Sirius
Jedi
MacBook Pro M5Does anyone have suggestions for a decent laptop?
MacBook Pro M5Does anyone have suggestions for a decent laptop?
I've used a MacBook Air M2
Both of these sound really good. BestBuy (not my favorite place, but it has everything electronic) has a MacBook Air 13 inch, M2 chip built for apple intelligence, 16GB mem, 256 SSD on sale for $650. I really like the idea of an "older" model. Anything "new" today often means higher speed but lower quality and a more invasive presence, regardless how packed and fancy the underlying technology is. Plus it's a good price.Go with the base 256 model
I would stay away from the Airs and go with the base-model MacBook Pro with an M4 or M5 chip. They are technically far superior and offer better value. The 256 GB SSD is much slower than the larger capacities; you only get full performance with the 512 GB version and above.Both of these sound really good. BestBuy (not my favorite place, but it has everything electronic) has a MacBook Air 13 inch, M2 chip built for apple intelligence, 16GB mem, 256 SSD on sale for $650. I really like the idea of an "older" model. Anything "new" today often means higher speed but lower quality and a more invasive presence, regardless how packed and fancy the underlying technology is. Plus it's a good price.
Personally, I have older M1 Pro and M2 Pro machines here. I wouldn’t buy those today. Go with an M4 or M5 (Pro or non-Pro). The “AI enhancements” mainly refer to hardware-accelerated neural engines (ASICs) used for running local LLMs. It’s just extra compute hardware.I looked briefly into the Mac chips. I see where each new one offers enhancements. From my perspective though, the only advantage I can see to the M4 chip over the M2 is it supports 2 displays. I didn't even think about that till KJS mentioned it. I recently got my amateur radio license, and many of operators use multiple screens because radio is all linked with computers now. So that could be a handy feature.
The M5 chip "Built for AI. From the silicon up." worries me.
OK. Thinkpad is still available at Amazon and BestBuy. I've used an older one and it was terrific. I'll check them out.business laptops. They are designed to last longer than general consumer laptops. Dell precision for example. Certain older Lenovos.
Good point.If you want the device to stay current for several years, that support window is worth factoring into the decision.
I think these things fall under the category of “most useless items to buy.” Who actually needs a portable or mobile Windows machine as a private consumer? They’re poor in every respect: underpowered, limited, and overpriced for what they offer. They don’t excel at anything.OK. Thinkpad is still available at Amazon and BestBuy. I've used an older one and it was terrific. I'll check them out.
I know nothing about Dell Precision. Looks like they can get pricey, depending on the chip. I am guessing they are workhorses. When Dell is good, it seems to be very very good (and when it is bad it is awful). Thank you.
It's a good point, and makes me laugh. Thank you.Who actually needs a portable or mobile Windows machine as a private consumer?
There are only a few real use cases for these devices. Things like running specific car-diagnostic software, connecting to a CAN bus, or carrying a small machine for field-work hacking make some sense. In those niche scenarios, having Linux on it or running VMware Workstation with proper USB passthrough can be practical.It's a good point, and makes me laugh. Thank you.
I can't disagree. I figure you aren't seeking an explanation, just stating a fact.
Linux: You need to have time to adjust and work with it
You really need to love to enjoy spending time for upgrades and so on.
And it depends if you need specific programs.