What is the best laptop to buy for programmers?
I'm running Visual Studio 2008, SQL Server, and occasionally Photoshop CS2.
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What is the best laptop to buy for programmers? I'm running Visual Studio 2008, SQL Server, and occasionally Photoshop CS2. |
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I like this Gateway 6860FX. Large 17" screen, a keyboard that resembles a normal one, close enough at least, though had to get used to yet another layout of arrow keys, home end etc. Lots of memory, fast. Didn't look at exactly what CPU etc - everything available today is plenty fast enough for me. Runs linux (Ubuntu and Arch) just fine, all devices ok. One factor tipping me toward this one - it looks cool. Black with rust orange trim around the keyboard. Most laptops look drab. Gotta have fun and style if i'm going to sit at this machine all day. On the downside, shorter battery life, a bit heavy to carry around - but then i meant to use it as a desktop replacement not a notebook for everyday coffee shop use. |
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I use a MacBook Pro running Vista 32bit, booting directly into a bootcamp partition. Rarely boot into the Mac OSX. Doing dev work with vmware is possible but painful due to minor sluggishness after a few hours of working in that environment. I would not recommend the MBP running Vista/VS2008 under vmware for fulltime work. The builtin keyboard for the Macbook Pro lacks home, end, pgup and pgdn keys. This makes working without an external keyboard/monitor painful. Running native Vista and external keyboard and monitor, the MBP works wonderfully as a dev machine. Works with 30" monitors requiring dual-link DVI. |
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I vote for any Lenovo T Series Notebooks. Every single one of them kicks ass. They main reason is they have non-glaring displays. (and they were the last company to cancel out 4:3 displays - I've got one of the last (T61p)) They also have reasonable battery life. (5-10 hours depending on the configuration). They are very durable and beautiful (imo). And they have the trackpoint, which I also like very much. |
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Personally what I'm looking as an ideal laptop for programmer would be a big screen (17") with a big resolution (like WUXGA, 1920x1200). But it should remain fairly light. Performance has to be good (correct CPU, lots of RAM, fast hard-drive), but it's not the primary criteria. Graphic card doesn't matter, should actually be integrated maybe, to save power. Somehow in the PC world there doesn't seem to be anything that matches these. When going into the 17" world, it's either gaming machines or machines for graphic designers or photographs, and they are all monsters (see the Lenovo W700, it even has pen tablet). Only one that seems to get close is the MacBook unibody 17", ok, but it's sad not to have another choice. Notebook review forums have a thread on the topic what laptop get close to the macbook 17", and there isn't :( |
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I use a core 2 duo 5500 with 2Gb RAM (and 15,4 inches) and vista buissness it is working fine ( i won't change it soon it is more than enough for now ) BTW i do ASP.NET development with (VS2008 and SQL Dev edition !) |
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It seems it is Macbook Pro vs Thinkpad... as it should be :) My main machine is a 15" 1 1/2 yo T61p that is still as good as new : fantastic keyboard, good 3d capabilities and great screen, decent speed for all modern applications, the closest thing to a thoughbook in term of sturdiness. If you are really tight on budget you can get one of these for cheap, maybe they are a bit old on specs, but it more than makes up in terms of comfort. I have also a very old 12" iBook G4 (my sis' old computer :)) that I use for iPhone development, and I love it as well, it's my first Mac and despite being quite lousy in terms of speed and build quality compared to the Lenovo (it is an entry-level 4-yo machine...) the awesomess of Mac Os and the small form factor makes it very pleasant to use it as a programming machine. I have been admiring several times the new MB Pros and they must be some great pieces of hardware to work with, making the future choice of replacing my workstation very tough... |
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