(Part 3) Reddit mentions: The best computers & tablets
We found 82,446 Reddit comments discussing the best computers & tablets. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 7,819 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.
41. CYBERPOWERPC Gamer Xtreme VR GXiVR8020A2 Desktop Gaming PC (Intel i5-7400 3.0GHz, AMD RX 480 4GB, 8GB DDR4 RAM, 1TB 7200RPM SATA III HDD, 802.11AC WIFI USB Adapter, Win 10 Home), Black - Discontinued with Manufacturer
- Amazon's Choice for a gaming desktop
- System: Intel i5-7400 3.0GHz Quad-Core | Intel B250 Chipset | 8GB DDR4 | 1TB HDD | 24X DVD±RW Dual-Layer Drive | Genuine Windows 10 Home 64-bit
- Graphics: AMD Radeon RX 480 4GB Video Card | 1x HDMI | 1x Display Port,Product Dimensions 20.2 x 9.2 x 21.6 inches
- Connectivity: 6 x USB 3.0 | 2 x USB 2.0 | 1x RJ-45 Network Ethernet 10/100/1000 | Audio: 7.1 Channel | Keyboard and Mouse
- Special Feature: 802.11AC Wi-Fi
- Warranty: 1 Year Parts & Labour Warranty Free Lifetime Tech Support
Features:
Specs:
Color | Video Card: AMD RX 480 4GB |
Height | 21.57 Inches |
Length | 20.16 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | January 2017 |
Size | Processor: Intel I5-7400 3.0GHz |
Weight | 32 Pounds |
Width | 9.25 Inches |
42. ASUS ROG GL752VW-DH71 17.3-inch Gaming Laptop (Intel i7 2.6GHz, 16GB DDR4 RAM, 1TB HDD, GTX960M 2GB Graphic Card, Windows 10),Metallic
- Powerful 6th-generation Intel Core i7-6700HQ 2.6GHz. 16GB RAM; 1TB 7200RPM Storage.
- 17.3 inch Matte FHD display. 1920 by 1080 resolutions. NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960M 2GB VRAM gaming graphic card.
- GameFirst III technology prioritizes the flow of the game data across your network. Gigabit Dual-Band 802.11AC ultra-fast Wi-Fi
- Feature the latest USB3.1 Type-C port for more convenient connectivity options.
- Ergonomically-designed keys with 1.8mm of key travel, gives you responsive keystrokes when typing and entering commands; The slide-off upgrade panel offers instant access, fit an M.2 SSD, a bigger hard drive or more memory.
Features:
Specs:
Color | Metallic |
Height | 1.3 Inches |
Length | 10.6 Inches |
Size | 17-30.99 inches |
Weight | 6.6 Pounds |
Width | 16.6 Inches |
43. ASUS UX303 13-Inch Laptop [2014 model]
13.3" Quad-HD IPS Touchscreen Display (3200 x 1800).Intel Core i7-4510U 2 GHz. NVIDIA GT840M 2GB VRAM.256GB Solid State Storage. 12GB RAMDual-Band 802.11 A/C. 8-Hour Battery life.3x USB 3.0, 1x HDMI, 1x miniDisplayPort, Bluetooth 4.0, SDXC slot
44. ASUS VivoBook S Thin & Light Laptop, 14" FHD, Intel Core i7-8550U, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, GeForce MX150, NanoEdge Display, Backlit Kbd, FP Sensor - S410UN-NS74
- 8th Generation Intel Core i7 8550U (Turbo up to 4.0GHz) Quad Core processor and dedicated NVIDIA GeForce MX150 graphics 2GB
- 8GB DDR4 RAM and 256GB SSD
- 14 inches Full HD Wide view display with up to 178 degrees wide view and Asus NanoEdge bezel for a stunning 77% screen to body ratio
- Slim 12.8 inches Wide, 0.7 inches Thin and portable footprint with metal cover and backlit keyboard with fingerprint sensor
- Comprehensive connections including USB 3.1 Type C (Gen1), USB 3.0, USB 2.0, HDMI, & headphone/mic combo port (*usb transfer speed may vary. Learn more at Asus website)
Features:
Specs:
Color | Gold |
Height | 0.7 Inches |
Length | 12.8 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | October 2018 |
Size | 14-14.99 inches |
Weight | 3.2 Pounds |
Width | 8.9 Inches |
45. ASUS F556UA-AS54 15.6-inch Full-HD Laptop (Core i5, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD) with Windows 10, Icicle Gold
15.6-Inch Full-HD Display with Windows 10 Pre-installed, Refer user guide below for firmware updatePowerful Intel i5-6200U 2.3 GHz Processor (Turbo to 2.8 GHz), Refer description for software update256GB Solid-State Drive for blazing-fast boot times and program launchesBest-in-class connectivity wit...
