I sadly went through a mess in trying to move to Dell in 2017. They’re on my skip list. I am glad they work for you though and thanks for the tip.Asus has a shadow something virus, i recommend the dell xps, i love mine very much!
I am ready to try Windows again. The critical video conversion software I need no longer works with macOS after Sierra, and I just cannot justify spending upwards of $3.5k for a decent spec’d iMac. I cancelled three iMac orders this week as I keep coming to this decision. I just have to move past my unease and try a little harder with Windows.
While I love drawing on the iPad there’s too much frustration with hardware problems and software glitches.
I think I’ll either go Wacom or traditional too.
Yes, trackpads, mice borks, and not knowing Windows - oh my!
I’ll see what Asus and HP are available at Microsoft & Best Buy tomorrow. I’ll make sure I’ll tell the folks at both stores what I need. If the Asus Mini Pro Art started at $2.5k I would jump, but I need to have a long talk with the OEMs and Microsoft reps and see what they suggest.
You can figure Windows out if you stick with it. Just need to be patient realize that there will be some ups and downs that come with the switch. You won't master Windows in a week or two, but stick with it, keep seeking solutions and it will become easier and easier
This is so true. Thanks. At least I know not to mess with the settings. And I will definitely look at wired mice.
I liked the idea of the Arc mouse, but will skip for now, given my Arc mouse blues. Still use a wired mouse at one job so I am not too concerned with that. Will have to make a note that I need 2 USB-A ports at least.My wife really like her Microsoft Arc mouse, but of course it’s not wired. I haven’t used a wired one in over a decade. No idea what’s out there in the wired mouse world
I have 2 usbA adaptors plugged into the 2 usbC ports which were 15 bucks and work greatI liked the idea of the Arc mouse, but will skip for now, given my Arc mouse blues. Still use a wired mouse at one job so I am not too concerned with that. Will have to make a note that I need 2 USB-A ports at least.
Thank you squared!Just advice to those going to swindows, seagate has software that can work in both osx and w10 for easy file transporting.
Edit to add: Here's a shot across the bow from Microsoft. Apple needs to get its act together, and fast.
Asus has a shadow something virus, i recommend the dell xps, i love mine very much!
Thank you for that and everything else.Not the new ones, and like most malware Shadow Hammer is easily verified as being present. Asus servers were hacked and a number of specifically targeted computer's were infected. Asus subsequently updated the compromised app delivering the malware payload and have a tool to specifically check for Shadow Hammer.
There's no need for concern, I've an ASUS ROG GL703GS and it has no issue and this is old news
Q-6
Thank you for that and everything else.
I just found out the new 15” HP Spectre will be available in a couple of weeks from Best Buy, unfortunately a lot of early 2018 specs in it for more money. I guess those chassis cannot handle six core CPUs, still I like it. I wish more of the Asus models were incoming (thought I saw a $5999 price tag for the Mothership).
I like this one...except I wish it came with 32gb RAM. I appreciate the keyboard is not higher up on that base panel.
https://www.bestbuy.com/site/asus-1...lid-state-drive-black/6319979.p?skuId=6319979
The hex core mobile CPU's need room to breath so to speak so they need robust cooling solutions or it will be the same situation as the MBP with heavy throttling.
Regarding the Zephyrus your paying a significant premium for RTX and still 8th Gen CPU and a little thinner. I'd make certain you really have the need, as an 8th Gen CPU & GTX GPU will be a good deal cheaper, or I'd wait on the 9th Gen CPU with RTX. The Zephyrus may also be limited to 24GB RAM This why I opted for a ROG GL series and at the time and no Zephyrus 17"
The Zephyrus is still a very powerful and excellent notebook, equally Asus is pushing the pricing. The GL series is also far easier to upgrade and has dual drives (1xM.2 MVMe SSD & 1x2.5 SATA bay HDD or SSD) GL703GS with 8750H, GTX 1070, 256 SSD, 1TB SSHD and 16GB is around $1900 and that's worth considering, especially given you can swap out the RAM and drives with ease...
FWIW I really like the 17" Zephyrus
Q-6
Thank you very much. I learned this morning, yes, I do have to make the switch away from Apple. I’ve been gently nudging myself into letting go over the last few days.
The funny thing is I am not sure if the Zephyrus’ tilt will work for me as far as typing.
