Need laptop recommendations

Accname

2D-Graphics enthusiast
Reaction score
1,464
Hi guys.

I am thinking about buying a laptop to code while I am traveling (or at the university, or somewhere away from home).
As a matter of fact, i really dont know much about laptop brands and the quality behind the names.
I will use the laptop mainly for coding; good graphics are not needed.

Here is, what I am looking for:
1). Good screen resolution: 1920 x 1080 would be best.
2). Preferred OS: Windows 7 (or linux if need be)
3). Fast start up, best with a solid state drive.
4). At least 4gb of RAM. (trivial I think...)
5). Price should not exceed 700€.

I am mainly using eclipse and coding in java. I really dont need it to play any games or anything. A super fast graphics card or processor is not needed at all. High disc space isnt needed either; I could live with a mere 128GB if need be.

Battery life should be good too, but I dont have too high hopes in this regard...

Thank you guys very much!
 
I like ASUS laptops, they're pretty reliable, if a bit on the more expensive side. There's quite a few on amazon for ASUS' Zenbook series (they have smaller screens so you can also get decent battery life). However, I don't know how Amazon handles shipping to where you live.

Most of the new laptops will come with Windows 8, not 7, so you'll either have to buy a copy of 7, downgrade via Microsoft somehow, or install linux (or just get used to Windows 8). I was able to find several with a 128gb SSD, a 1920x1080 screen, 4gb of RAM, for under $900 (about the equivalent of 700€).
 
I would probably prefer linux over windows 8.
I just wanted windows 7 because that is what I use at my desktop pc. Would make things a little bit easier to switch between them. Also, most people I work with use windows 7.
 
I just installed Classic Shell on my Windows 8 laptop and I'm fine. Might give it a try. Desktop, too, actually.
 
Can you guys give me a link or a name or something? I cant seem to find a good laptop which meets my needs.
 
+1 for the zenbook prime - either that or a thinkpad, depending on how portable you want it to be

windows 8 pro comes with "downgrade rights" which means you have a license for windows 7 for when you decide to upgrade to it

Can you guys give me a link or a name or something? I cant seem to find a good laptop which meets my needs.

what stores can you buy from? giving you a link to something that only ships to the US wouldn't help too much
 
Well, everything that ships to europe.
Ebay, amazon, anything of that nature.

What do you guys say about this:
Asus Zenbook UX31E-RY009V 33,8 cm (13,3 Zoll) Ultrabook (Intel Core i5 2557M, 1,7GHz, 4GB RAM, 128GB SSD, Intel 3000 HD, Win 7 HP)

for just 600€.

The CPU is kinda weak, but everything else looks pretty good for the money. I would just be running eclipse and some simple, self-made java applications on it.

What about this one?
Samsung Series 5 Ultra 530U3C A0L 33,8 cm (13,3 Zoll) Ultrabook (Intel Core i7 3517U, 1,9GHz, 4GB RAM, 128GB SSD, Intel HD 4000, Win 8)

Slightly stronger CPU and graphics card and 700€.
 
I think I will be going with the asus zenbook.
It has a screen resolution of 1600x900 which is far better then the pitiful 1366x768 of the samsung.
 
I use http://www.amazon.com/computers-accessories/dp/B00AWJX7JU

However, I did not spend $959 on it, I got it for a lot cheaper on sale and it's a great laptop. I know it didn't meet a lot of the requirements which you wanted but it's a pretty good laptop for what you pay. It's capable of playing most games aswell too, which is nice even if you are not a huge gamer since you never know when a good game you want to play will come out.

My only actual feedback to what you want in a laptop is I understand why you want an SSD and why you want Windows 7, but if you want faster start up time why don't you use Windows 8? My laptop starts up including starting windows, booting...etc in 20 seconds, and that's because Windows 8 starts up FAST. SSDs just aren't worth the money yet in my opinion until they do not cost so much for space. Also, why are you looking for a laptop with such high resolution yet a good battery life? The laptop I use has pretty good battery life, and it has a battery saving mode for when you're off the charge and it can last up to 10 hours off the charger, depending on what applications you use.
 
My win7 desktop starts up in about 15 seconds the last time I counted. If I am at university I am constantly on stop and go. I need the laptop to be flexible.
The display resolution must be big for coding. You just cant code with a small resolution; its horrible. Especially after working with 1920x1080 for some time now.

I dont want to play any games on it at all. I dont play games in my free time. I just need opengl 3.2 support for my self written programs.

I went with the: Asus Zenbook UX31E-RY009V for 600€. Its a really good price for a new laptop with these specs. The product description is claiming a 2 seconds start up time which would be perfect. 1600x900 display resolution is pretty good as well.
A long battery life is of course always nice to have but not 100% neccessary; there are alot of opportunities to charge the laptop at university.

Anyways, thanks for your help guys.
 
@blackveiled, there are reasons for a high-resolution screen, and likewise for SSD's - you really can't compare purely on boot times
 
I just recently bought a Dell Inspiron 17R Special Edition.

