart, which I have to use a LOT for work) My thinking is that a SP4 could replace both of these devices, particularly with the optional docking station and a couple of spare monitors which I can beg from our office IT guy. I'm not super enamored with the configurations available though- the M3 version could probably run everything I need just fine and I like the fact that it is fanless, but the 4 GB of ram seems really chintzy. I don't really want to pay a $400 premium just for an additional 4 gigs of ram (don't care about the drive size since I'll use cloud storage and chuck a microSD card in if I ever need extra local storage), but I also don't want to be regretting not having that 8 gigs of memory 2 years from now. Any thoughts?
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# ? Dec 15, 2015 20:05 |
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Longbike posted:I am currently on the fence regarding purchasing a SP4 to replace my Asus Vivotab and my Yoga 2 pro. I used the Asus for taking handwritten notes and sketching at work until the digitizer stopped working (just out of warranty, naturally) and use the Yoga for presenting in meetings and doing work which our hilariously crappy and poorly configured corporate laptops cannot do (these things are restricted to running a locked down version of IE9 and even cannot use Lucidchart, which I have to use a LOT for work) It would probably be really good for the use cases you describe. But you will want the extra RAM, no doubt about that.
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# ? Dec 15, 2015 20:28 |
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This might be more a tech report thing, but does anyone have juddering/freezing after waking up their laptop from sleep? I have the recommended 960m Dell, and its is absolutely perfect except for this problem. Don't know if its a dell thing, a nvidia hard/software thing, or a Windows 10 thing... Edit: it usually means I end up restarting my laptop every time I open it which takes... 10 seconds? So not a huge problem. Still, best to avoid if I can. Stumiester fucked around with this message at 03:01 on Dec 16, 2015 |
# ? Dec 16, 2015 02:55 |
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Is there any reason I shouldn't grab a cheap refurb Latitude E7450 to replace my T430s? It'd be a 5300u with 8GB RAM and a 256GB SSD Seems slightly lighter weight and still has a trackpoint but comes with a 1080p IPS screen (which even if it isn't fantastic has to be better than the ThinkPad) and should have double the battery life
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# ? Dec 16, 2015 03:47 |
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So I recently returned a Surface Book due to a multitude of software issues I didn't feel were worth waiting to be fixed in addition to my own admittedly all-too-high expectations for the GPU. I'm looking around for a replacement and decided I don't really need tablet functionality at all since I've also recently upgraded to a Note 5 and that pretty much handles all my media consumption/note-taking needs. I'm currently trying to decide between pulling the trigger on the 4K i7 XPS 15 that the Microsoft Store currently has in stock or waiting for the MacBook Pro refresh that is supposedly coming early and should theoretically upgrade the 15" model wayyy more than this year's refresh did. I really like the way the XPS looks but I have a couple of questions if anyone's dealt with it since I don't live near a MS Store and Best Buy doesn't have it on demo. Is the 4K display too glossy? I hear the 1080 display is a great matte but I'd prefer the 4K if it's not too reflective. Does the trackpad have bad software support like most Windows laptops or is W10 actually good with that stuff now? And is it light enough to use on your lap comfortably or is it really more of a desk workstation? This is all anecdote stuff really so I appreciate any feedback!
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# ? Dec 16, 2015 09:38 |
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Butt Savage posted:but from Lenovo and on their business line of all things? How does this relate to screens? ThinkPads have been using the same TN panels since they switched to widescreen in the T61 models. I'm sure they continue to sell them as the baseline screen because it's the baseline screen.
