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#16
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Best desktop replacement laptop? Any advice appreciated
Paul nospam needed.com wrote:
RayLopez99 wrote: .... I think the newsgroup lines in your USENET client must be broken. lol Do understand, Ray is a Google Groups user... You're supposed to fill them with appropriate selections of newsgroups. And really, you're familiar with computers already. Not a noob. Just go to a web site that will accept your credit card, get a computer with plenty of cores. Done. It's not like you have a lot of choice in laptops. They're all "cut from the same cloth". The major difference is probably upgrades/service difficulties. The simple answer is probably "the more you spend, the closer you get to a desktop replacement". Going further off topic, and getting smaller... Currently, a handheld like the iPhone and others hardly even do copy and paste. They are interesting though, if you don't mind making payments for two years. Besides a mobile phone, they function as various other handheld devices, with $2 software. For example... A GPS (very useful here, with the iPhone's big display screen). A radio scanner (plug your speaker minijack into the earphone output, stream music from the Internet through your wireless router, to save smartphone bandwith, and you have hi-fi FM stereo radio). A barcode scanner (going to try that one soon, like for comparing prices at the store by scanning the barcode and then looking it up using the built-in Internet connectivity). A television schedule. Some might find it very useful for Internet messaging. Maybe a few other significant applications, and a dozen lesser applications. It is growing on me. It is useful for doing little computing stuff especially when my desktop computer is off. And then there is the weather radar. Before I got a smart phone, I was thinking how cool it would be to have weather radar, especially for in-line street skating. I had noticed some fancy car commercial that appeared to have five day forecast weather displayed on the dashboard screen. Then I got the smart phone and noticed it had weather applications. A recent application is called WeatherScope (maybe USA only). You can get it for your PC for free from Oklahoma University (it takes some configuring). And they made a version for the iPhone. It is $10, but it rocks. When you turn on the iPhone and tap the WeatherScope application icon, using almost all of the screen, it downloads the most recent rainfall radar frame/picture for the location you had last displayed. Tap a single control button, and it downloads and displays an animated view of the most recent rainfall for that favorite location. I thought that technology was years away, not realizing the availability and application of handheld Internet connectivity. -- If you want to live in luxury, install a 2.5" SSD in it. Paul |
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#17
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Best desktop replacement laptop? Any advice appreciated
On Dec 10, 8:42*am, John Doe wrote:
Paul nospam needed.com wrote: RayLopez99 wrote: ... I think the newsgroup lines in your USENET client must be broken. lol Do understand, Ray is a Google Groups user... You're supposed to fill them with appropriate selections of newsgroups. And really, you're familiar with computers already. Not a noob. Just go to a web site that will accept your credit card, get a computer with plenty of cores. Done. It's not like you have a lot of choice in laptops. They're all "cut from the same cloth". The major difference is probably upgrades/service difficulties. The simple answer is probably "the more you spend, the closer you get to a desktop replacement". Any models appreciated. You own a laptop? Going further off topic, and getting smaller... Currently, a handheld like the iPhone and others hardly even do copy and paste. They are interesting though, if you don't mind making payments for two years. Besides a mobile phone, they function as various other handheld devices, with $2 software. For example... A GPS (very useful here, with the iPhone's big display screen). A radio scanner (plug your speaker minijack into the earphone output, stream music from the Internet through your wireless router, to save smartphone bandwith, and you have hi-fi FM stereo radio). A barcode scanner (going to try that one soon, like for comparing prices at the store by scanning the barcode and then looking it up using the built-in Internet connectivity). A television schedule. Some might find it very useful for Internet messaging. Maybe a few other significant applications, and a dozen lesser applications. It is growing on me. It is useful for doing little computing stuff especially when my desktop computer is off. And then there is the weather radar. Before I got a smart phone, I was thinking how cool it would be to have weather radar, especially for in-line street skating. Weather radar...ppfft. You need to have a fast internet connection, which here in Greece is lacking, even and especially with ADSL (PPPoE version) which is throttled due to inadequate hardware. Be happy you are in the USA where you have decent fibre optic infrastructure. Oklahoma is ... OK. RL |
#18
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Best desktop replacement laptop? Any advice appreciated
On 10/12/2010 01:21, RayLopez99 wrote:
