(Part 3) Best laptops according to redditors

Jump to the top 20

We found 74,016 Reddit comments discussing the best laptops. We ranked the 5,747 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.

Next page

Subcategories:

2 in 1 laptops
Traditional laptops

Top Reddit comments about Laptop Computers:

u/ObiChiefKenfrodo · 396 pointsr/pcmasterrace

Apple Macbook Pro

  • i5 CPU
  • 8gb RAM
  • 256gb SSD
  • $1500

    Asus Laptop

  • i5 CPU
  • 8gb RAM
  • 256gb SSD
  • $500


    The screen on the Asus is not quite as nice as the one on the macbook but it doesn't account for the $1000 difference in price. You could find one with a nicer screen for a couple hundred more if you looked around.

    This one is the same price as the macbook but has more ports, twice the RAM, twice the SSD space, a higher screen resolution, a much better CPU, and dedicated graphics.

    What is apple even doing?



u/MrSh0wtime3 · 11 pointsr/chromeos

I really have no idea. And as always, im sure people will say "you cant get better machines for the price bro". Ugh. Stop being sheep. Windows machines are drastically better speced out even at this price range.

I just want better hardware for ChromeOS. We should be able to beat Windows on price and quality. But they just refuse to even try. They want to take the Apple approach without being Apple. Its frustrating.

https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-VivoBook-R5-3500U-Graphics-F512DA-EB51/dp/B07QQB7552

https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-ZenBook-NanoEdge-I5-8265U-UX431FA-ES51/dp/B07NZ8HBBK

https://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-Ultrabook-Touchscreen-Quad-Core-Fingerprint/dp/B07CNVG2CD

https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-VivoBook-Lightweight-WideView-Fingerprint/dp/B0795W86N3

u/TheFinalMetroid · 11 pointsr/bapcsalescanada
u/go_east · 10 pointsr/Philippines

PSA: Amazon Prime Day is fast approaching. There are so many options for forwarding and some have promos for Prime Day starting already.

Also PSA: the local distributors are all ripping you off and offer dumster-fire tier customer service and warranties. Don't support them till they stop (and ignore their puppet accounts that will reply with FUD). Do the math yourself on forwarding costs, the big Prime Day price discounts (check camelcamelcamel for the actual lowest price on items) and amazing Amazon customer service vs buying locally and getting shit-tier customer support the local distributors. The exception to this is cell phones, the US sucks for this if you want dual sims, no bloat or any kind of modern cell phone experience. Europe is much better and there are forwarders who offer EU addresses, but forwarding is overall more expensive from Europe. Make sure you choose a forwarder who has been around for a while and has people on social media reporting good experiences (there are crappy/rip off forwarders now). I will not recommend any particular service as they all have negatives and positives and I am not interested in advertising for any of them.

I posted a lengthy price calculation on a post by a guy who got ripped off buying a P145,000 laptop on Lazada from the official seller (which is just a local distributor) so you can see what that looks like:

>Let me pose the question to you: have you checked out Shippingcart, Jinio, POBox, Johnny Air, etc? How much would that laptop be if you bought it on Amazon? Forget putting it on Camelcamelcamel and waiting for the price to drop or on Black Friday/Prime Day or something, just retail price and bought the laptop today? Lets find out.

&gt;So I dont know what model you tried to buy but you said ROG. See [this model at Amazon](https://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/B07G5Z9H8R/ref=dp_olp_all_mbc?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;condition=all) (its the Amazon Choice model). Right now its $1299.99 sold by Amazon itself (best seller to buy big ticket items you will import): https://imgur.com/a/eeKVxhV. <br /> <br /> &amp;gt;So there is tax of $126.75 if you ship it to Jinio (Connecticut). That is: P67,314.13 + P6563.18 = P73877.31. But then you've got shipping. This is really hard to calculate depending on how you ship (sea or air) and which company you use (I use 8 different forwarding companies these days). I air shipped 2 laptops and a few other things 6-7 months ago via Shippingcart with their 12lbs 15% off promo and it looks like I paid about $58 per laptop. <br /> <br /> &amp;gt;So, P3003.27 + P73877.31 = P76880.58. Thats right, a little over half what you paid OP. And you get that sweet Amazon customer service.