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# ? Dec 16, 2015 16:15 |
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I just go myself a Dell XPS 15 9550 as a kind of early christmas present. Great machine, just one flaw: The fans are on even if the machine is doing nothing whilst connected to AC power. Is there a way to remedy or limit this, or a way to outright control the fans? edit: Reinstalling solved this. I suspect dell software is implicated. champagne posting fucked around with this message at 09:56 on Dec 17, 2015 |
# ? Dec 16, 2015 18:05 |
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BottleKnight posted:I really like the way the XPS looks but I have a couple of questions if anyone's dealt with it since I don't live near a MS Store and Best Buy doesn't have it on demo. Is the 4K display too glossy? I hear the 1080 display is a great matte but I'd prefer the 4K if it's not too reflective. Does the trackpad have bad software support like most Windows laptops or is W10 actually good with that stuff now? And is it light enough to use on your lap comfortably or is it really more of a desk workstation? This is all anecdote stuff really so I appreciate any feedback! I bought the Dell XPS 13 256gb/i5/8gb RAM a couple weeks back: I haven't found the 4k display too glossy, but I'm also not using the machine in direct sunlight very often. I'd imagine that if you tried to use it outside during the day in full sun it could be problematic unless you maxed the brightness. For reference, I have my brightness set at 30% and I still find it plenty bright indoors. I originally had the 1080p matte screen but my unit had/developed hardware issues after a week (the screen flickering issue you may have read about) so I exchanged it, and the QHD+ screen was the only available option at the time. The trackpad is good. It's a precision as you might expect, including pinch zoom, control panel access (four finger tap), application switch (three finger swipe) etc. I haven't had any sensitivity issues and the scrolling is fine. I can confidently say the machine is amazingly light and comfortable enough to use on my lap on the couch or in bed, and I don't think I've ever used a laptop or tablet where I could say that. It also barely warms on the underside. The XPS 15 is about a pound heavier, I think. I do light/indie gaming on my machine so I didn't care about having a dedicated graphics card. If you do then I'd probably go with the 15, if you're less of a PC gamer then I would go for the 13.
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# ? Dec 16, 2015 19:03 |
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Are laptop prices expected to go down in January? I was looking at this machine. The current deal looks pretty good, but I'd read that prices may get better next month.
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# ? Dec 16, 2015 19:25 |
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Could someone point me toward a good tutorial on how to transfer my documents/important crap off a laptop? I'm getting a new computer soon but I'm going to be doing a full wipe/fresh windows install of the old one so I can give it to a relative.
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# ? Dec 16, 2015 19:27 |
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a shameful boehner posted:I bought the Dell XPS 13 256gb/i5/8gb RAM a couple weeks back: Thank you! I game enough and do video editing here and there so I'm definitely heading for the 15 but that's very good to know. I know 4K will probably do a doozy on the battery life but it looks like a worthwhile upgrade considering the amount of screen in that little laptop. And 4.5 pounds seems crazy light for that amount of hardware!
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# ? Dec 16, 2015 19:28 |
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It's not even 4.5 - my XPS 13 is 2.75 lbs and I think the XPS 15 is 3.8. I'm still consistently amazed at the screen when opening the laptop and/or watching 4k videos, which it handles like a champ. I have gotten about 8 hours of battery life with my usage habits, screen set between 30-70% brightness, streaming videos, downloading large files, and a few light games like HOMM3. I wonder if the Intel 520 graphics chip could handle Civ V... Be wary of scaling issues. I just ran into my first one when trying to use SOAPUI, and SOAPUI is not at all capable of handling a super-high DPI screen. Interface text got resized to about 8pt. font, and there aren't any options to change it to scale appropriately that I can find.
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# ? Dec 16, 2015 19:45 |
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# ? May 14, 2024 08:36 |
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Paperhouse posted:Think I'm going to buy either a T450 or an X250 - given that their specs are nearly identical is it really just the size of them that would sway it either way? Quoting this I've read around and it seems as though the X250 screen is much nicer too. I'm used to a 15.6" laptop though and am wondering if I want a screen that small, even if it is nicer. Is the T450 screen really that bad? Bear in mind that I'm using a Lenovo G550 at the moment which was a budget consumer laptop even 5 years ago when I got it, and I don't really have an issue with the screen, though I've not had much to compare it to. Help me decide, I keep swaying between them!
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# ? Dec 17, 2015 01:58 |