Specs:
Color | Gold |
Height | 10.1 Inches |
Length | 15 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Size | 8GB_256GB_SSD |
Weight | 5.07 Pounds |
Width | 1 Inches |
46. ASUS FX502VM-AH51 Gaming Laptop (Windows 10, Intel Core i5-6300HQ, 15.6" LCD Screen, Storage: 1024 GB, RAM: 16 GB) Black
13.3-Inch Full-HD Display with Windows 10 Pre-installedLatest 6th generation Intel i5-6300HQ 2.3 GHz Processor (Turbo to 3.2 GHz)Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 3GB discrete graphicsLarge 1TB 7200RPM HDD with 16GB DDR4 RAMExtensive connectivity with HDMI/D-SUB/USB 3.0, 802.11a/c WiFi, and SD Card Reader
Specs:
Height | 0.9 Inches |
Length | 10.5 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Size | GTX1060 | 16GB | 1TB HDD |
Weight | 4.9 Pounds |
Width | 15.4 Inches |
47. Samsung Chromebook (Wi-Fi, 11.6-Inch) 2012 Model
11.6-inch Display, Samsung Exynos 5 Dual Processor2 GB DDR3L RAM, 16 GB Solid State Drive, 2 USB Ports: 1 USB 3.0 + 1 USB 2.0HDMI Port, Built-in dual band Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, web camera includedIncludes 100GB of free Google Drive storage (for 2 years)
Specs:
Color | Silver |
Height | 0.69 Inches |
Length | 11.4 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Size | 11.6" |
Weight | 2.43 Pounds |
Width | 8.21 Inches |
48. Dell Inspiron 15 7567 Laptop: Core i5-7300HQ, 256GB SSD, 8GB RAM, GTX 1050Ti, 15.6inch Full HD Display
- 15.6 inch FHD (1920 x 1080) Widescreen LED Backlit Display
- 7th Generation Intel Core i5-7300HQ Quad Core 2.50 GHz
- 8GB 2400MHz DDR4 RAM, 256GB Solid State Drive
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti, Built in media reader, Bluetooth 4.2
- Windows 10 Home 64 bit English
Features:
Specs:
Height | 3 Inches |
Length | 21 Inches |
Size | 8GB RAM | 256GB SSD |
Weight | 6.61 Pounds |
Width | 9 Inches |
49. Acer Aspire 5, 15.6" Full HD, 8th Gen Intel Core i5-8250U, GeForce MX150, 8GB DDR4 Memory, 256GB SSD, A515-51G-515J
8th Generation Intel Core i5-8250U Processor (Up to 3.4GHz)15.6" Full HD (1920 x 1080) Comfy View widescreen LED-backlit display8GB DDR4 Memory & 256GB SSDUp to 7-hours of battery lifeWindows 10 Home
Specs:
Color | Obsidian Black |
Height | 0.82 Inches |
Length | 15.02 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Size | 15.6-inch |
Weight | 4.41 Pounds |
Width | 10.35 Inches |
50. Fire Tablet with Alexa, 7" Display, 8 GB, Black - with Special Offers (Previous Generation - 5th)
- Beautiful 7" IPS display and 1.3 GHz quad-core processor. Available in four colors.
- Now with the Alexa cloud-based voice service - just press and ask
- Enjoy millions of movies, TV shows, songs, Kindle e-books, apps and games
- 8 or 16 GB of internal storage and a microSD slot for up to 200 GB of expandable storage
- Prime members get unlimited access to a huge selection of songs, books, videos and more
- Up to 7 hours of battery life
Features:
Specs:
Color | Black |
Height | 0.42 Inches |
Length | 7.52 Inches |
Release date | September 2015 |
Size | 8 GB |
Weight | 0.69 Pounds |
Width | 4.53 Inches |
51. ASUS Chromebook Flip C302 2-In-1 Laptop- 12.5” Full HD Touchscreen, Intel Core M3, 4GB RAM, 64GB Flash Storage, All-Metal Body, USB Type C, Corning Gorilla Glass, Chrome OS- C302CA-DHM4 Silver
- The flexible 360 Degree hinge and 12.5 inches full HD touchscreen lets you use the C302 in tablet or laptop mode
- Intel Core Processor with 64GB storage and 4GB RAM for fast and efficient performance with a bright backlit illuminated keyboard
- Extremely lightweight at 2.65 pounds with the protection of a sleek aluminum metal body
- Starts up in seconds and lasts all day, thanks to a long battery life rated upto 10 hours
- Make sure latest chrome version is upto date and is using the device in stable channel
- Note: Check user manual in technical specification before use
Features:
Specs:
Color | Silver |
Height | 0.5 Inches |
Length | 8.3 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | January 2017 |
Size | 12.5" |
Weight | 2.65 Pounds |
Width | 12 Inches |
52. Asus TUF FX505DT Gaming Laptop, 15.6” 120Hz Full HD, AMD Ryzen 5 R5-3550H Processor, GeForce GTX 1650 Graphics, 8GB DDR4, 256GB PCIe SSD, Gigabit Wi-Fi 5, Windows 10 Home, FX505DT-AH51, RGB Keyboard
- Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 4GB graphics (base: 1395MHz, Boost: 1560MHz, TDP: 50W)
- Quad-core AMD Ryzen 5 r5-3550h processor
- 15.6” 120Hz full HD (1920x1080) IPS-type display
- 256GB NVMe SSD | 8GB DDR4 RAM | Windows 10 Home
- Gigabit wave 2 Wi-Fi 5 (802.11AC)
- Durable gaming laptop with MIL-STD-810 military standard construction
- Dual fans with anti-dust technology | RGB backlit Keyboard rated for 20-million keystroke durability
Features:
Specs:
Color | Black |
Height | 1 Inches |
Length | 14.2 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | August 2019 |
Size | 15-15.99 inches |
Weight | 4.8 Pounds |
Width | 10.3 Inches |
53. ASUS VivoBook Thin and Lightweight FHD WideView Laptop, 8th Gen Intel Core i5-8250U, 8GB DDR4 RAM, 128GB SSD+1TB HDD, USB Type-C, NanoEdge, Fingerprint Reader, Windows 10 - F510UA-AH55
Powerful 8th Generation Intel Core i5 8250U 1.6GHz (Turbo up to 3.4GHz) processor15.6 Inches Full HD WideView display with ASUS Splendid software enhancement8GB DDR4 RAM and 128GB SSD + 1TB HDD storage combo; Ergonomic chiclet keyboard with fingerprint sensorComprehensive connections including USB 3...