I will definitely look into laptop models with GTX cards. I do not need a RTX card machine (and jumping in with a StudioBook seems ridiculous in my case). Also, I am skittish about doing surgery on these given my unfamiliarity with working on PCs.
For me, Asus names for their laptops are super confusing. I’d love a 17” with a glossy screen (some matte screens are tough for me to get used to). Microsoft had an Asus 17” that had a huge bezel but it boasted a glossy IPS screen.
Besides the little Spectre MS had, I liked one of the Razers and that behemoth Asus (I did not remember it’s name). There is a new 15” Spectre coming in the first week of June, but it has an MX card and is tariff priced. I love their screens and keyboards though...
I’ll go to other Best Buy branches with a list of what I want, which is something be comfortable to type on and look at, with a GTX card that will run Final Draft, Word, video conversion software, Affinity Photo & Publisher, drive a Wacom tablet & art software (probably Painter and ClipStudio Pro), and allow me to multitask without throttling. Decent battery life, 7-8 hours is fine. I’ll need at least two USB-A ports because I want to use a wired mouse.
Am I asking too much of a laptop?
Anyway, many thanks for the detailed thoughts. I’ll seek out the Asus model you mentioned, and make a list of the specs I need for software I am running now or will add.
I am frustrated because I seem to know more about PCs than any of the staff at the Best Buy’s and the Microsoft store I can visit. B & H Photo is out because they do not allow returns and they’re super nasty to talk to.
I feel the same way about macOS. I mean, having to install a paid application to get proper window snapping... The window management in macOS is terrible.
No MS Paint type program by default.
Having applications run with no windows existing.
That's very annoying. But you can change it with some quick terminal commands.Very slow with input-blocking "animations".
Those are completely optional.Having every annual update risk breaking tons of software, so that lots of it won't work if it hasn't been updated (or a newer version purchased).
The problem you all to often run into at Best Buy is that the sales associate that is trying to assist with your PC purchase was probably working a fast food window and asking if you “would like fries with that” the week before. My experience with Best Buy is they are poorly trained to do much other than look up specs on their own website. Yeah.... I can do that at home before I go.
It’s too bad the MS Store near you doesn’t seem to be able to help. I have seen/heard them help people when I have been in. Particularly business customers who make one of the one to one concierge type appointments and they are very knowledgeable and very helpful, spending a lot of time listening and suggesting both their own products and other product they carry (Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Razer, Huawie, etc.)
But I suppose that has more to do with the manager and how they hire/train than anything else
Thank you very much. I learned this morning, yes, I do have to make the switch away from Apple. I’ve been gently nudging myself into letting go over the last few days.
The funny thing is I am not sure if the Zephyrus’ tilt will work for me as far as typing.
I will definitely look into laptop models with GTX cards. I do not need a RTX card machine (and jumping in with a StudioBook seems ridiculous in my case). Also, I am skittish about doing surgery on these given my unfamiliarity with working on PCs.
For me, Asus names for their laptops are super confusing. I’d love a 17” with a glossy screen (some matte screens are tough for me to get used to). Microsoft had an Asus 17” that had a huge bezel but it boasted a glossy IPS screen.
Besides the little Spectre MS had, I liked one of the Razers and that behemoth Asus (I did not remember it’s name). There is a new 15” Spectre coming in the first week of June, but it has an MX card and is tariff priced. I love their screens and keyboards though...
I’ll go to other Best Buy branches with a list of what I want, which is something be comfortable to type on and look at, with a GTX card that will run Final Draft, Word, video conversion software, Affinity Photo & Publisher, drive a Wacom tablet & art software (probably Painter and ClipStudio Pro), and allow me to multitask without throttling. Decent battery life, 7-8 hours is fine. I’ll need at least two USB-A ports because I want to use a wired mouse.
Am I asking too much of a laptop?
Anyway, many thanks for the detailed thoughts. I’ll seek out the Asus model you mentioned, and make a list of the specs I need for software I am running now or will add.
I am frustrated because I seem to know more about PCs than any of the staff at the Best Buy’s and the Microsoft store I can visit. B & H Photo is out because they do not allow returns and they’re super nasty to talk to.
Thanks. Definitely going to buy at least 2 drives to start with. I will probably also back up my writing to a cd-rom (yes I know), but that should be an easy way to move those documents over.Have you looked at the 2019 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme, it might check all the boxes with the 4K display (glossy) and some members own them.
