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View Full Version : Notebook as main computer?


S_Wilson
10-13-09, 08:04 AM
So, does anyone use their notebook as their main system? Tell us why and how you like it.

TazExtreme3
10-13-09, 09:00 AM
I actually use my netbook (Eee pc 701) as my main machine. I do a lot of photoshop work on it (ctrl-+ is my best friend) as well as some video encoding (slow but gets the job done) every now and then. Mostly I just do my online jobs and surf the web anymore so I don't really need a bunch of Ghz.

S_Wilson
10-13-09, 10:08 AM
I actually use my netbook (Eee pc 701) as my main machine. I do a lot of photoshop work on it (ctrl-+ is my best friend) as well as some video encoding (slow but gets the job done) every now and then. Mostly I just do my online jobs and surf the web anymore so I don't really need a bunch of Ghz.

Wow, that's pretty hardcore doing photoshop and encoding on that. :thup: Something I would never attempt. :)

Cyrix_2k
10-13-09, 12:15 PM
Yes, I have for the last few years. Works fine and it's portable. Plus when I bought this thing, it was faster than my desktop. I have a T7400 (C2D @ 2.16ghz) in my primary laptop and a 1.8ghz C2D in my second laptop iirc. I've been looking at netbooks as was wondering how if photoshop would work on one; I guess Taz answered that question!

benbaked
10-13-09, 12:26 PM
I have used my iBook G4 as my main system for a few years now. If I'm at home I browse the net on my server because its sitting at my desk, but most of the time its just crunching rosetta@home and serving up media files. Pretty much all "real" work I do on my iBook. It has been a good computer, and the portability is the main reason it is my main system.

I just bought a 16" MSI a few weeks ago, once I get Win7 loaded it may become my main system just because its faster and has a BD-ROM drive. But, maybe it won't. From a build quality standpoint it is inferior to my five year old iBook, and the battery life is nowhere near as good (two-and-a-half hours tops compared to three-to-four hours on the iBook). Either way, a laptop will be my main system. Gotta have that portability. :)

Netbooks don't interest me, other then modding one to be a hackintosh, and it would have to at least include a dual-core Atom, which I haven't seen in any of the netbooks under what I would be willing to pay for one ($300 tops, no more).

Ashura
10-13-09, 12:48 PM
I've been using my Thinkpad as my main machine for a few months now. Most of my time is spent doing office work (Office suite, Adobe Creative Suite, Quickbooks) and in my free time I usually browse the internet and watch movies. The x200 is more than capable for all of those things (the onboard can play HD movies well too) and having a good SSD means I rarely feel like I'm on an underpowered machine. I have 2209WAs both at work and at home so it's usually hooked up to one of those and I don't have to use the laptop screen too often, but when I do 12" @ 1280x800 is a pretty sweet spot for most things. And, the portability is a big plus with about 3-4 hours and 3lbs on my 4-cell, and 8-9 hours and 3.7lbs when travelling with my 9-cell.

The one thing I do that my laptop can't do is game, but since I only have time for that on the weekends my file server can be used as a gaming machine for those days.

Valk
10-13-09, 07:55 PM
My tablet pretty much is my main system for most things like office and light graphics work. I draw on it and edit pictures, catalog them ect. hell, i can even play ut and stuff on it heh.

I use my desktop for the odd game, and archiving. otherwise, it belongs to the wife.
used to be all into ocing and building killer rigs, then i baught a car and got a girlie he he. laptop is more than enough.

Vengance_01
10-13-09, 08:11 PM
Unless you game, any quality notebook can be your main system. Decent Core 2 Duo, 4GBs of ram, Intel SDD 80GB for OS and a 2.5 500GB External for storage and you have a system that can match most any desktops.

A15G
10-13-09, 08:49 PM
I have an Gateway MP8708

17 Inch
T7200
1.5GB RAM

It does pretty much what I need it to do. And I got this laptop for $200 or so im quite happy with it. I sold my desktop after I got this thing, the pros on a laptop serving as a desktop is ofcourse as everyone knows it, its more portable. And what I hate the most is the battery aging process. So I keep the thing plugged in most of the time unless I really need to take it out of the house or move it somewhere. Since the laptop is 17 inch widescreen, I decided not to buy a screen. But I have to admit, I miss my desktop. I could actually play games at an affordable build, as gaming laptops will empty my wallet!

Flurp
10-14-09, 04:44 AM
Hmm... I've been using my laptop as my main for the past 3 1/2 years... I can't play the best games maxed on it... but I can still play them decently... but going to start building a pc this coming summer(may/june), Reason i've used this as my main was cause I was in the marines... and wasn't in the same place very long and didn't have a place to plug up a tower in iraq and such... but oh well it works :) ah I do still have a tower at my parents house lol

mbentley
10-14-09, 07:09 AM
at work, i have a laptop for my primary computer. it is a typical core 2 duo 2 ghz with 2 gb of ram. i am on call fairly frequently so it is a necessity. i have a docking station at work and one at home so i can work from either place. my job is one of those that requires that i work no matter what the weather is so i have to work from home sometimes. i am pretty used to working on a laptop since i have an extra monitor at both locations as well as a keyboard and mouse.

my actual workstation that i use when i am not working is a dell inspiron 9100 (p4 2.6 ghz, 2 gb of ram) which is technically a laptop but it is desktop replacement. right now, the screen is broken and it has been for the past 3-4 years. i actually finally ordered a new screen to finally fix it :p hopefully i can start using it around the house again once i get a new battery as well so it will return to laptop function instead of just basically being a desktop.

pros: lightweight, energy friendly, quiet, portable, acts as its own UPS
cons: not as wide of upgrade possibilities, smaller screen when using laptop only

bobelot
10-14-09, 07:15 PM
I sold one of my desktops and bought a Lenovo G530 on sale for $330. I don't game (I've been clean for four years) so it does everything I need it to for college and I love the portability. I don't need a flashy laptop (I'm a minimalist), and I also used the price difference to buy other goodies.