Specs:
Height | 0.8 Inches |
Length | 14.2 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | January 2018 |
Size | i5-8250U | 8GB RAM | 128GB SSD+1TB HDD | Windows 10 |
Weight | 3.7 Pounds |
Width | 9.6 Inches |
54. Lenovo Flex 14 2-in-1 Convertible Laptop, 14 Inch FHD, Touchscreen, AMD Ryzen 5 3500U Processor, Radeon Vega 8 Graphics, 8GB DDR4 RAM, 256GB NVMe SSD, Win 10, Black, Pen Included
Up to 8 hours of battery life with quick recharge technology to power your laptop computer up to 80%Comprehensive protection with Windows 10 helps protect against viruses, malware, and ransomwareConvenient TrueBlock privacy shutter allows you to physically close your webcam when you're not using itT...
Specs:
Color | Onyx Black |
Height | 0.7 Inches |
Length | 12.91 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | April 2019 |
Size | 14.0 in |
Weight | 3.52 Pounds |
Width | 9.02 Inches |
55. Acer Aspire E5-573G 15.6-Inch Laptop (Intel Core i5-5200U, 8 GB RAM, 1 TB Hard Drive, Windows 10 Home), Black
Intel Core i5-5200U 2.2 GHz (3 MB Cache)Windows 108 GB DDR3L SDRAM1 TB 5400 rpm Hard Drive15.6-Inch Full HD Screen, NVIDIA GeForce 940M with 2GB VRAM
Specs:
Color | Charcoal Gray |
Height | 1.15 Inches |
Length | 15.02 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Size | 15.6-Inch |
Weight | 5.29 Pounds |
Width | 10.08 Inches |
56. Lenovo Y50 59418222 16-Inch Gaming Laptop (2.8 GHz Intel Core i5-4200H Processor, 8 GB RAM, 1TB HDD, Windows 8.1) Black
- Intel Core i5-4200H 2.8 GHz Processor
- 8 GB DDR3 RAM
- 1 TB 5400 rpm Hard Drive, 8 GB Solid-State Drive
- 15.6-Inch Screen; NVIDIA GTX-860M 2GB Graphics
- Windows 8.1, 4-hour battery life
Features:
Specs:
Color | Black |
Height | 15.24 Inches |
Length | 10.37 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Size | 16-16.99 inches |
Weight | 5.29 Pounds |
Width | 0.94 Inches |
57. MSI GL62 6QF-893 15.6" Gaming Laptop Notebook GTX 960M i7-6700HQ 12GB 128GB + 1TB Windows 10 USB Type-C
- Powerful 6th-generation Intel Core i7-6700HQ 2.6GHz. 12GB RAM; 128GB m.2 SATA SSD + 1TB 7200RPM Storage.
- 15.6 inch Matte FHD display. 1920 by 1080 resolutions. NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960M 2GB VRAM gaming graphic card.
- 360° virtual surround sound powered by Nahimic. Amplify your experience with your headset with Audio Boost
- Exclusive Super Port (USB 3.1 Type-C interface) supports dual 4K external monitors, and portable charging power up to 5V/3A
- Fast, accurate and responsive programmable gaming keyboard by SteelSeries. Powerful customization with SteelSeries Engine, Maximum Memory Capacity: 64GB
Features:
Specs:
Color | Black |
Height | 1.06 Inches |
Length | 15.07 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Release date | April 2016 |
Size | 15-15.99 inches |
Weight | 5.29 Pounds |
Width | 10.23 Inches |
58. Eluktronics P650HP6 15.6" FHD 1080p IPS Graphic Design Laptop PC - Intel i7-7700HQ Quad Core Windows 10 Home 6GB GDDR5 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 VR Ready 256GB SSD + 1TB HDD 16GB DDR4 RAM
- 8th Generation Intel Core i5-8250U Processor (Up to 3.4GHz)
- 15.6" Full HD (1920 x 1080) widescreen IPS display
- 8GB DDR4 Memory & 256GB SSD. Up to 16 GB (maximum)
- Up to 10-hours of battery life
- Windows 10 Home
Features:
Specs:
Size | 15-15.99 inches |
Weight | 5.9 Pounds |
59. Dell Inspiron Gaming Laptop - 15.6" Full HD, Core i7- 7700HQ, 8 GB RAM, 1000 GB HDD + 128GB SSD, GTX 1050, Metal Chassis - i5577-7359BLK-PUS
7th Generation Intel Core i7 7700HQ Quad Core (6MB Cache, up to 3.8 Giga Hertz)8GB 2400 Mega Hertz DDR4 up to 32GB (additional memory sold separately)Dual drives with 128 GB Solid State Drive + 1TB 5400 rpm Hard Drive, No Optical Drive option15.6 inch FHD (1920 x 1080) Anti Glare LED Back lit Displa...
