BWR1953
Admiral
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2009
- Messages
- 6,279
I typically “jump in” to learn about recent tech when I need it, then I buy it and get back out. I generally don't stay up to date.
Such is the case now.
I prefer Windows.
My current laptop is a Dell e6500 running Windows 7, which was built in 2008 and which I purchased used 3 years ago for $125. Prior to this one, I’d had a Dell e6400 which I’d owned from 2010 and I got that one used for a couple hundred bucks as well. When it went bad, I swapped the hard drive out of it into the e6500. Quick and easy.
So: the e6400 from 2010 until 2017 and the e6500 from 2017 until today.
Before those, I’d had desktops.
So now I’m researching and learning and trying to budget for what I really need, not something that’s the latest and greatest just for fashion sake. And sticker shock is setting in, as it always does when a person is on a fixed income like me.
My uses:
In addition to routine email, ‘net surfing, etc., I also need a pretty strong machine to do video editing. But I’ll also be live-streaming and downloading TV shows and movies from the internet, so storage and speed are factors. I also may give the new laptop to my stepson when he leaves home in a few years when he turns eighteen. So, I don't want something "too ancient" for him.
I’m learning that I’ll probably want an SDD drive with NVMe. I’ve been looking at 1TB SSD storage, 32gb RAM and at least an Intel Core i5 processor or better. I'm open to AMD but I haven't owned one in 25 years. :noidea:
Some of the computers that I’ve checked out have over-clocked the CPU such that it’s as much as 3 times faster than original. But these machines are from resellers who take the original machines and hop them up. I’m fine with that, but I’ve read some reviews where customers have stated that they couldn’t get OEM warranty support because the modified machines were considered “used” since they were purchased previously by the resellers to install the upgrades.
Thoughts and suggestions?
Such is the case now.
I prefer Windows.
My current laptop is a Dell e6500 running Windows 7, which was built in 2008 and which I purchased used 3 years ago for $125. Prior to this one, I’d had a Dell e6400 which I’d owned from 2010 and I got that one used for a couple hundred bucks as well. When it went bad, I swapped the hard drive out of it into the e6500. Quick and easy.
So: the e6400 from 2010 until 2017 and the e6500 from 2017 until today.
Before those, I’d had desktops.
So now I’m researching and learning and trying to budget for what I really need, not something that’s the latest and greatest just for fashion sake. And sticker shock is setting in, as it always does when a person is on a fixed income like me.
My uses:
In addition to routine email, ‘net surfing, etc., I also need a pretty strong machine to do video editing. But I’ll also be live-streaming and downloading TV shows and movies from the internet, so storage and speed are factors. I also may give the new laptop to my stepson when he leaves home in a few years when he turns eighteen. So, I don't want something "too ancient" for him.
I’m learning that I’ll probably want an SDD drive with NVMe. I’ve been looking at 1TB SSD storage, 32gb RAM and at least an Intel Core i5 processor or better. I'm open to AMD but I haven't owned one in 25 years. :noidea:
Some of the computers that I’ve checked out have over-clocked the CPU such that it’s as much as 3 times faster than original. But these machines are from resellers who take the original machines and hop them up. I’m fine with that, but I’ve read some reviews where customers have stated that they couldn’t get OEM warranty support because the modified machines were considered “used” since they were purchased previously by the resellers to install the upgrades.
Thoughts and suggestions?