S_Wilson
10-14-09, 09:24 PM
So this is more widespread at OCF than I thought. :)

I've been bouncing back and forth between desktop and notebooks for the last 1 1/2 years because it has been kind of hard to find a notebook that suits my picky tastes.

There are many reasons I want to use a notebook over a desktop and mbently's pro list hit pretty close. My two primary motivations are that I like saving energy and money but also when it comes interstate moving, which we tend to do from time to time, there will be less to pack and load with all the desktops gone. :)

Mr.Guvernment
10-14-09, 09:49 PM
i had a dell inspiron 9100 laptop, Intel Pressy 3Ghz,1.5Gh of ram and a60G 7200RPM hd i used as my main work rig for about 3 years, i loved it, 15' 1920 x 1200 res screen, ws great!

S_Wilson
10-14-09, 10:04 PM
i had a dell inspiron 9100 laptop, Intel Pressy 3Ghz,1.5Gh of ram and a60G 7200RPM hd i used as my main work rig for about 3 years, i loved it, 15' 1920 x 1200 res screen, ws great!

Man, 1920 x 1200 on a 15" screen, I don't know how you guys handle those. I did that res on a 17" for a while and couldn't deal with it, lol. 1680 x 1050 at 17" works ok but for a 15" it would have to be around 1440 x 900. Guess my eyes are getting to old. :)

Cyrix_2k
10-14-09, 10:17 PM
So this is more widespread at OCF than I thought. :)

I've been bouncing back and forth between desktop and notebooks for the last 1 1/2 years because it has been kind of hard to find a notebook that suits my picky tastes.

There are many reasons I want to use a notebook over a desktop and mbently's pro list hit pretty close. My two primary motivations are that I like saving energy and money but also when it comes interstate moving, which we tend to do from time to time, there will be less to pack and load with all the desktops gone. :)
When you move between different locations frequently, laptops quickly become your machine of choice. I'm always going between school, home, work, and other universities. I also use my laptop to take notes and distract me in boring classes :p

Randyman...
10-14-09, 10:38 PM
Slap a SSD in there, and have fun :) . If you really need heavy-handed CPU power, then I might consider a desktop Quad for the heavy lifting and a cheap C2D for your Laptop.

Keep in mind that "Desktop Replacement" laptops will have poor battery life, aren't exactly light, cost a lot, and are generally outperformed by a cheap desktop.

Whatever you choose - BACKUP YOUR DATA! It seems that lots of people with Laptops never backup their data (likely the case across the board :rolleyes: ). This is more important with a laptop as they see more physical stress, generally run hotter, AND you have a HUGE chance of loosing the entire machine (or stolen, whatever). Back up that data, peeps :)

:cool:

CompuTamer
10-15-09, 04:23 PM
I can use my Netbook as my main machine for a while, but not permanately. I have to have my 19inch of goodness to really be comfortable, but it's not that hard to get adjusted to my Netbook's screen (10.2inch). I spend the weekend away from the house a lot, so it sees a lot of work there (remote managing server, photoshop, light video editing, youtube, one or two small games, ect)

Oh, and WoW, i HAD to put WoW on a 16gig flash drive so i could carry it around with me. Pushes that little Atom up to 90% load, but even so, i can run that game for about an hour on it and still have 20% battery left. Fan gets loud though :/

Flurp
10-15-09, 06:10 PM
haha I use 1650x1050 on a 17" :)

Mr.Guvernment
10-20-09, 02:55 PM
Man, 1920 x 1200 on a 15" screen, I don't know how you guys handle those. I did that res on a 17" for a while and couldn't deal with it, lol. 1680 x 1050 at 17" works ok but for a 15" it would have to be around 1440 x 900. Guess my eyes are getting to old. :)

i loved it, could have so many windows open!

Bobnova
10-20-09, 03:04 PM
I used an alienware M7700 as my main box for a couple years, i liked the 1680x1050 17" screen, that was glorious.
Constantly wondering if it was going to overheat and fail, not so much.
Along the same lines, knowing that a hardware failure would be $500 minimum was an issue, and the thing was quite noisy, and instead of risking a dead keyboard drinking at the computer i was risking the entire computer.

Being able to move it was really cool though, gaming on my main box at the inlaws house was great. I miss that.

sulretal
10-20-09, 04:06 PM
I use a notebook as my main computer, but it only makes sense. I usually end up taking my laptop with me to school for artstor(a database of art) , music and reference images when I am in the studio. I rarely need a powerful computer at home because I just listening to music, write stuff on word and read stuff on the internet. If I game it's seldom anymore and I play games that are too old to worry about performance. I'm not big into digital art so I rarely use photoshop programs that might require beastly rigs.