Specs:
Color | Black |
Height | 0.99 Inches |
Length | 10.43 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Size | 128G SSD + 1TB HD | 8G RAM |
Weight | 5.66 Pounds |
Width | 15.7 Inches |
60. Huawei MateBook X Pro Signature Edition Thin & Light Laptop, 13.9" 3K Touch, 8th Gen i7-8550U, 16 GB RAM, 512 GB SSD, GeForce MX150, 3:2 Aspect Ratio, Office 365 Personal, Space Gray - Mach-W29C
World's First FullView Display: Immersive 13.9-inch 3K touchscreen with 91% screen-to-body ratio, only 0.57-inch thin and weighs only 2.93 lbs., perfect for at-home or on-the-go computingPowerful Inside: Windows 10 Home Signature Edition with no bloatware. 8th Gen Intel Core i7 8550U processor + NVI...
Specs:
Color | Space Gray |
Height | 8.54 Inches |
Length | 11.97 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Weight | 2.93 Pounds |
Width | 0.57 Inches |
🎓 Reddit experts on computers & tablets
The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where computers & tablets are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
I would recommend the Huawei Matebook X Pro because of the following :
The case has a high quality feel to it and smooth matte aluminum surfaces, flexing is minimal around the base and center of the keyboard and likewise for the lid despite the very narrow bezels.
It weighs 2.9lbs which is light like you want.
USB 3.0, USB type C, Thunderbolt 3 for ports.
Upgrades is hard, ram is soldered and SSD is underneath a heat pipe, but upgradeability is low in most ultrabooks.
Camera is "spring-loaded popup" from the keyboard, so the angle is fixed and image quality is unimpressive.
Keyboard is spill-proof chiclet keyboard, shallow in travel, Feedback is adequate, typing overall is quiet, and backlighting comes standard in two levels.
Touchpad is large, Multi-touch gestures is supported and easy to do thanks to the large touchpad.
Mouse keys are integrated (there are no dedicated mouse keys), feedback is soft and little spongy.
Display is 3:2 aspect ratio, has 13.9-inch screen , Brightness is very high (but usability in direct sunlight is still average because of the glossy screen), slight backlight bleeding that is easy to ignore.
Color coverage is very good at 61.6% for RGB and 95% for sRGB, screen doesn't have Screen flickering / PWM (which is a great plus if you have sensitive eyes) since you asked for a great screen.
CPU throttle under continuous intensive work, however, it is still more powerful than the 7th gen dual, so it may not be the best if your intensive work is made in long periods, but it should be more than powerful enough for bursts of intensive work
Fan noise is low during low to medium usage.
Heat is average during normal usage, but it gets hot during gaming (but still stays cool in the area that you use during gaming).
There are two front-facing speakers on each side plus two more facing the bottom corners.
Battery life is about 8-9 hours during normal/average usage.
Another big con for some is that it is made in china, which means that the support in the US currently limited.
NVIDIA MX150 which is one of the best for this range but still not great for newer games Benchmark(use the same website to check the benchmarks of the other GPU from the right hand list) and it will run Rocket League and WoW smoothly.
***
If you prefer more powerful GPU and CPU and can handle 4.5lbs, then I would recommend this Eluktronics mech g2 because it has great combination between value for money, weight, battery life, and performance.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/NVIDIA-GeForce-GTX-1660-Ti-Laptop-Graphics-Card.386426.0.html
If you want to check similar option make sure to check my post a list of best gaming laptops under 1500 in 2019
I would say there is a sweet spot for performance with every price tier.
I would recommend building with an AMD 570 or 580 as your GPU. at 1080P they are extremely powerful cards for the money and in comparison to the lower priced cards, there is a HUGE performance jump when you get a 570 or higher ( Nvidia 1060 is good too but i feel like you are currently getting more for your money with AMD).
If you go below a 570 you are going to have to cut corners on gfx settings in everything and in the long term you won't feel like your money went as far.
So that GPU is around 180ish bucks and a 580 4gigabyte version is only 210. SO its worth the 30 bucks, bigtime. You can max out pretty much every single game at 1080p 60fps. The 480 is almost the exact same card.
On the CPU front it's going to be a hard choice. Dayz loves faster cores so Intel is def faster, but that comes at a decent cost. If we are talking about the lower tier of CPUs ( sub 200 bucks) the i5's are not overclockable so AMD kinda wins here to IMO. A 1500x or 1400 can be had for 170-190 bucks, they are overclockable and have a decent stock cooler. The intel parts will always need a cooler if you buy one you can OC. I would ALWAYS purchase an overclockable CPU. The return on your investment is worth it.
Above all DO NOT BUY FX series AMD cpus. A cheap I3 will better in most cases.
A B350 ryzen support motherboard is 100 bucks. Would recommend picking one with good onboard sound though.
8 gigs of Ram 60$ is all you need.
50$ for a 1TB hard drive
CASE 50$ bucks and 35$ PSU (get at least a 500w) and you are set.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01NBL8BER/ref=psdc_13896597011_t1_B01M3UKNVD
This PC is pre built and honestly is a way better value. I feel like this is the sweet spot, you will totally feel like you have a beast rig and not just something that works. It's like 200 bucks more but the difference in performance and longevity is massive. It is also above the minimum spec for VR! This MB and CPU are not capable of overclocking but it is a very strong CPU and won't bottle neck the GPU at all.
If you built it yourself you would be around 700$ish. That Prebuilt is perfect for someone like you. I personally always build it myself since it was surprisingly easy once I learned. If you know someone that could help you IRL then totally build yourself. Otherwise get the PC i linked man. It's going to make your money go so much further.
Above all DONT GET FX amd cpus. You will feel the inadequacy immediately. You can go cheap on the GPU if it is at least a 460 (560) or 1050ti (950, 750ti). That can be easily upgraded later. DO NOT buy any GPUs lower than the ones i mentioned.