Inspiron 17R Special Edition Non-Touch
3rd Generation Intel® Core™ i7-3630QM processor (6MB cache, up to 3.4 GHz)
Windows 8, 64-bit, English
17.3" Full High Definition (1080p) LED Display with Anti-Glare
8GB3 Dual Channel DDR3 SDRAM at 1600MHz
1TB 5400 RPM SATA Hard Drive
NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M GDDR5 2GB

With a student discount and tax it was around $900. It's okay, works for what I need.
 
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
  • Varine Varine:
    I would be there for days, even with my camera set up slides can take a long time, and if they want perfect captures I really need to use my scanners that are professionally made for that. My camera rig works well for what it is, but for enlargements and things it's not as good.
  • Varine Varine:
    I've only had a couple clients with that so far, though. I don't have a website or anything yet though.
  • Varine Varine:
    Console repair can be worthwhile, but it's also not a thing I can do at scale in my house. I just don't have room for the equipment. I need an office that I can segregate out for archival and then electronic restoration.
  • Varine Varine:
    But in order for that to be real, I need more time, and for more time I need to work less, and to work less I need a different job, and for a different job I need more money to fall back on so that I can make enough to just pay like, rent and utilities and use my savings to find these projects
    +1
  • Varine Varine:
    Another couple years. I just need to take it slow and it'll get there.
  • jonas jonas:
    any chance to get that stolen money back?
  • jonas jonas:
    Maybe you can do console repair just as a side thing, especially if there's so much competition business might be slow. Or do you need a lot of special equipment for that?
  • jonas jonas:
    I recently bought a used sauna and the preowner told me some component is broken, I took a look and it was just a burnt fuse, really cheap to fix. I was real proud of my self since I usually have two left hands for this kinda stuff :p
  • tom_mai78101 tom_mai78101:
    I am still playing Shapez 2. What an awful thing to happen, Varine, and hopefully everything has been sorted out soon. Always use multi-factor authentication whenever you have the opportunity to do so.
    +1
  • Varine Varine:
    I think all of the money is accounted for now, and all the cards have been changed out, so I think for the most part it's taken care of now. Just need to go through and make sure all of my accounts are secured again, it's just time consuming.
  • Varine Varine:
    And yeah everything has 2 factor turned on now, or at least everything I can think of at the moment.
  • Varine Varine:
    The consoles don't need too much equipment that I don't already have. I would like to get a reflow oven, but I don't really want to buy one so I'm thinking about modifying a toaster oven I have to make something that will work for what I'm doing.
  • Varine Varine:
    I have the soldering irons and reflow and all that, but without an oven it's kind of hard to build mod chips and things like that. I made a handful of them with a hot air station, but it's a pain.
  • Varine Varine:
    The only thing I'm not really set up for is BGA rework. I've done it before a little bit, but not reliably, and that equipment is wildly expensive. You need X-rays and shit.
  • Varine Varine:
    I also have a couple 3D printers. I'm not super good with those and need to get an enclosure built, but they'll be useful for some aesthetic mods I've been thinking about. At least I can use them to do designs and then just have someone else print out the parts for me once I know they work.
  • Varine Varine:
    I also use them to make adapters for all my camera shit, but that's also an on the side thing for now. Lens adapters get really expensive.
  • Varine Varine:
    I've been trying to do some little art pieces as well, but I'm not much an engineer so they haven't gone great. I got some new things showing up to try and play with
  • Varine Varine:
    I want to build this tesserect kind of thing with mirrors, and I've been trying to make this like black hole diorama. In my head it looks really cool, but I kind of thought I could form polarizing lenses into a sphere but I tend to just destroy them every time I try.
  • Varine Varine:
    So I got a new idea, but I'm not sure how to make it work like I want without being able to get a polarizer curved. I think they are made out of PVA typically, and I thought I could just heat it up a little bit to soften the film, but that clearly isn't working. So I'm going to try a few other things, I'm thinking if I put a mirror film over the polarizing film I might get something cool. I have some polarized LED's as well, and I think if I make a central light source I can use the mirrors combined with the polarizers to make that central light APPEAR black. I have next week off so I'm going to spend some time trying to figure it out
  • Varine Varine:
    The tesserect works, at least. I just need to figure out how to be able to assemble it, but I think I have a pretty good idea of how to go about it. Or at least a prototype of it. I'll post some pictures next week
  • jonas jonas:
    That last bit sounds like the last entry in a scientist's journal in a destroyed research facility in a post-apocalyptic video game
  • Varine Varine:
    lol it's not that exciting
  • Varine Varine:
    Shiny tho
  • Varine Varine:
    Basically it's a cube with a two way mirror on the inside, and then a smaller cube suspended in that with a mirrors on the outside of it. Kind of like those infinity pictures where they use two mirrors to go forever. Only it's twelve mirrors
  • Varine Varine:
    And the tiniest LED strip I could find

      The Helper Discord

      Members online

      No members online now.

      Affiliates

      Hive Workshop NUON Dome World Editor Tutorials

      Network Sponsors

      Apex Steel Pipe - Buys and sells Steel Pipe.
      Top