&gt;But wait, what if something went wrong in shipment? So this is Amazon itself you bought from. If you don't know what this means, this is the company that is giving refunds for Huawei phones bought 1 year ago (as per people on /r/Android). Ok so say you have to send it back to Amazon. This is a PIA but LBC is one of the cheaper options for this and I can tell you it costs around P7000 to send a laptop back to Amazon or Best Buy (I`ve done it to both). Then you have to pay to forward it back to you here in the Philippines.

&gt; So, P7000+ P3003.27 + P76880.58 = P84180.85. Yep, even if you have to replace a broken laptop (or received a switch instead of a laptop) its still about 60% the price you paid.

u/spchee · 10 pointsr/Steam

Looking at the games you listed, you don't need a 'gaming' laptop.

Since you know nothing about 'what all the specs mean'. I'll give you a quick run down of what's important.

The CPU - just because a laptop says advertises itself as quadcore at X ghz doesn't mean it's good. Instead find the CPU model (e.g. i5 8400) and look it up on a bench marking website and compare it with other CPUs of other laptops at whatever price point. Another thing you can do is look for youtube benchmarks, which will give an indication of how that CPU will perform on whatever games she wants to play (e.g. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggfuW_tx9GA). Generally when looking at these benchmarks you want to look out for the FPS counter - anything 60 or above is good.

GPU - Again, look for benchmarks of how the GPU performs on websites and on you tube. Although the games she plays doesn't need to good of a GPU. Again, anything above 60 FPS is good.

HDD/SSD - SSDs are SIGNIFICANTLY faster than Hard-drives, although are more expensive. So if you can get an SSD, get one as I've been able to turn utterly crap laptops into fast ones. This will not help with actual FPS (frames per second) performance in games, but load times and the responsiveness of activities will be significantly better. You shouldn't ever underestimate how big of a difference an SSD will make. Therefore I'd probably find a laptop with an SSD of 240GB or over. You can always upgrade/replace a HDD with an SSD if the laptop you brought doesn't have one and you can find them for about $30 I'd say.

Resolution - Get a 1920x1080 screen (commonly referred to as 1080p). IPS is nice but not necessary. The screen size is up to you. Bigger = better viewing experience however if you want to carry it around every where, smaller might be better.

RAM - 8Gb is generally the norm, although you can probably get away with 4Gb. If you need to you can upgrade the amount of RAM your laptop holds anyways pretty easily.

___

Now the games you listed aren't very intensive games (meaning they don't require too good of a PC). Anything over $800 imo is definitely overkill since she won't be playing graphics intensive games. I'd get a laptop with a decentish CPU but nothing too fancy, and you might be able to get away with integrated graphics (the GPU that comes with the CPU), although I wouldn't be overly sure. So don't waste your money on a laptop with a really fancy GPU. Especially as she's only 12; she doesn't need a mid-high end laptop for the types of games she plays.

Something to watch out for is the tag 'gaming'. Just because it has the tag 'gaming' doesn't mean it's good at gaming - it's simply a tag used for marketing. So ignore the tag 'gaming' and just focus on pure specs. The only thing a 'gaming' laptop offers is that it probably looks nice with flashy colours.

Also have you considered a desktop? As they generally are more upgradable (If she decides she wants to play games which are more graphically intense she could easily buy a new GPU for 200 and throw it in there instead of buying a totally new laptop) and more affordable. The only thing she won't be able to do is carry it around.

