The dual screen ASUS is cool but I am concerned about battery life of having 2 screens.
It will definitely not have good battery life! Nor is it the most portable device out there!
The dual screen ASUS is cool but I am concerned about battery life of having 2 screens.
The more I think about it, the more it's growing on me.
I like the way Dave2D describes it - take away the idea that ASUS or any third party will design a custom UI for you. Just imagine what YOU would use the screens for. I think I would use it to have menu bars and settings windows in the various design programs I use always open - Rhino3D, The Adobe Suite, etc. Also, I think part of the screen would be my media consumption that I tend to have running on my iPad while I work - MLB, Youtube, Podcasts, etc.
Hinging on how much more they are charging for it and the thermal situation, I think ASUS has won 2019.
I could use something like that for web development, with the inspector/console on the smaller lower screen.https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/27/18641211/asus-zenbook-pro-duo-announced-specs-computex-2019
What’s your thoughts on this one?
I’m not sold on second screens on the surface around the keyboard or touch bar.
Same here, but I have two thoughts, first the keyboard has no wrist support, is a big deal for me, but also my usage case. When I'm not traveling or moving around, my laptop is on my desk hooked up to a monitor - that dual display is not as useful then. Still I do think Asus hit it out of the park, I'll wait till the dust settles.The more I think about it, the more it's growing on me.
Same here, but I have two thoughts, first the keyboard has no wrist support, is a big deal for me, but also my usage case. When I'm not traveling or moving around, my laptop is on my desk hooked up to a monitor - that dual display is not as useful then. Still I do think Asus hit it out of the park, I'll wait till the dust settles.
I'm more interested in a decent windows tablet to compliment my laptop. When I travel into the office, a tablet is a better option, as I have a work computer waiting for me. A tablet works better and while it sounds like I'm a total lenovo fanboy, I do really like the X1 table (3rd gen), it hits out of the park design/component wise, but those things come at a price. I don't know about spending 1,000 for an auxiliary device that will compliment my laptop.
I could use something like that for web development, with the inspector/console on the smaller lower screen.
In many ways this would be the ultimate progression of the touchbar, wouldn't it?
I see that Intel's been playing around with the same idea: https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/28/...xclusive-dual-screen-hinge-tobii-eye-tracking
I need to run windows only software and various apps that are desktop versions not iOS versionsWhy Windows tablet? Can you really get better than the iPad as a secondary device?
I could use something like that for web development, with the inspector/console on the smaller lower screen.
In many ways this would be the ultimate progression of the touchbar, wouldn't it?
I see that Intel's been playing around with the same idea: https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/28/...xclusive-dual-screen-hinge-tobii-eye-tracking
Dang, that looks awesome. Screen elevated to eye level, it would have more or less the same screen-to-keyboard proportions as my desktop. And they say it can handle 195W total heat, I'd buy this in a heartbeat.I see that Intel's been playing around with the same idea: https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/28/...xclusive-dual-screen-hinge-tobii-eye-tracking
Dang, that looks awesome. Screen elevated to eye level, it would have more or less the same screen-to-keyboard proportions as my desktop. And they say it can handle 195W total heat, I'd buy this in a heartbeat.
Finally they start reinventing laptops, not only racing to who can slim them the most.
Could be inconvenience to use on public transportation. Imagine somebody bumping into it and break it.
Here's the video from the verge on this prototype.I could use something like that for web development, with the inspector/console on the smaller lower screen.
There's a level of innovation we're seeing, but so far only more of the same for the Mac. Its funny, in some ways Apple was on the right track with the idea of thebetter time to be in the market for the PC, and arguably a worse time to own a Mac
There's a level of innovation we're seeing, but so far only more of the same for the Mac. Its funny, in some ways Apple was on the right track with the idea of the touchpad, but they didn't think big enough. Can you imagine how things would have turned out if Apple rolled out a full display like the Zenbook? Instead we got emojis instead of function keys.
There's a level of innovation we're seeing, but so far only more of the same for the Mac. Its funny, in some ways Apple was on the right track with the idea of the touchpad, but they didn't think big enough. Can you imagine how things would have turned out if Apple rolled out a full display like the Zenbook? Instead we got emojis instead of function keys.
Indeed and especially given the issues befalling the mac, T2 crashes, Flexgate, keyboard, etcThere was a time where the ROI of Mac was considered about 4x better compared to Wintels.
Or as a clothes folder - Dr Sheldon Lee Cooper would have used that for surewhen that folding laptop conks out, one can use that for a quick step ladder!
... instead, once the RTX Studio models are out, Apple asks twice the price compared to one of these but giving you 1/4 of the performance.
There was a time where the ROI of Macs was considered about 4x better compared to Wintels. Today we‘re about to see the opposite
I don't get this whole "Studio" thing, Quadros have been around for ages and there was always a split between gaming and pro workstations. The only difference is Nvidia, in March, started releasing "Creators Ready" drivers for the civilian graphics cards promising improvements in pro apps and more stability, so now they sort of create perception that you have officially sanctioned "Pro" machine without forking extra cash on Quadro. But I honestly don't see any differences, both these and "Gamers Ready" drivers perform the same and both are crashing my system from time to time when 2080Ti is connected in eGPU. I actually went back to RX580 to drive my monitors when using a laptop and put the big boy RTX where it belongs - in a desktop.
Yeah, me to, I just don't understand the introduction of that Studio brand. It is almost like they're trying to tell people who can't read the gaming laptop specs - " hey, you can totally use it for professional work!!".TBH I love these notebooks as they seriously perform, they have upgrade paths, don't present issue, far cheaper than a certified portable workstation and they generally have better cooling
Yeah, me to, I just don't understand the introduction of that Studio brand. It is almost like they're trying to tell people who can't read the gaming laptop specs - " hey, you can totally use it for professional work!!".
I guess it makes sense then I forget sometimes that even the best inventions can go unnoticed unless they're marketed in a proper way.Erm, raises hands.