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fatman1683 posted:Thanks, that's a pretty great deal. Only downside is it doesn't have an IPS display, which I forgot to specify originally as it's pretty important. http://www.dell.com/en-us/work/shop/cty/pdp/spd/inspiron-15-7572-laptop/cai157w10p1c2629 i7-8550U 8GB upgradeable to 16 at least Dont know if it has a M2 slot but it has two drive slots IPS MX150 is better than the 940mx you were looking at And the most important feature: Not a refurbished laptop Chances are there will be a coupon code you can use as well or find it cheaper sold elsewhere
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# ? May 18, 2018 21:38 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 19:08 |
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1gnoirents posted:http://www.dell.com/en-us/work/shop/cty/pdp/spd/inspiron-15-7572-laptop/cai157w10p1c2629 Nice one, thanks. I'm not a huge fan of Inspirons and in that small a chassis the i7 is probably going to thermal throttle, but it's definitely a good buy. Thanks!
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# ? May 18, 2018 23:10 |
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1gnoirents posted:I dont mind how they do it. Then you should've been content with the "proprietary power supply" remark, because that's the only way you're going to get >100 W. The current USB PD spec cannot transfer more than that; it's not designed to do so and the devices need to negotiate power transmission, so no device is going to be configured to request more than the spec can deliver. 1gnoirents posted:I emailed Anker yesterday and they actually responded. They are coming out with USB hubs that can pass through 130-180 watts, but no ETA. They did tell me it'd cost around and look similar to this product You could have a dock that supplies more power, but only 100 W over a single Type C port, with the rest going to the other ports.
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# ? May 19, 2018 02:52 |
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Hi, what's the build quality of the HP Elitebooks like? I've been thinking about getting one of the 700 series when the models with the AMD cpu comes out, because I like the look of the specs, but they don't seem to have gotten brought up much in the last couple pages and i'm not really eager to go digging too far back
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# ? May 19, 2018 03:22 |
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The 820 and 840 G1/2/3/4 we use have always been rock solid but I’ve heard a few bad things about cooling and stability on the G5 Be aware the basic screens are still garbage but hey they have proper docks, upgradeable memory and track point buttons still.
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# ? May 19, 2018 06:09 |
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nwin posted:Well the good news is I guess Lenovo is having a 30% off sale for Memorial Day and the corporate code gets you in early, so I was able to grab something with better specs for the same price. If the sale had been going on when I purchased I'd have ordered it with a SSD instead of planning to upgrade it myself; that's shaping up to be an ordeal, with special hardware and cables being needed with a $60 price tag and more than a month of lead time...
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# ? May 19, 2018 18:14 |
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Eletriarnation posted:You may not want to wait long enough for them to get common/cheap, but we're already starting to see Intel 6-cores in gaming laptops and there's a range of mobile Coffee Lake models up in ark.intel.com so we should be seeing some more mainstream models of laptop with them soon. I don't know how the performance compares to the 4 core i7-7700hq processors in laptops with better cooling though.
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# ? May 20, 2018 00:17 |
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Atomizer posted:Then you should've been content with the "proprietary power supply" remark, because that's the only way you're going to get >100 W. The current USB PD spec cannot transfer more than that; it's not designed to do so and the devices need to negotiate power transmission, so no device is going to be configured to request more than the spec can deliver. Yes sorry thats what i meant by "I dont mind how they do it". As long as its functionally a pass through hub like all the others ill be happy. For now that doesnt seem to exist but it most likely will, even if it takes up two ports on my laptop.
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# ? May 20, 2018 02:06 |
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I would imagine that there will be a new PD spec that exceeds 100w in the next couple of years. I really wish the mini USB-C docks did not have a hard wired cable and use a second port instead. The hard wired cables are always 4-6" long and all the cables end up cluttering the table. Give me a 6' cable so I can stuff all that garbage in the drawer or under the table by the power supply. It's 2018 I don't need 60 cables snaking all over my desk anymore.
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# ? May 20, 2018 07:40 |
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I wouldn't be surprised if the next-gen USB-PD solution goes to somewhere around 48-52 volts, since you're not going to get much more amperage through the same cables. That voltage range is already semi-common in professional IT gear thanks to power-over-ethernet, which would also make it convenient for those kinds of devices to support a "USB PD next-gen" input as their alternative. The current standards are limited to 5 amps and 20 volts, for a maximum of 100 watts. If we assume the same amperage limit with a goal of 48 volts delivered to the device (so a bit higher at the source depending on cable length) we're talking 240 watts, which I think is more than enough for any laptop that one could reasonably care about easy portability.