Remember that you can plug this PC into your TV. All new flat panel TV's are essentially PC monitors with higher latency. That could save you a good bit of funds till later. I play on a 46 inch in a recliner with a wireless g700s mouse and keyboard. I had to do some research to buy the right TV to get low enough latency, but you can make do with the TV you play consoles on, especially since steam has big picture mode.
I have almost the same level of rig as the prebuilt and i get 60+ fps on high setting 90% of the time. Only in major cites does it drop and it is only around 50fps then. So Dayz looks awesome and is smooth as silk. Heck i play witcher 3, DOOM, and Battlefield 1 on ultra and stay at 60 fps 90% of the time.
If you drop down to the PC you linked you will play on the lowest settings and it will dip into the 30fps range in cites or lower. The difference in how the game feels between the two PC's is like night and day.
I don't think you really understand what I'm saying.
When I went to college, I had the exact same thought you're having, and I bought the same sort of computer. I bought the most portable computer I could get without sacrificing power. It was one of the thinnest and lightest 15.4" laptops on the market at the time. It was maybe a bit over an inch thick and weighed about 5 lbs, but it had a decent processor and a dedicated graphics card so I could game. I'm not talking about some ferocious 10-lb, 17" behemoth. It was no ultrabook, but it was absolutely comparable in size to any $400 non-gaming laptop on the market today.
And I'm telling you, from experience, that it sucks to carry such a thing around. It was great having a laptop instead of a desktop, because I could head home over Thanksgiving or Christmas without taking a keyboard, mouse, monitor, speakers, and computer with me. It was even pretty decent for studying, because I could carry it to the common room in the dorm and set up for the evening (and LAN parties were similar). But after the first week of class, that computer never actually left my dorm building, because carrying it across campus was more effort than it was worth. Then, once I got to class, it was too big for the desk.
It's not going to matter whether this is a specialized gaming beast or a normal mid-range computer. If you genuinely think you'll need a computer in class (which is highly unlikely; most students still take notes on paper), then you need the absolute thinnest and lightest computer you can get. If I were going back to college, I would not want anything larger than 11 inches in class. Think Ultrabook or Macbook Air - anything bigger is a huge burden to carry day after day. But those are very expensive, and they still can't be your primary computer. I'd get a Chromebook or an Acer 11" netbook. I picked the Chromebook specifically because the Samsung with its ARM processor has incredible battery life, but as long as you keep the size in check you can get a normal laptop instead.
Cloud storage is great, because it's automatically everywhere when you need it, and it's backed up a lot better than most people's local hard drive is. But, if you're paranoid that Google is going to copy your class notes and you think your backup system is better than their RAID arrays, so be it. Use a USB memory stick or an SD card. I worked on-campus IT and saw just how many students lost important coursework this way, but I'll trust that you make good backups. The important thing is that you can quickly and easily pull your day's notes off of the tiny computer, because:
Tiny computers can be somewhat limiting. You need one if you actually expect to use it in class, but that's about the only place you'll want to use it, and there's no sense booting it up for 5 minutes every night to transfer documents. You need a second, serious computer in your dorm, for research, typing long papers, and gaming. For a college student, there's a lot of benefit to this being another laptop instead of a desktop, assuming you don't need the absolute best gaming experience money can buy.
So, here's my genuine, heartfelt suggestion. This is what I, as a relatively recent college graduate (freshman in 2004), would do if I had to do it all over again:
Huge badass laptop ($1,350) for my dorm room. It doesn't get moved around much unless I'm going home for the weekend, so it might as well be as preposterous and powerful as I can get.
PLUS
Tiny but usable laptop ($300) or Chromebook ($250) to carry around with me everywhere. I might even use Remote Desktop for everything, so I was actually working on the powerful laptop in my room and not on the little guy. Or, if I want to get fancy, set up a VPN and a shared network drive or NAS so I can access all my files, from either computer, from anywhere in the world. If it's dropped or stolen, it's super easy to replace, because it didn't actually have anything valuable on it, and didn't cost much in the first place.
I would suggest the [Acer R11 for $269USD](https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Chromebook-Convertible-11-6-Inch-CB5-132T-C1LK/dp/B01J42JPJG/ref=sr_1_2?s=pc&ie=UTF8&qid=1483770071&sr=1-2&keywords=acer+r+13 "Amazon Link to purchase") if you're really on a tight budget, but you're going down to 11.6", which may in the end be better for portability if you're still lugging back and forth from classes. It also has Android Apps in the stable channel which is a bonus. Just make sure if you get the R11 that you get the 4Gb Ram model or else Android won't run well on it anyway. My previous chromebook was the Acer C720P, which has the same screen size, and it was nice and light to carry around from work, home, and travelling, and was the laptop that I've used for most of my Master's degree and works well for typing long papers. The [Asus Chromebook Flip (1) at $259USD](https://www.amazon.com/C100PA-DB02-10-1-inch-Chromebook-1-8GHz-Operation/dp/B00ZS4HK0Q/ref=sr_1_1?s=pc&ie=UTF8&qid=1483771163&sr=1-1&keywords=asus+Chromebook+flip "Amazon Link to purchase") is nice, but in my opinion the keyboard is too cramped to be used as a computer to write anything longer than a facebook or reddit post, which I imagine why your original post requested info on 13"-ers, and 16Gb storage is too small for the future anyway.
