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That didn't take long to move into the OS platform wars!
If the school says, specifically, that students are required to be equipped with a Windows computer, that may be because assignments are given with extra software the students have to use that only runs on Windows.
It's not really a matter of what you like or what you prefer or how "free and open" you wish to signal that you are. You may have locked yourself into an OS when you chose your school and/or department.
That didn't take long to move into the OS platform wars!
If the school says, specifically, that students are required to be equipped with a Windows computer, that may be because assignments are given with extra software the students have to use that only runs on Windows.
It's not really a matter of what you like or what you prefer or how "free and open" you wish to signal that you are. You may have locked yourself into an OS when you chose your school and/or department.
For actually doing coding assignments (or any other serious work), having 1 or 2 large external monitors, a decent mouse, and a decent keyboard are the most critical aspects.
don't code. But this is 1,000% correct. I'd have two monitors beyond my main computer. Laptops frankly suck unless you travel a lot. When I've done video and audio work, I bought studio monitors for the audio. Never will go back. The right equipment goes a long way depending on the end goal. I dumped 64gb of RAM into my iMac when I got it. Running a 2015 and it runs smoother than a horny vagina.
Some of the intel processors (I think the U and Y series) may sound like a beefy multi core i5 or i7, but theyre power saving models, that trade battery life in exchange for less processing power.
Which processor would you recommend?
Windows or Mac is personal preference. ... They are all about the same in my book
16 GB of Ram is plenty. Windows or Mac is personal preference.... all have student discounts.
Maybe consider the brighter 500nit screen if you think they might want to code outdoors often (I always liked doing that, and a bright screen helps when the sun creeps up on you).
Thank you. Laptop screens are upgradeable at the time of purchase through Lenovo?
What screen size is appropriate? 14 or 15 inches?
Is aspect ratio important?
I just looked both the custom AND most preconfigured ones say "4+ month backlog"...damn supply chain. So I dunno if you can wait.
HunterTits says
Don't they all use Macs on college?
Only Art Fags.
nd, as you note, whatever you get you are stuck with. Good idea to get something you can live with.
Both have the worst track pads I have ever used. The
Both have the worst track pads I have ever used.
Are you in the computer industry? Would you consider mentoring my kid a little bit? I am not in the computer industry.
Both have the worst track pads I have ever used. The 2020 is better as the 2017 made the laptop barely usable at times (it was intermittent). I've tried all kinds of drivers without success but finally settled on uninstalling all of the lenovo software and let windows do the driving - this seems to have helped immensely.
Not into Apple ecosystem.
xeon cpus are also comparable to H (actually I think generally a bit higher end), but its kinda a high end thing allowing you to use ECC ram. I wouldnt mind one, but not sure I'd go out of my way for one unless I really wanted a top of the line model spare no cost.
Do not buy too cheap with less number of CPUs if he wants to do some serious stuff, very likely it will pay him back in no time.
I understand. I have no intention of going cheap. I am budgeted to spend upto $1500 to $2000. I just want him to have an excellent laptop that will get him through 4 years of undergraduate school. However, I do not want to overbuy and over complicate it. I just want something that will HIM and his needs.
Like other said, try
1. Mac that is close to Linux
2. If college requires windooooz (I see $800-$1500 6-8 CPUs, 16-32GB RAM at Costco) buy and install Virtual machine (like http://openbox.org) and install Linux on it.
3. Like others said above buy a (not too) cheap new/old laptop and install any Linux flavor (I like Ubuntu) with dual boot to keep windows and Linux.
Linux is very flexible to be able to install quite a number open source software and experiment while leaning, its a lot of fun :)
Do not buy too cheap with less number of CPUs if he wants to do some serious stuff, very likely it will pay him back in no time.
Has anyone here tried wsl (windows subsystem for Linux) yet?
It's like working on a computer from 2000. It works, but it's a little painful.
Has anyone here tried wsl (windows subsystem for Linux) yet?
Does anyone have any thoughts about how Dell Precision vs Lenovo Thinkpad laptops compare?
Any comments about this laptop for freshman in college of engineering?
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