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# ? May 20, 2018 14:45 |
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My trusty T530 seems to be on its way out after four years of hard use and going around the world. After putting in vague search terms for some kind of T-series and getting 200 results, I've decided to trust my major purchasing decisions to strangers on the internet. Use: Minimal gaming (I guess I played Civ 5 and Pillars of Eternity on low settings a couple times level), no graphic design or rendering, just shitposting and anime Wants: SSD, 15" screen, another ThinkPad of some variety. HDMI port would be a plus, lighter is a plus, durable and has a CD/DVD drive are musts.
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# ? May 20, 2018 19:48 |
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This might sound sarcastic or stupid, but are there ANY major manufacturers left out there that are shipping a DVD drive on their current gen laptops? I would expect that you'd be stuck with an external.
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# ? May 20, 2018 20:10 |
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Ok this might be a dumb question but I only ever have put parts in a desktop and never even owned a laptop until 2 years ago. It's a budget one I got on a black friday deal but plays my counter strike just fine. Anyway I bought the less expensive version with a 1tb HDD instead of the one that had an SSD. I'm led to believe that it has some sort of slot to put a laptop ssd in if I had one. My question is is it possible to put a regular desktop SSD in? I have one just sitting around and want the extra space.. This is the laptop This is the drive I want to put in
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# ? May 20, 2018 21:27 |
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The Dell Inspiron 15 5000 has modern parts and a DVD drive, but if you hate AMD its out because it uses Ryzen APUs. The 2500U /should/ be able to handle the games but I havent looked too deeply into benchmarks to confirm. There's a few lower end "gaming" laptops that also have an optical drive for whatever reason. Asus has a couple, and Acer has at least one. Lenovo has an Ideapad with a drive but it maxes out at 8GB of ram and is last gen both in CPU and GPU (7200U+MX940)drunken officeparty posted:Ok this might be a dumb question but I only ever have put parts in a desktop and never even owned a laptop until 2 years ago. It's a budget one I got on a black friday deal but plays my counter strike just fine. Anyway I bought the less expensive version with a 1tb HDD instead of the one that had an SSD. I'm led to believe that it has some sort of slot to put a laptop ssd in if I had one. My question is is it possible to put a regular desktop SSD in? I have one just sitting around and want the extra space.. The laptop you have has 1 2.5 slot and an M.2. If you want to add the desktop SSD you would have to remove the 1TB drive, otherwise you'll need an M.2 form factor SSD which looks like this Arcon fucked around with this message at 21:37 on May 20, 2018 |
# ? May 20, 2018 21:34 |
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EDIT: Never mind, I'm an idiot.
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# ? May 21, 2018 01:50 |
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Red Crown posted:My trusty T530 seems to be on its way out after four years of hard use and going around the world. After putting in vague search terms for some kind of T-series and getting 200 results, I've decided to trust my major purchasing decisions to strangers on the internet. Not a Thinkpad, but this checks most of your boxes. G-Prime posted:This might sound sarcastic or stupid, but are there ANY major manufacturers left out there that are shipping a DVD drive on their current gen laptops? I would expect that you'd be stuck with an external. You can certainly still find built-in optical drives, but they're just not going to be in the thin & light ("Ultrabook") models. For example, see the laptop I linked above. drunken officeparty posted:Ok this might be a dumb question but I only ever have put parts in a desktop and never even owned a laptop until 2 years ago. It's a budget one I got on a black friday deal but plays my counter strike just fine. Anyway I bought the less expensive version with a 1tb HDD instead of the one that had an SSD. I'm led to believe that it has some sort of slot to put a laptop ssd in if I had one. My question is is it possible to put a regular desktop SSD in? I have one just sitting around and want the extra space.. Arcon covered this, but let me suggest leaving the HDD in there, adding the SATA m.2 SSD, then reinstalling the OS on the latter (keeping the HDD will let you use it for game/multimedia storage.) All of the expansion (including RAM) is accessible under a single door fastened with IIRC 3 screws: Left-to-right, the 2.5" bay, m.2 slot, 2xDIMM slots. You could've just flipped your laptop over and discovered this for yourself though.
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# ? May 21, 2018 08:32 |
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Isn't the mx150 pointless and no better than Intel integrated graphics? Edit: lol I guess with ram being so expensive it's better just to have the dedicated ram, though. mystes fucked around with this message at 09:00 on May 21, 2018 |
# ? May 21, 2018 08:58 |
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G-Prime posted:This might sound sarcastic or stupid, but are there ANY major manufacturers left out there that are shipping a DVD drive on their current gen laptops? I would expect that you'd be stuck with an external. https://www.costco.com/Dell-Inspiron-15-5000-Series-Touchscreen-Laptop---Intel-Core-i7---1080p.product.100403040.html
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# ? May 21, 2018 09:22 |
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Arcon posted:
Is there no such thing as like a sata to m2 adaptor or something? Or an external thing that it can plug into and go through USB (yes I'm aware that would destroy the point of an SSD, I'm just looking for the storage space).