I currently have the [Acer R13 at $399USD](https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Chromebook-Convertible-13-3-inch-CB5-312T-K5X4/dp/B01LXYG77O/ref=sr_1_1?s=pc&ie=UTF8&qid=1483771046&sr=1-1&keywords=acer+r+13 "Amazon Link to purchase") and it's great. I honestly can say it's overall the best computer I've ever owned and in my opinion the best value for a computer that money can buy. That being said, $400 is a lot of money for a student, but if you can afford it, it's definitley the one I'd recommend for you. The new ones that are coming out of CES, specifically the [Asus Chromebook C302 at $499USD](https://www.amazon.com/Chromebook-C302CA-DHM4-Traditional-Laptop-Silver/dp/B01N5G5PG2/ref=sr_1_1?s=pc&ie=UTF8&qid=1483771756&sr=1-1&keywords=Asus+Chromebook+C302 "Amazon Link to Pre-Order") and the [Samsung Chromebook Plus at $449USD](https://www.amazon.com/Samsung-Electronics-XE513C24-K01US-Chromebook-Touch-Screen/dp/B01LZ6XKS6/ref=sr_1_2?s=pc&ie=UTF8&qid=1483771819&sr=1-2&keywords=samsung+chromebook+plus "Amazon Link to Pre-Order"), that will have touch and support android apps may run better but all cost more, will be harder or impossible to get now, and are arguably not a better value for the dollar. Back lit keyboards are nice but aren't a necessity for you I imagine!
Good luck on making a decision and let us know what you ultimately decide!
I'M IN :D And I've already got ideas c: Gonna start on this c:
EDIT: I meant to edit this.. Not reply. ._.
Something that is grey.An item that is less than a dollar, including shipping... that is not jewelry, nail polish, and or hair related!A movie everyone should watch at least once in their life. Why?I'll come back with the three I missed c:
Edit#2: Adding raffle phrase! fear cuts deeper than swords
Also adding one of the bonuses! Purdy paintbrushes are made in Oregon c: They've been made in Portland since 1925! c:
Hm I don't know if there's any outside bundles beyond the 10% discount but I think you could get a much more potent laptop all around for less than the price there. Newegg and Amazon have had good deals and will likely continue to do so until Cyber Monday.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01LXO0PO2/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Either version of the above is a good deal right now, don't know how long the sale is gonna last. A 960m may not max it out at 60 fps constantly but should be reasonable. A 1060 mobile version is practically the desktop variant, and should crush the game.
https://www.amazon.com/MSI-GE72VR-Apache-Pro-024-i7-6700HQ/dp/B01IS33QWY/ref=sr_1_5?s=pc&ie=UTF8&qid=1480139416&sr=1-5&keywords=msi%2Blaptop%2Bgaming&th=1
Meanwhile for more there's this MSI. A 1060 with the processors listed should be absolutely fine to max it, and out of all the games that benefit from being installed on the SSD I recommend FF XIV for that. This is definitely more punch than the one you listed while being in that kind of price range or cheaper.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=9SIA8S14H07846&cm_re=eluktronics-_-9SIA8S14H07846-_-Product
Finally there's this one on Newegg. A smaller and newer brand but if you look around most of the reviews are positive, and it's a much more plain laptop aesthetically which may please you. Also seemingly no bloatware; if you were willing to go for a newer brand without a history one of their laptops might be a good bet, the one I linked is just a starting point.
I know portability weight and stuff is probably a factor to you too, but if you look around trying to find something with the specs of the MSI or Eluktronics ones would be a good bet. If you have further questions or want clarification from me feel free to reply or PM with specifics you want to know. Happy shopping and good luck.
I marked things with a [w] if they're on my WL!
Bonus:
Oregon Chai!
> typing long word documents ranging from 20 to 100 pages.
As others have said, I would recommend testing out Google Docs on your current PC and see how it handles the things you require. You can also try out Microsoft Office Online, and depending on the Chromebook you should have access to the Microsoft Office Android apps as well.
> Opening 10 - 15 browser tabs for research articles.
Most any Chromebook with 4GB of RAM should be able to handle that, but I would still recommend using an extension like OneTab. It's primary function is to conserve system resources, but it also makes it MUCH easier to scan through a large number of tabs very quickly because you can see the full tab name instead of the truncated portion you see in the tab bar when several tabs are open.
> Audio transcribing (listening to recordings at reduced speeds to type them out word for word).
I've never tried this on a Chromebook and honestly don't know if the default audio player allows adjustment of audio speed, but I'm confident you could find an Android app that would allow you to do that if need be.
> Reading/highlighting PDFs.
Kami should work very nicely for you. You can try it out on whatever PC you're currently using to see how it works. You could also use Onenote Online or any number of Android Apps.
> Will a chromebook with 2gb ram perform these functions smoothly? Or am I better off getting a low-end microsoft laptop?
Honestly, I would say neither. You're better off buying a nice Chromebook with 4GB RAM as a minimum. And since it sounds like you would be doing a lot of extended typing sessions, it's imperative that you get a device with a very good keyboard. At this point, the best option available on the Chrome OS side is the Asus C302CA or the Dell Chromebook 13 if you can grab one of those refurbs when it pops up on Dell Outlet.
> How seamless is the conversion from a google doc to word doc?
I've never had any problems with it, and I don't expect you would either unless you're doing some extremely complicated formatting. Even so, you could always use Office Online or the Android Apps (which, last I checked, were available on my C302CA).
