Ask HN: Which laptop brands are worth shortlisting for Windows work/development?
32 points| petecooper | 11 years ago | reply
Currently, I have a MacBook Pro 17"(Mid 2010). I work in OS X 10.10 and Windows 7. I work on my own projects (mostly OS X) and also client projects (mostly Windows 7). The OS split is currently 40/60 and the trend is for more Windows 7 client work. With that in mind, I wish to split my own projects from client projects and have a Windows 7-only laptop.
The last i386 laptop I bought was an IBM Thinkpad T21. It's been that long. I loved that laptop, and used it until its untimely death. What I'm looking for is a 2014 equivalent to my T21; solid, reliable and built to be used all day. I will stop short of saying `price no issue`, but I'm willing to drop 800-1200GBP on the right laptop.
HN, my question is: which laptop brands are worth shortlisting for Windows work/development?
Thank you in advance.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5088260
[+] [-] w1ntermute|11 years ago|reply
Also, remember to get a machine with maxed out RAM (if the RAM is not user-installable) or max it out yourself (if it is user-installable). Also, make sure you get the max resolution screen and replace the HDD with an SSD, if you get one with the former.
[+] [-] AndrewKemendo|11 years ago|reply
Since this is exactly what I do, I will say that running XCODE with the emulator in OSX (iAtkos) on the VM is painfully slow even with Maxed everything.
I would strongly suggest scaling back a bit on the ThinkPad settings and also having a Macbook for OSX/iOS dev.
I think it also depends on what OP is developing - ours is super heavy 3D graphics intensive so that is why we need as few layers between us and hardware as possible.
[+] [-] jzelinskie|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] iLoch|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Artemis2|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Robin_Message|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] virmundi|11 years ago|reply
One the whole, it's a powerful workhorse (I bought it when I was using Scala and SBT). It is also $600 dollars cheaper than my similarly spec'ed new MBP. I would buy again when I need to upgrade this box.
[+] [-] Zikes|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] marcuniq|11 years ago|reply
The difference between consumer and business laptops is enormous in terms of reliability and how long they last, even from the same manufacturer. In our experience, the only "consumer" laptops which can keep up with the mentioned business laptop brands are from Apple.
PS: Check out projektneptun.ch for reasonable configurations of Lenovo/HP/Apple laptops. I own a Lenovo Thinkpad T440p.
[+] [-] PaulHoule|11 years ago|reply
Some minuses are that the bluetooth quit working with Windows 8, although I got a USB bluetooth dongle. Also I got the dock for the W520 and found it doesn't work ~quite~ perfectly in terms of the USB ports realizing you just plugged something in and connecting on the first time.
[+] [-] tomswartz07|11 years ago|reply
We've run into a few devices with this 'feature' that makes it impossible to swap out faulty wifi, bluetooth, what-have-you devices.
[+] [-] basch|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sarciszewski|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] notauser|11 years ago|reply
It is solidly built, very easy to pack, and the keyboard is great for an ultrabook. The trackpad is also good.
I also have a Yoga 2 Pro, which was great value for money and pretty lovely, but I wouldn't want to type on it all day.
[+] [-] huhtenberg|11 years ago|reply
In my case first the RAM stick died, then the LCD inverter, then the WiFi and then the HDD. All in a scope of one week, three weeks after the end of the warranty. It was spectacular.
[+] [-] teach|11 years ago|reply
Within each brand, there seems to be a lot of variability in quality from model to model.
[+] [-] btb|11 years ago|reply
I have on occassion bought Acer PCs for non-devs at the office, and have regretted it every time. Sure they are cheap, but they also break down very fast and/or have lousy driver support, its just not worth the hassle. I still remember the stationary Acer PC I buy for one of our salesguys. Everytime he went above 50% CPU usage it sounded like a vacuum cleaner, and could be heard from the hallways.
[+] [-] danielki|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] btb|11 years ago|reply
But I also see alot of people running windows on macbooks. So I guess that could work too.
[+] [-] mkoryak|11 years ago|reply
I have a Thinkpad T43p with 2gb of ram from 2006 that still runs pretty good today (with a new battery), on the other hand pretty much every lenovo I have bought since (2 or 3 of them) have all had some problem that prevented me from using them.
I no longer recommend thinkpad to anyone.
[+] [-] larzang|11 years ago|reply
They're very reasonably priced in addition to being well-built.
[+] [-] dingaling|11 years ago|reply
http://www.lightandmatter.org/2014/general-photography-artic...
The Dell M4800s are well spoken-of online ( haven't used one myself ), mainly for their raw power and robustness.
[+] [-] shepardrtc|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] arca_vorago|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] southphillyman|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] zamalek|11 years ago|reply
We've had horrific experiences with the top-of-the-line Asus and Toshiba laptops.
[+] [-] lowlevel|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kyriakos|11 years ago|reply
Also recently bought a lenovo yoga pro 2. Everything is nice about it but default windows installation is a bit bloated.
[+] [-] ceedon|11 years ago|reply
We had a bad run of LCDs on the T410s and Lenovo had folks on-site to fix all of them as they died. Pleasant overall experience.
I have a maxed-out 15" retina, and I still miss my T430s sometimes... (dat trackpad)
[+] [-] bradfa|11 years ago|reply
I owned a T22 and T41, now I have a T530. All ran/run Windows well.
[+] [-] molsongolden|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] AdamN|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Afforess|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] thenipper|11 years ago|reply