Hope this helps

Edit found this laptop - https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Nitro-AN515-Laptop-i5-8300H/dp/B07C715KNT/ref=sr_1_4?keywords=laptop+gtx+1050+ssd&amp;amp;qid=1565396341&amp;amp;s=pc&amp;amp;sr=1-4

Now the GPU is a bit overkill IMO so if you do some digging you could probably find a laptop with a better CPU and a worse GPU at a similar price.

u/jklemon17 · 9 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

This is my pick, should handle everything described very well: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07PB5M8DS/

p.s. your niece sounds awesome, and you're awesome for helping like this!

u/valkyr · 9 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Win10 certainly made some improvements in the battery life department, but the rMBP is still going to reign supreme there thanks to Mac OS just being better optimized for it. If you're looking for something comparable spec-wise to the 13" rMBP, but cheaper, look at the Asus UX305LA, or if you want something more durable and a similarly long battery life, check out the 14" Lenovo Thinkpad T450S, which you can get cheaper by signing up for a free "student &amp; teacher account" here. I'm also a big fan of the XPS 13, though the price and specs are fairly similar to the 13" rMBP. If you want to go higher than 13", but still get a premium finish and good performance, check out the $1449 config of the new XPS 15. They manage to fit a 15" screen in the body of a 14" laptop thanks to the infinity display. A little out of your price range, but one of the best laptops on the market, and has a good GPU for most gaming.

u/bluesandal · 8 pointsr/linux

I have been running Lubuntu on the Asus UX305LA and have been pleased with it. It has an aluminum build similar to the MacBook Air.

I was deciding between the Asus and the Dell XPS 13 and ultimately went with the Asus based on price.

u/techstar2000 · 8 pointsr/LaptopDeals

I would go for something like this G5587-5859BLK-PUS G5 if looks and performance are important to me.

u/kaysn · 7 pointsr/thesims

It will run TS4 no problems on High settings. But for that kind of money ($1000) you'll find other laptops with the same specs if not better. And that is more "built" for gaming. Problem with most laptops for media consumption, they don't have enough air vents. Or not large enough for the air to pass through.

This for example costs $300 less with better GPU. A GTX 1050 Ti leaves the 1050 in the dust.

This laptop was recommended by another user from another thread asking for laptop advice. Again cheaper than the Acer Aspire 7 and with better specs.

u/llamacolypse · 7 pointsr/AskWomen

Victorinox 8 Inch Fibrox Pro Chef’s Knife which I got for my husband, we needed a better kitchen knife and this one was rated pretty well by america's test kitchen

Chooka rain boots I have thick calves and these rain boots are fantastic, they're a bit wide too so I can wear wooly socks with them.

My Asus laptop

This cat lounger my cats love, especially my chunky one

And my air purifier

u/blueteak · 7 pointsr/Vive

Getting really close, I got one of them for a recent trip and it works great for VR on the go :)

u/[deleted] · 7 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

This laptop will get the job done with running Fortnite, it doesn't have a lot of space but it's upgradeable and I doubt she needs that much. It has a very respectable battery life.

&amp;#x200B;

https://www.amazon.com/Dell-Inspiron-7567-Laptop-i5-7300HQ/dp/B07793DRK9/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=Dell+Inspiron+15+7567&amp;qid=1565572396&amp;s=electronics&amp;sr=1-3

u/xxkid123 · 6 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

What games are you going to be playing?

Actually nevermind, this is the best new gaming laptop you can get in this price range:
https://www.amazon.com/Dell-Inspiron-5000-Gaming-Laptop/dp/B06XFG7157/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1523978923&amp;amp;sr=8-3&amp;amp;keywords=1050+laptop

Or in general, an i5 HQ and a gtx1050 with 8g of ram. Frankly at $600 there's not much you can do, either the games you want run, or they don't. You would need to jump up to $850 to get an i7 and a 1050ti, which should handle most games at medium-high, and $1050 to get an i7 and a 1060, which will handle just about anything. Then if you want portability you'll need to jump up to the $2000 range for something semi portable and capable of gaming.

You may have more luck trying /r/hardwareswap, Craigslist, and the secondhand market in general.