For especially that video rendering, it will take a powerful quad core preferably i7 processors, more than 8 GB RAM and a dedicated graphics card to do well. If you were to go a little over $1200, this Eluktronics N857HK1 Pro-X Special Edition laptop would do a very good job for you. It not only has the powerful 7th gen quad core i7 processor, but also a fast SSD, solid gtx 1050 Ti dedicated graphics card and very good 16 GB RAM..In addition, it has a very good cooling system which is crucial, nice build quality and beautiful IPS 1080p display. If you are willing to spend a little higher, you could get this 2017 Eluktronics P650HP6 that is actually optimized for graphic design and has a wonderful gtx 1060 dedicated graphics card.. I must also say that both laptops have a very good backlit full keyboard with a numeric pad.
If you're on a budget, I just picked up this laptop and definitely recommend it. I did a lot of research beforehand and it's the best thing out there in this price range. It's running a Ryzen 5 CPU, which means it's got some impressive graphics capability for your CAD work. Plus it's a 2-in-1 and pretty light, so it's also great for note taking in class.
Another major benefit, especially if you're engineering and have some technical skills, is that the RAM, battery, and SSD are user upgradeable, which means you'll be able to keep this laptop running strong for years with a couple cheap upgrades when it starts to slow down.
It's not as fancy as other laptops out there, the build quality is where they had to make some compromises. Plastic body, speakers arent amazing, not the best screen out there, and the battery life is about 5-6 hours. But it's Lenovo, so it's still pretty solid, the keyboard feels pretty good and the trackpad is as good as anything out there under about $900.
Overall there's nothing near this powerful out there at this price range, especially if the 2-in-1 touch screen matters to you. But whatever you choose, I would definitely recommend something with a discrete graphics card or an AMD Ryzen processor like this one if you're going to be doing graphics intensive work like CAD.
**note: if you'll be doing a ton of MATLAB however, MATLAB is optimized for Intel and runs a lot slower on AMD processors, so that may also be something to consider.
This MSI GL62 6QF-893 gaming laptop would be perfect for you. It just had a big price drop from $999 to $899 which makes a perfect chance for you to get a machine with an awesome i7 quad core processor, 12 GB RAM, a nice 1 TB HDD plus 128 GB SSD ..It also has a very decent gtx 960 dedicated graphics card for gaming . This laptop will play the games you mentioned very well. Other great attributes of this laptops are , an amazing build quality with great keyboard and nice touch pad as well as a nice screen quality and great cooling system. It's battery life is also better than that you require.
Gee, what timing! I just recently finished writing my Top 5 Best Budget Gaming Laptop under $1000 guide.
The #1 pick of the guide if you want a quick answer was the HP Pavilion 15 Gaming Notebook.
The reason the Pavilion took the number 1 spot was because it's the best all-rounder. It's got the Intel i7-6700HQ CPU which is the best even in the up to $1500 price range, the Nvidia GTX960M which is very respectable and can play recent games on high, if not ultra settings, 16GB of RAM, 15.6" Full HD IPS display and more importantly a 128GB SSD as well as a 1TB 7200RPM hard drive.
This is definitely the best laptop with impressive specs that also has an SSD and a good screen.
Now if screen size is a huge factor for you and you'd prefer 17.3" instead of 15.6" you're going to have to sacrifice a little bit given the price range.
For the 17.3" range i'd suggest the Asus ROG GL752VW-DH71. It has the same CPU/GPU/RAM as the Pavilion 15 with the notable omission of the SSD drive.
Ultimately the decision of SSD v bigger screen size is a choice for you to make. Although keep in mind that the DH71 does have an upgrade panel, so you can add an SSD down the track if you want faster boot speeds/game loading screen etc. where as you can't make the screen size bigger.
Hope this helped and i'm happy to answer anymore questions you may have!
First of all, the Razer Blade is kind of bad (to put it lightly) in terms of price:performance.
Since your budget is higher than most of the mainstream laptops, you can have almost anything (certainly much better than what Razer offers).
If money is no object, there are usually two options:
The crazy notebooks are usually closer to $3000 now, but they can pack the 880M, which cannot be had in the more desirable thin form factor. Also, they can have good performance at a reasonable price. These are between a desktop and a laptop in portability, and are also somewhat cost-efficient.
It used to be that all gaming notebooks came in this massive form factor, but now the medium-high end graphics can be put in a smaller chassis, and this is almost always more desirable over the monsters that used to be. The portability sometimes comes at a premium, for example the GS60 with the 870M goes for ~1800 while you can get that performance for ~1200 in a less desirable form factor.
The Y50 is extremely cost efficient. If you want a cut-down model with a so-so processor, the Amazon model for $900 is very cost-effective. The 1080p display is pretty bad, although for the cost/performance, you can't really complain. Since your budget is described as <$2000, I imagine this is not for you. There is a model with a higher resolution display that fixes the poor performance of it in that regard
Over at Lenovo's website they have all the configurations at decent prices. The second one from the left for $1129 is probably the best (though with the 1080p display). 16GB of RAM and 4GB of VRAM is unnecessary and only adds to cost. The 1TB HDD is more useful, and warrants an upgrade from the first model. The SSD is limited to 8GB from the factory, and I recommend buying your own mSATA SSD to use. The 250GB 840 evo is nice.
The 860M is technically an upper-mid range GPU, and may not perform to your expectations. Unfortunately, the next step up, the 870M, costs quite a bit to get in a portable form factor. I only know of the GS60 that manages to do this, and it typically costs $1800 (Also the Blade for $2200). This is kind of unreasonable for such a performance jump. Still, if you compare the GS60 to the Blade, you are still getting a good deal, so it's not that bad. If you expected to spend $2000, you will be well-served by the GS60 for $1800. It's basically a Blade with a lower-resolution screen for $400 less.
