What laptop are you using for your day to day work and why? |
What laptop are you using for your day to day work and why? |
dell latitude
i5 7th gen 2.5Ghz, 8Gb RAM, HDD 500Gb, 1366x768 HD display
second monitor Dell 1280x1024
Windows 10 enterprise 64bits
only because my employer forces me... they have some bulk deal with dell.I like it! It does the job. I don't mind the keyboard either, but day-to-day I either use a Filco Majestouch 2 keyboard or an Apple Wireless keyboard.
All my desktops are Win10.
Other than that, I've dropped it from my height on a tiled floor by accident, it landed on a corner. I've unbent screen part with pliers, and fixed cracked hinge with superglue, soda and steel wires, and that was it. Alternative would be to order a part of the chasis, but it would take too long. During the repair I've also weakened hinge resistance a bit, it was too strong for non-touchscreen version; should have done it from the start I guess.
Can't imagine working on anything else.
Some of my colleagues have an iMac + MacBook Pro setup. The iMac is at their desk and the MacBook Pro is for taking to meetings and working from home.
I switched from Macbook Pro 2013 to ~$1,000 Xiaomi Mi notebook pro (i7, 16GB, Dedicated GX card, better battery, HDMI port, 15inch, Mac like keyboard and touchpad, fingerprint reader). I run a right-swipe virtual machine and run chrome all day without issues. It's a good for 3 years machine. Screen is fullhd though.
In hindsight, I shouldn't have bought the macbook. There seems to be a second market for used laptops, though, and so I may sell it.
A coworker recently got the single GPU Serval, and I could see using that daily. Ubuntu 18.04 is a great desktop OS. I have tentative plans to take apart my Bonobo, remove the batteries, put power supplies inside with a standard power plug out the back and cut out the trackpad and fit in an Apple trackpad.
LXD+QEMU makes it a pretty nice machine. I almost don't miss OSX and this [0] project has solved a lot of those issues.
It just won't die. I tear it down once a year and clean it. I've started transitioning everything off of it to an Ubuntu VM on a home Proxmox server with a pass-through GPU, provisioned with 4-core 4gHz processing power.
I guess the keyboard on it is what I'm most comfortable with. It's gone through a couple batteries and power bricks, and I keep expecting it to not boot up one day.
If I had to get another laptop, I would probably not make much of the monitor, and plug in my HD TV like I have now. I would probably look for one comparable in size... For the keyboard. Laptops have wonky keyboards sometimes.
I was working linux for these years on it, but switched recently to Windows 10 + Microsoft's linux subsystem thingie - it works pretty nice - once this machine will totally break I think I'll consider one of Surface Books since the OS is not a problem for me anymore.
Why I work on it? It's fast (SSD + i7 (even if it's an outdated model) + 12GB of RAM) makes it really reliable for fullstack development. Besides that, 13" Screen is enough for me, makes it pretty mobile machine.
I have to say that installing Linux on that laptop was not the easiest, multiple challenges including wifi drivers and trackpad drivers issues. But once it's all fixed up, it works well. I chose it for a combination of low price and lightweight.
Why? Because my top-end 2013 MBP 15" died and I couldn't find anything I liked better. But it was still plenty fast.
I want to flee macOS, as Apple doesn't truly care about it anymore, but I can't tolerate anything else. I want to tolerate Windows 10 as a main OS but I can't get myself there, yet.
It's also a tank, built in the era before Apple got the idea that they can make their machines more flimsy and make more money.
If I was buying a new laptop, I’d look hard at the Lenovo Thinkpad X1 Extreme.
Soon: Undecided, was going to be an x1 extreme until they put the price up by £500 for no reason so itll likely be an xps15 or a 13-14" laptop and an eGPU next
The reason is that it's an "extreme" model. It has a better processor and way better graphics card. You can also still get this year's "non-extreme" X1 Carbon, the 6th generation. That's still the same price.