On Dec 9, 2:46 pm, wrote: Why would someone in "comp.os.linux.setup" help you buy a Windows 7 laptop ? Mind boggling... Well that presupposes that Linux OS is so radically different than Windows7 that it requires special hardware. Even I, a Linux basher, am not prepared to go that far! :-) I think the point is that Linux users are fond of looking at alternatives, learning about what's available, and choosing the best tool for the job. Windows-only users are fond of buying whatever they are told, paying as much as is asked, and being thoroughly impressed just because their purchase looks shiny. There is therefore little doubt that one can get better quality technical advice on computer purchases from a Linux newsgroup than from a Windows newsgroup. Whether /Ray/ will get useful advice or not is a different matter. And whether he can understand the advice or not is yet another issue. And really, you're familiar with computers already. Not a noob. Just go to a web site that will accept your credit card, get a computer with plenty of cores. Done. It's not like you have a lot of choice in laptops. They're all "cut from the same cloth". Two issues: so you like "plenty of cores", eh? But my experience is that two cores vs a quad core is not that big a step, yet you pay a Windows doesn't do multitasking very well, and windows apps typically do not make much use of multiple processors. Two cores are definitely better than one, but most windows apps will not scale with more cores. There are a few programs that /will/ benefit from more cores even on windows - some games, some photo of video editors, etc. If you want to live in luxury, install a 2.5" SSD in it. No I heard that Windows 7 likes to "bip" the HD with a 1 second burst "log file" and these excessive writes will wear out your SSD. Some dual traditional mechanical HD + SSD try and get around this problem by having the trad. HD handle these "bips", but it's still experimental. SSD is still 2 to 5 years away from being mainstream. I'm sure there must be some way to fix this fault in Win7. But it is certainly true that Windows writes regularly to the disk in various places, with little or no user control. However, your "knowledge" about SSDs is several years outdated, and even then applied only to low-quality SSDs. A decent SSD can be written to continuously at full speed for years without failure - they are orders of magnitude better than hard disks for reliability and endurance. And they /are/ mainstream in every case where the price-per-GB is acceptable. http://www.storagesearch.com/ssdmyths-endurance.html |
#19
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Best desktop replacement laptop? Any advice appreciated
RayLopez99 raylopez88 gmail.com wrote:
John Doe wrote: The major difference is probably upgrades/service difficulties. The simple answer is probably "the more you spend, the closer you get to a desktop replacement". Any models appreciated. You own a laptop? Aren't their laptop groups, or groups with users who mostly use laptops? I would think so, since there is even a group for iPhone users. Going further off topic, and getting smaller... Currently, a handheld like the iPhone and others hardly even do copy and paste. They are interesting though, if you don't mind making payments for two years. Besides a mobile phone, they function as various other handheld devices, with $2 software. For example... A GPS (very useful here, with the iPhone's big display screen). A radio scanner (plug your speaker minijack into the earphone output, stream music from the Internet through your wireless router, to save smartphone bandwith, and you have hi-fi FM stereo radio). A barcode scanner (going to try that one soon, like for comparing prices at the store by scanning the barcode and then looking it up using the built-in Internet connectivity). A television schedule. Some might find it very useful for Internet messaging. Maybe a few other significant applications, and a dozen lesser applications. It is growing on me. It is useful for doing little computing stuff especially when my desktop computer is off. And then there is the weather radar. Before I got a smart phone, I was thinking how cool it would be to have weather radar, especially for in-line street skating. Weather radar...ppfft. Before leaving home or leaving for home, whenever there is any doubt about rain, I use weather radar. It accurately helps me get from here to there without getting rained on. Very useful. If you have current rainfall radar, you can tell whether and how long the rain will take to get there, unless it develops overhead (but that is rare). You need to have a fast internet connection, which here in Greece is lacking, The rainfall frames/images are very small. But you must have weather radar stations and the application must be programmed to use them. That is why I said "maybe USA only". I suppose Great Britain or France might be other places for such an application, any country that has publicly broadcasted weather radar. In Greece, you need angry-mob radar -- even and especially with ADSL (PPPoE version) which is throttled due to inadequate hardware. Be happy you are in the USA where you have decent fibre optic infrastructure. Oklahoma is ... OK. RL |
#20
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Best desktop replacement laptop? Any advice appreciated
A barcode scanner [smartphone app]
Tried one... Scans easier than the crud machines at Wal-Mart, even without a macro lens. |
#21
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Best desktop replacement laptop? Any advice appreciated
On Dec 12, 6:03*am, John Doe wrote:
A barcode scanner [smartphone app] Tried one... Scans easier than the crud machines at Wal-Mart, even without a macro lens. Do you have any hand-held barcode scanners in mind I can buy off the internet? Models and makes and links appreciated. RL |
#22
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Best desktop replacement laptop? Any advice appreciated
RayLopez99 raylopez88 gmail.com wrote:
John Doe wrote: A barcode scanner [smartphone app] Tried one... Scans easier than the crud machines at Wal-Mart, even without a macro lens. Do you have any hand-held barcode scanners in mind I can buy off the internet? Models and makes and links appreciated. The "devices" are applications being made for iPhones and probably other smart phones, for about $1 US. Apparently eBay bought "RedLaser" and made it free for the iPhone (and maybe other smartphones, I dunno). Used it today at Wal-Mart, worked well. And I have an iPhone 3G, that does not have a macro lens like on the 3GS or higher. Besides running typical applications, you can simulate other devices with a smartphone (most common might be GPS). Quite cool IMO. It ain't cheap, but the price for smartphones will fall with proper competition. For a barcode scanner simulator application, you need one with processing power, a camera, and Internet connectivity (for price comparisons). |
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