ROG GL703GS is a 1080p matte display and battery life is poor as it only uses the GTX 1070, 4x USB A ,1xUSB C, HDMI, Ethernet, SD Card reader, mini DisplayPort. As ever a powerful notebook may struggle with your expectation for battery life, but maybe others have more experience with their own W10 notebooks.
Like I said there's a lot of favour for the X1E and now it's just had the GPU (GTX1650) revised which is getting closer to a GTX 1060 which isn't too shabby for a relatively thin and light machine.
StudioBook is more specialised and I dare say not a cheap, especially with the Xenon option. I'd set a budget and stick to it, or things easily spiral and over specifying does not guarantee longevity. TBH outside of video conversion your needs are relatively modest, you should also budget for an external drive to back up to as there's going to kinks in the road transitioning to W10. If your system is fully backed up it's not a drama, just part of the learning curve.
Q-6
My 2014 15" MacBook Pro served me well, but it had the CPU voltage issue which caused it to crash all the time, I finally rectified it with a $10 app. Now I somehow cracked my screen. I decided to save some money and decided to try a Windows laptop - a surface Pro 6. The hardware wasn't that bad, Microsoft is getting closer and closer to the level set by Apple - but they are not there yet. Windows is still clunky and buggy. So I returned it and bought a base 2018 15" MacBook Pro. OS X is fluid and responsive. You don't have to pay for Office. And yes, everything just works. The keyboard is fine - I don't mind it (I did get a 4 year warranty - just in case). I still question the decision to remove the USB A port and the SD port - still, there are dongles OS X is the perfect OS with no competition. My old MacBook Pro did not need one system reinstall nor did it slow down with time. Once you go OS X you never...
the windows 10 experience is incredible, more responsive than Mojave and start up to visuals in seconds just with a tap of the finger, i'm extremely surprised and happy!
Im running windows 10 on my Zenbook bought 2012 and working like a charm.
OMG I hate the sales associates at best buy. Even there geek squad doesn't have a clue what is going on. One time, probably around 2010 I went in best buy deciding I was going to swap the Super Drive out of my MacBook Pro and but in a 7200rpm HD in its place. Already had swapped out the Primary HD and replaced it with another 7200 rpm HD. Went up to the geek squad counter and asked if i bought the hd could they do it there and pay them for convenience instead of me going and buying the crazy screws apple uses and taking the time. The guy straight up told me that what I was doing was straight up impossible, that I cant just take the CD drive out and replace it with a HDD. After that, I never even tried to use best buy for anything again...The problem you all to often run into at Best Buy is that the sales associate that is trying to assist with your PC purchase was probably working a fast food window and asking if you “would like fries with that” the week before. My experience with Best Buy is they are poorly trained to do much other than look up specs on their own website. Yeah.... I can do that at home before I go.
It’s too bad the MS Store near you doesn’t seem to be able to help. I have seen/heard them help people when I have been in. Particularly business customers who make one of the one to one concierge type appointments and they are very knowledgeable and very helpful, spending a lot of time listening and suggesting both their own products and other product they carry (Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Razer, Huawie, etc.)
But I suppose that has more to do with the manager and how they hire/train than anything else
The problem you all to often run into at Best Buy is that the sales associate that is trying to assist with your PC purchase was probably working a fast food window and asking if you “would like fries with that” the week before. My experience with Best Buy is they are poorly trained to do much other than look up specs on their own website. Yeah.... I can do that at home before I go.
It’s too bad the MS Store near you doesn’t seem to be able to help. I have seen/heard them help people when I have been in. Particularly business customers who make one of the one to one concierge type appointments and they are very knowledgeable and very helpful, spending a lot of time listening and suggesting both their own products and other product they carry (Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Razer, Huawie, etc.)
But I suppose that has more to do with the manager and how they hire/train than anything else
Mac is better in some parts of window management than Windows (for instance, I prefer its fullscreen implementation and mission control). Window resizing and snapping is a whole other league in Windows, that's true. But if you don't mind paying 99 cents, you can get the best of both worlds on a mac.
Pain is not really a must-have app for most people. Still, Preview can do everything Paint does.
This to me is a god-send. Mac's implementation allows you to:
- Close a programme and open it again to find every window as you left it.
- Close all windows but still keep services running in the background (notifications, music, downloads)
- Keep commonly used applications open.
That's very annoying. But you can change it with some quick terminal commands.
Those are completely optional.
I think this really depends on the use case for every people.