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Answer» Hey everyone,
After using a laptop exclusively for over the past decade I'm interested in having the desktop experience of having a large screen and mouse. I guess I'm a bit picky when it comes to components (like I'd spend more to have a quieter power supply, CPU fan and case) and when looking at prices I'm probably looking at about ~$300 cpu ~$100+ motherboard ~$50-60 quiet cpu fan ~$100 case ~$80 power supply ~$120+ RAM ~$150 SSD So approximately $900, plus the monitor, mouse, and keyboard. I thought for that price I could just buy a pretty decent laptop and plug in a monitor, keyboard and mouse for a similar experience. I'm also thinking plugging into a laptop might be quieter overall too (I haven't used a desktop in a quiet room for awhile so I'm not sure what they're capable of). The main advantage to doing this would be that I can take the laptop with me wherever I WANT of course. I have a chromebook atm that's fine for remote USE although I'm still getting used to it not being able to do some things windows can. One advantage I see for a desktop is that if one of the parts like the on board video card (or any video card) dies, I can just replace the one part instead of junking a whole laptop (they've lasted me 2-3 years in the past). Also I bet the desktop would be fairly faster than a comparable $900 laptop. I don't game though so I don't need it for that. I do use Autocad occasionally (which has worked okay on a i5 laptop) and want to use a 4 K monitor for excel and youtube.
I'm curious if you have opinions regarding using a laptop to mostly use an external monitor and mouse with versus building a proper desktop. Thanks!For the past 7 years, my employers have only provided me with a laptop for a work computer. Whether in the office or working from home, I always use an external monitor, mouse and keyboard. With those items attached to my laptop (I use a dock to make things easier), it functions nearly indistinguishably from a desktop computer. Since it's a work computer, I don't use it for gaming but I run compilers, VMs, Excel, Word, Visio, PowerPoint and all types of other software on it. The main advantage to having just the laptop is that I can move from place to place and bring my setup with me. In my current job, I often travel to remote client sites and work on-site but other times, I work from my home. Portability is the main reason for this setup and it works fine.
However, if I didn't require portability, I would choose a desktop over a laptop every time. The cost to performance ratio for a desktop is much better than a laptop. A desktop is easier to maintain, repair and UPGRADE and has better storage options. Although I own several personal laptops, I always prefer using my desktop at home.
Quote However, if I didn't require portability, I would choose a desktop over a laptop every time. The cost to performance ratio for a desktop is much better than a laptop. A desktop is easier to maintain, repair and upgrade and has better storage options. Although I own several personal laptops, I always prefer using my desktop at home.
+ 1Good points strollin. That's pretty much what I thought. I do bring a computer to work, but it doesn't require anything my chromebook doesn't seem to be able to do so far. The great thing about this little acer chromebook with a mobile processor is it can internet browse great, while having about 10 hours of BATTERY life, is only 3.5 pounds and only cost $200 on sale. It feels like a cheap ultrabook. I do kind of miss Windows though. This computer feels a bit restrictive at times maybe how an iphone may feel compared to the more options androids have.
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