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# ? May 21, 2018 10:45 |
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mystes posted:Isn't the mx150 pointless and no better than Intel integrated graphics? extremely wrong
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# ? May 21, 2018 12:53 |
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mystes posted:Isn't the mx150 pointless and no better than Intel integrated graphics? The MX150 is basically a mobile GT1030 (although there are at least two versions with a substantial speed difference, boo Nvidia) which is a lot faster than even current Intel integrated and generally able to trade blows with the Vega in a 2400G. Not really good enough to make a "gaming laptop" but it would be the difference between "unplayable at any settings" and not for some games. e: but don't take my word for it, here's a source Eletriarnation fucked around with this message at 16:15 on May 21, 2018 |
# ? May 21, 2018 16:11 |
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drunken officeparty posted:Ok this might be a dumb question but I only ever have put parts in a desktop and never even owned a laptop until 2 years ago. It's a budget one I got on a black friday deal but plays my counter strike just fine. Anyway I bought the less expensive version with a 1tb HDD instead of the one that had an SSD. I'm led to believe that it has some sort of slot to put a laptop ssd in if I had one. My question is is it possible to put a regular desktop SSD in? I have one just sitting around and want the extra space.. I'm honestly just morbidly curious what you're using an internal optical drive for that you need one built in to your laptop in 2018
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# ? May 21, 2018 16:45 |
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drunken officeparty posted:Is there no such thing as like a sata to m2 adaptor or something? Or an external thing that it can plug into and go through USB (yes I'm aware that would destroy the point of an SSD, I'm just looking for the storage space). You could just put it in a usb enclosure. It wouldn't destroy the point of an ssd either, your random reads would still be much faster than a spinner. It doesn't really make any sense though, why not replace your hard drive with the ssd and put that in the enclosure? edit: Hadlock posted:I'm honestly just morbidly curious what you're using an internal optical drive for that you need one built in to your laptop in 2018 this too, I don't think I've actually needed an optical drive for like 4 years
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# ? May 21, 2018 16:49 |
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Because I already have the ssd. I'm working with a cheap black friday laptop here I'm not exactly Bill Gates.
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# ? May 21, 2018 17:15 |
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If you don't actually care about the optical drive there are often adapters you can buy or in some cases even 3D print which will allow you to install a SATA 2.5" drive in the bay.
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# ? May 21, 2018 17:23 |
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drunken officeparty posted:I'm not exactly Bill Gates. we get it u like linux
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# ? May 21, 2018 18:13 |
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Outside of my consoles and my car from 2003, I haven't used an optical drive for over a decade.
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# ? May 21, 2018 18:57 |
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drunken officeparty posted:Because I already have the ssd. I'm working with a cheap black friday laptop here I'm not exactly Bill Gates. Then yeah, you should get a usb enclosure, put the HDD in that, and install your OS of choice on the SSD youre replacing the HDD with. Should get you the most benefit out your situation anyway.
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# ? May 21, 2018 21:36 |
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https://www.sprint.com/en/shop/plans/2-in-1-always-connected.html are available with free unlimited data from Sprint for X time, and then $15/mo for unlimited data after that (with AutoPay discount). Laptops that qualify: ASUS NovaGo, HP Envy x2, Lenovo Miix 630
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# ? May 21, 2018 22:32 |
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drunken officeparty posted:Because I already have the ssd. I'm working with a cheap black friday laptop here I'm not exactly Bill Gates. I think you're missing what I'm saying. Put the SSD in your computer and put the hard drive in an enclosure.
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# ? May 21, 2018 22:42 |
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This ticks pretty much everything I need, my only turn-off is the 256GB SSD. So, I checked out something similar, and it looks like getting the 500GB SSD pushes you up to a higher overall weight class. I'm willing to plop down the extra money for it, as long as there aren't any big red flags here: bad resolution, known poor product quality, better deal from another product line, etc.
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# ? May 21, 2018 22:45 |
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Red Crown posted:This ticks pretty much everything I need, my only turn-off is the 256GB SSD. So, I checked out something similar, and it looks like getting the 500GB SSD pushes you up to a higher overall weight class. I'm willing to plop down the extra money for it, as long as there aren't any big red flags here: bad resolution, known poor product quality, better deal from another product line, etc.
