Which one will be more reliable an Asus Rog one or Thinkpad E series one. I want the laptop to last at least five years.
I wouldn't buy either. The ThinkPad T, W and X series offer very good quality, while the E and other series don't offer the same quality.Which one will be more reliable an Asus Rog one or Thinkpad E series one. I want the laptop to last at least five years.
it depends on the users tooWhich one will be more reliable an Asus Rog one or Thinkpad E series one. I want the laptop to last at least five years.
Yeah that's correct my core 2 duo laptop by dell which is 9 years old is still running. Thank you for your detailed explanation.it depends on the users too
my friend bought laptops from many brands and none of them last more than 1 year because the way he uses them
I bought laptop from Acer, HP and Toshiba. All of them last 7-10 years already
if you optimize it properly and clean the dust every 1 to 1.5 year, it will last long regardless of the brand
however, thinner laptop tends to be more vulnerable and more difficult to repair than thicker ones. They can overheat more easily -> won't last as long (in theory)
in my opinion, you should buy laptops that:
- easily upgradable: at least 2 ram slots, extra M2 slot
- has the best GPU for the cheapest price
- Newer CPU generation is welcome, but it's not always better than the previous gen. Sometimes the newer gen is worse
- easily repairable
- thick = better heat distribution, much easier to repair and replace
- the laptop doesn't have widespread hardware issues (Alienware in the past has serious soundcard failure, Asus's screen and charging port failure,...)
I wouldn't buy either. The ThinkPad T, W and X series offer very good quality, while the E and other series don't offer the same quality.
What sort of specs do you need?
What is your budget?I need a cpu that will last at least 5 years. I basically watch online contents, photoshop editing and learning web development also in future I will like to edit 1080p videos. The Asus one has i5 9th gen with gtx 1050 not ti and the Thinkpad one has amd ryzen 3500u with vega 8 graphics.
I suggest having a look at HP's ProBook series of laptops. I currently own two of them and am very happy with the quality.800$
Okay but HP laptops get pretty hot because my friend have one and I have seen that happening...so how about this series?I suggest having a look at HP's ProBook series of laptops. I currently own two of them and am very happy with the quality.
On some models it is easier to remove the fan to give you access to the vent on the laptop to remove accumulated dust, than others.
Just because one laptop from a brand gets hot, does not mean that every model will. My ProBooks and other HP laptops don't get hot, but there are many different models of them, so I can't answer that question. If there a a model you like, have a look at reviews for it.Okay but HP laptops get pretty hot because my friend have one and I have seen that happening...so how about this series?
Me too. I've owned a number of ThinkPads and still have some. Currently I prefer my HP ProBooks. They also have good keyboards and build quality and the whole bottom cover slides off, for easy access to the RAM, storage and fan.I am a big fan of ThinkPad laptop for its durability and fantastic keyboard experience.
2009? I thought Packard Bell computers were gone 20 years ago. Last one I saw was in Wikipedia!I bought my Packard Bell in the year 2009.
The new HPs with the "Sure's" are really really good.
You'd have to bump your budget a little... you have to go to the premium HP laptops... just find an HP that has 'Sure Sense'.... and then look at all the other "Sure's" -- those are really good tools. They can assist in recovery from most things..
a.)
i'm currently running (total) 3 laptops: two MSI gaming laptops and an Packard Bell (older average model with i5 and GT540M, discontinued by manufacturer).
b.)
bought my MSI laptops about 3-4 years ago. I bought my Packard Bell in the year 2009.
c.)
MSI seems to have a quite good reputation here on popular german gamer/computer boards: their gaming laptops
are offering a very good gaming performane. On the other side the price for this performance sems to be quite fair/very good.
I had no problems at all (so far) with my msi machines: running one of them as desktop replacement (MSI GE60, i7,
GTX 860M, SSD, 15 inch). Also my Packard Bell is still running fine: no problems at all.
d.)
i'm very satisfied with my two MSI gaming laptops (no problems at all) and also my Packard Bell was running fine all
the time... ...so based on my personal experience i would recommend MSI and Packard Bell: nothing bad about my brands.
BTW:
here is my second gaming laptop (MSI GT72, i7, GTX 970M, SSD with 250GB, HDD with 1TB) on malwaretips.com:
System Specs - Gaming-Laptop: MSI-GT72-2QD (GTX970M, i7)