One thing about the GS60: It gets hot. most of the thin gaming notebooks do, but the GS60's underside on the 870M model can cause burns. It's quite cool when web browsing and such, but during gaming, you need to watch out. The palmrest is pretty cool too, even when gaming, so you just have to make sure to NEVER use it on your lap while gaming.
For gaming at this price range I would advise you to check one of those laptops
laptop name | Dell Inspiron | Acer Predator Helios 300 2018 | Dell Inspiron 15 7567
--- |--- |---- |----
CPU | Quad core 8th Gen I5-8300H | Hexa core 8th Gen I7-8750H | Quad core 7th Gen I5-7300HQ
GPU | GTX 1060 Max Q | GTX 1060 | GTX 1050 Ti
Screen "| 15.6"" FHD IPS " "| 144Hz 15.6"" FHD IPS" "| 15.6"" FHD IPS"
Ram | 8 GB | 16 GB | 8 GB
SSD | 128 GB | 256 GB | 256 GB
HDD | 1 TB | 0 | 0
Weight | 5.7 Lbs. | 5.5 Lbs. | 5.5Lbs.
Battery life | 4.5 Hrs. | 3.5 Hrs. | 6 Hrs.
Price | 950~1050$ | 1150~1250$ | 700~800$
Pros | One of the best bang for the money in the market. | One of the best bang for the money in the market. | The GTX 1050Ti should be enough for CAD work and good gaming exprince .
Pros | The GTX 1060 Max Q should be enough for CAD work and good gaming exprince . | A great screen with 144hz perfect for photo and video editing and a nice game play . | Decent battery life .
Pros | Decent battery life . | The GTX 1060 should be enough for CAD work and good gaming exprince . | One of the best bang for the money in the market.
Amazon has a great deal right now where you get the VR headset for free with the ACER .
I'm sorry, but $500 is a pretty hard limit to deal with for any gaming laptop. Laptops in general tend to be way more expensive for the power you get due to things like miniaturization, thermal management, built in screen, charging systems, and battery regulation systems, etc. A touchscreen will easily add ~$100 as well.
If you must, however, something like this is probably your best bet and should play most games today nicely at at least low settings:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/MSI-GE62-Apache-Pro-004-15-6-i7-6700HQ-2-60-GHz-16GB-1TB-256GB-GTX-960M-W10-/282275541250
You really don't want any graphics card worse than a 960M right now, but if you must, try something like this with a 950M:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16834315423
Integrated graphics are getting better but are still terrible for gaming and can't hold a candle to a 360/PS3.
Something like this might be able to play games from 2014 at low settings:
https://smile.amazon.com/Newest-Acer-Aspire-WiFi-AC-Windows/dp/B01IOOBX3G/
FYI, this is an incredible tool for comparing laptop graphics cards and seeing which games can run on what graphics:
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Computer-Games-on-Laptop-Graphics-Cards.13849.0.html
If you could splurge, this is actually amazing for the price and I've seen it even lower before Thanksgiving week. It'll play anything today at high settings, pretty much.
https://smile.amazon.com/FX502VM-Gaming-Laptop-NVIDIA-i5-6300HQ/dp/B01LXO0PO2/
Actually it seems to have sold out over the weekend... Most laptops with a 1060 graphics card sell for $1200 or more.
There are gaming laptops across the spectrum from $500 up to $2300. While filling out the sidebar form would yield the best recommendation, the Asus N550JK is honestly the best pick at $1000. The Nvidia GeForce 850M is a mid-range card that should do well for most things, and the laptop itself is a solid piece of metal. Definitely the best thousand-dollar laptop on the market (at the price of minimal portability).
$500 : Acer Aspire E5 571G : Very low end. Not great perfomance.
$750 : Lenovo Y40 : Surprisingly good performance and a good budget pick as the little brother to the Y50.
$1000 : Asus N550JK : Best Value or whatever
$1250 : Asus UX 303LN : Starting to get much better portability in exchange for some performance.
$1500 : Gigabyte P34Gv2 : Best laptop that combines portability and power in exchange for a terrible (4 hrs) battery.
Above this are the Razer Blades and MSI GT lines. I know nothing of these realms besides their superiority.
You have a huge number of options depending on what you are really looking for. Specs to look for would probably be an i7 processor, 8GB or more RAM, and an excellent, dedicated graphics card if you work with 3D imaging, or a normal, integrated graphics card if you just work with normal images. You can also decide between a SSD, a HDD, or both. I would recommend an SSD unless you need 1TB of storage space and don't want to use an external hard drive.
You also should look for something with a good IPS screen, and likely 15 inch screen rather than just 13 since you don't seem to mind poor portability and weight.
I can give a few recommendations in a bit
Ok recommendations.
If you really want to budget, you could get away completely fine with a refurbished HP Pavilion for just $620. This would be good if you want to save money, don't do 3D graphics rendering, and are fine with an HDD instead of an SSD.
If you want really good value, and are fine with a 'gamer looking' laptop, an MSI GL62 would be a good pick for $900. It would have basically everything you need. Especially good if you do 3D graphics with the 960M.
I can offer more options if you want. Just let me know what you are looking for based on what I've offered, and what you want different.
Also, if you want another Zenbook and are fine with a 13 inch screen, the Zenbook 303UB is a great choice for $1180. Would be extremely portable.