by amitheonlyone on 8/1/21, 2:35 AM with 7 comments
Now two things I didn't like was the weight at 2.2kg and screen size 15". I'd have like to have a 14" screen and weight around 1.5kg. There's a kind of business variant of this laptop which has an Intel i5 11th gen chip without the NVIDIA graphics and costs around the same. The advantage is that is it is 1.7kg.
I have been primarily using Linux for around 2 years now, so I do plan to dual boot Linux at the minimum. So I am worried about Ryzen compatibility. Can the HN crowd please give your opinion on whether the specs is ok for my use or I should look at something else?
I've posted about buying a laptop before but my budget didn't let me purchase it before.
The laptop I was looking at: https://www.amazon.in/dp/B096SKGTCG/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_glt_fabc_55E34DY0PP1WZ0NFG277
by AccordionGuy on 8/1/21, 4:00 AM
https://www.globalnerdy.com/2021/07/29/buying-a-used-laptop-...
I’ve had it only a few days, but I’m enjoying it. It runs circles around my previous Windows laptop (my work-issued machine is a MacBook Pro), my trusty ThinkPad T430 with 16GB RAM, especially since I used my Amazon points to bump the RAM up to the maximum 32 GB. I’ve been using it to build Android and Flutter mobile apps, learning Unity, Spring Boot/Kotlin web applications, and some Jupyter Notebook work. It also does a lovely job of playing GTA V.
by SheinhardtWigCo on 8/1/21, 3:11 AM
Inexpensive gaming laptops are always a significant compromise in some way. If you mostly use it for development and only use it for gaming occasionally, you might end up feeling like the compromise wasn't worth it. It depends how much gaming you want to do and whether you could do it elsewhere, like a console or PC.
There's a good subreddit for this kind of question: https://www.reddit.com/r/SuggestALaptop
by Grazester on 8/1/21, 2:59 AM