Not being facetious but can you grab me a source to back all that up for THAT laptop?The only 'shame' is the piss-poor writing and wild conclusion jumps on that PC World article which you cite. I honestly don't know where to start; it's like reading a review written by a child. It's unbelievable that such an incompetent understanding of technology from that writer made its way to being published. That's PC World for you, I suppose.
Not to mention it's an HP laptop. That piece of crap will be throttling and overheating before you could even say CUDA.
The only 'shame' is the piss-poor writing and wild conclusion jumps on that PC World article which you cite.
i don't think that's a niche market at all..There's a niche in the market for high-powered "desktop replacement" portables [snip]
[...]with large screens and internal space for decent GPUs and lots of storage that are portable enough to easily commute between desks.
add- i don't really think you need 'large' internal space for decent GPUs.
also, i definitely wouldn't describe 17" screen as being 'large'... maybe large enough to make a portable more unwieldily (or, not able to fit in more standard sized backpacks)..
i guess this boils down to what we personally consider 'decent'.Yes you do - decent CPUs and GPUs generate a lot of heat and you need space for the cooling system & airflow. Ultra thin'n'crispy systems have to throttle back when things start getting hot. The Achilles heel on the MBP17" (which is still relatively thin) was thermal expansion/contraction cracking the solder on the GPU.
i had a 17" PowerBook....17" is about as large as you can go and still have some semblence of being a laptop. I have a 17" MBP and when its on a desk I mostly use it plugged in to a 24" or 27" external - but 17" is still big enough to be really useful as a second screen, or to demo something to a small group etc. The screen is actually the same resolution as a 24" 1200p display.
Actually, I've got a very nice 17"-compatible backpack for when I have a fit of energy and cycle to work (OK, admission, power-assisted bike, but hey, I'm horribly unfit and old enough to remember when we thought PowerBook G3s were thin and light...)
Not to mention it's an HP laptop. That piece of crap will be throttling and overheating before you could even say CUDA
i understand, other people would 'love' for apple to do 17" laptops again..
and to be honest in many things my 2012 8740W actually is faster than my 2013 mac Pro
PCWorld appreciates your ad traffic. "Mission accomplished " as far as they're concerned.
heh, this pretty much sums up our personal differences in laptop wants..If I was continually flying with it or carrying it around during the day, I'd get something smaller - but for taking it into work or the occasional trip, its fine.
Perhaps if Apple opted to upgrade its Mac Pro, this wouldn't have occurred, but 3 years later people only have a promise of something different in 2018 or 2019.It's just a blurb announcing a new portable and gives an underhanded jab to Apple nothing out of the ordinary.
Perhaps if Apple opted to upgrade its Mac Pro, this wouldn't have occurred, but 3 years later people only have a promise of something different in 2018 or 2019.
Have 2 Zbook 17's and their predecessors the Elitebook 8740W and 8770W, can run them at 100% CPU and GPU for days and never crack 80c. they are not the HP consumer garbage I love to bitch about.
I agree the article does suck ... and to be honest in many things my 2012 8740W actually is faster than my 2013 mac Pro.
Perhaps but in this case Apple made its bed and they now need to deal with an aging desktop that cannot be upgraded. I have little sympathy for their short-sidedness.PC world would just find something else Apple to take a jab at though. I like PC world but Gordon has acts like Steve stole his first born.
but the DOCK, the $200+ Dock of this machine is an utter piece of garbage.
The only 'shame' is the piss-poor writing and wild conclusion jumps on that PC World article which you cite. I honestly don't know where to start; it's like reading a review written by a child. It's unbelievable that such an incompetent understanding of technology from that writer made its way to being published. That's PC World for you, I suppose.
Not to mention it's an HP laptop. That piece of crap will be throttling and overheating before you could even say CUDA.