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# ? May 21, 2018 22:47 |
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mystes posted:Isn't the mx150 pointless and no better than Intel integrated graphics? You could've actually spent 30 seconds to find benchmarks and see for yourself how wrong you are instead of getting ridiculed in this thread by everyone else! drunken officeparty posted:Is there no such thing as like a sata to m2 adaptor or something? Or an external thing that it can plug into and go through USB (yes I'm aware that would destroy the point of an SSD, I'm just looking for the storage space). I'm not sure what you're going for at this point, but there are indeed m.2 internal adapters/enclosures in addition to USB enclosures. Again, I'm not sure what you want at this point because you inquired about adding an SSD, were interested in m.2, but apparently have a 2.5" drive lying around. Modest Mouse cover band posted:https://www.sprint.com/en/shop/plans/2-in-1-always-connected.html are available with free unlimited data from Sprint for X time, and then $15/mo for unlimited data after that (with AutoPay discount). Oh god, those are the ARM-based Windows laptops. No thanks, we've been down this road before! Red Crown posted:This ticks pretty much everything I need, my only turn-off is the 256GB SSD. So, I checked out something similar, and it looks like getting the 500GB SSD pushes you up to a higher overall weight class. I'm willing to plop down the extra money for it, as long as there aren't any big red flags here: bad resolution, known poor product quality, better deal from another product line, etc. That other laptop you found is a worse version (WXGA instead of FHD display and the other things mystes noted) of the one I recommended, and as I just mentioned in the post you quoted, you can upgrade the storage yourself via m.2/NGFF and/or a 2.5" bay: Atomizer posted:Arcon covered this, but let me suggest leaving the HDD in there, adding the SATA m.2 SSD, then reinstalling the OS on the latter (keeping the HDD will let you use it for game/multimedia storage.) All of the expansion (including RAM) is accessible under a single door fastened with IIRC 3 screws: If the included 256 GB SSD isn't enough, you can very easily replace it yourself (and potentially resell the original for like $60-80 if you have nothing else to do with it) or just add whatever you want in that 2.5" bay, although it looks like for Acer laptops that don't come with that bay occupied, you have to request the mounting hardware.
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# ? May 22, 2018 05:20 |
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Atomizer posted:
I want the exact opposite of that adapter. A way to plug in a 2.5" drive into the m.2 slot.
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# ? May 22, 2018 07:24 |
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Technically this exists but the next serious question is going to be "Where do you intend to put this drive? The M.2 hole is not big enough, and there's not room for another 2.5 drive" at which point you are taking the HDD out anyway and should have just plugged the SSD into the sata port already accessible from that position. Im legitimately surprised they make these things, the usecases for them is few and far between. "Guy sits with laptop back open 24/7" and "Computer toucher has to check the port and just wants to use his normal sata ssd for testing instead of buying a full M.2 drive" are about all that comes to mind immediately.
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# ? May 22, 2018 07:43 |
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What laptops out there have 3x3 or 4x4 MU-MIMO wave2 802.11ac WiFi built in? I need one for testing purposes.
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# ? May 22, 2018 08:23 |
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Arcon posted:Technically this exists but the next serious question is going to be "Where do you intend to put this drive? The M.2 hole is not big enough, and there's not room for another 2.5 drive" at which point you are taking the HDD out anyway and should have just plugged the SSD into the sata port already accessible from that position. Im legitimately surprised they make these things, the usecases for them is few and far between. "Guy sits with laptop back open 24/7" and "Computer toucher has to check the port and just wants to use his normal sata ssd for testing instead of buying a full M.2 drive" are about all that comes to mind immediately. Depending on just how unwiedly it would be, I am willing to keep the laptop back open 24/7. I just use it as a desktop anyway. It stays plugged in and I haven't moved it as a portable computer since I bought it.
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# ? May 22, 2018 11:05 |
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CrazyLittle posted:What laptops out there have 3x3 or 4x4 MU-MIMO wave2 802.11ac WiFi built in? I need one for testing purposes. I think they top out at 2x2; at least the good Intel part and the newest Killer one does. drunken officeparty posted:Depending on just how unwiedly it would be, I am willing to keep the laptop back open 24/7. I just use it as a desktop anyway. It stays plugged in and I haven't moved it as a portable computer since I bought it. Well, if you're serious about being crazy, I suppose the next concern is powering the drive, since I don't think that adapter had power. After that, cross your fingers and hope it works. No promises it will work, never used it, etc.
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# ? May 22, 2018 17:22 |
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In mid june I'm going to be traveling for a month or so and during this time, would like to get some work done. I'd like something super, super cheap (in case it get's stolen or something) that I can run linux on and android studio. Those are basically my only requirements. I read the op and was looking at the Asus X205, but I'd like at least 8gb of RAM. Any other recommendations for something in like, the $300 range that I can install linux on and just use for programming?
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# ? May 22, 2018 18:00 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2024 19:08 |
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sausage king of Chicago posted:In mid june I'm going to be traveling for a month or so and during this time, would like to get some work done. I'd like something super, super cheap (in case it get's stolen or something) that I can run linux on and android studio. Those are basically my only requirements. i think the easiest thing thatll meet this requirement is going to be a refurbed lenovo x230 off ebay or something
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# ? May 22, 2018 18:02 |