You will want to spend $40-60 to get a second stick of ddr4 to run in dual channel. I highly recommend the second hand market for this, ram usually lasts for ever so second hand ram is rarely an issue.

u/construktz · 6 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

The Lenovo y50 would be ideal, but it is a little over your hard limit.

here is a list I put together of some gaming laptops. The 7th option down is a Lenovo Y40 and it would provide the best situation for your type of work. Good battery life, decent gaming performance, portability, etc.

u/trainedtech88 · 6 pointsr/LaptopDeals

This dell G5 tick all your boxes. check it out.

u/BudgetSetHelp · 6 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I am not sure what kind of programming you are doing, but i figured that you don't need a dedicated GPU because the xps 13 doesn't have one.

Here are some options that match your Description:


ASUS ZenBook 14 price: $900


Vivobook S15 S512 price: $800


Inspiron 15 5000 price: $680


ASUS VivoBook 15 price: $550


More Customization: BudgetSet


^(You are talking to a human.)
^(If you find this reply useless, downvote for removal.)
^(This project is purely for help, and there is no way for us to profit from it)

u/archibald_crappins · 6 pointsr/photoshop

Lenovo Flex 14

$549.99. A little more than your budget, but perfect for what you’re looking for.

u/elliottdmann · 6 pointsr/computers

Probably something like this: Dell Gaming Laptop G5587-5859BLK-PUS G5 - 15.6" LED Anti-Glare Display - 8th Gen Intel i5 Processor - 8GB Memory - 128GB SSD+1TB HDD - NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 6GB, Licorice https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CD3MRZD/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_SWS0CbS3MHPBA.

For your budget, a laptop with a GTX 1060 6GB graphics card is likely the best you can find. The RAM and SSD could be of greater capacity; however, those things are generally simple to upgrade later when your budget allows.

u/legos45 · 5 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Straight from Dave Lee's review on YouTube, the ASUS Zephyrus S GX531GS is a great fit. It has no overheating issues. It has:

  • i7-8750H 6-core processor

  • 16 GB of RAM

  • 512 GB SSD storage

  • 1080p 144Hz 15.6" display

  • GTX 1070 8 GB Max-Q graphics card

  • Weight of 4.6lbs

    The laptop runs Windows 10 Home. The laptop will be able to run recent games on high settings to max.
u/ButterMyToes · 5 pointsr/buildapcsales

I'm not too sure about the upgradability (not exactly the best w/ laptops) but I found this Lenovo Ideapad Flex the other day. 3500U, 8GB DDR4, 256GB NVMe, 1080p. Can fold up into a tablet and comes with a pen for the display. I think it came to around $560 with tax.

u/CyberJeeves · 5 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Gaming laptops are hard to find with sufficient power below $1000. If your budget is not flexible, then the closest thing you'll find is the Lenovo Y50 i5 version, which is around $900 and has a pretty good GTX 860M GPU. For the money, the performance is quite good, though the screen leaves much to be desired.

u/User_Simulator · 5 pointsr/buccos

I'm anxious I'm on an Apple TV so that might be bad for the help! https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Aspire-Nitro-GeForce-VN7-593G-73KV/dp/B01N35Z1DA/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&amp;amp;ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1495748033&amp;amp;sr=1-1&amp;amp;keywords=nitro+1060 It isn't a government in a corner OF spot a la Adam Frazier.

~ PandaMan32

-----

^^Info ^^| ^^Subreddit

u/Allhailhaels · 5 pointsr/thesims

Idk your budget, but something that has at the minimum an Intel Core i3 processor with Intel Integrated graphics card and 4GB Ram. This would go for about $300-$400 dollars, would be able to play the Sims 4 at very low settings and the Sims 2 Ultimate Collection at comfortable settings/smooth gameplay.

If you can spare some more money, ideally you should get an Intel Core i5 or i7 processor, preferably a 6/7/8th generation (generation indicated by the first of number that follows, so for example I have an i5 6200U processor). 8GB+ RAM (more the better) is all suggested. The processors I just mentioned will suit the game fine for medium/high settings but for ultra settings look for one of the i5/i7 with “HQ” at the end. The difference between a processor ending is that 6/7th gen and below processors that end with U are only “dual core” while HQ means “quad core”. If you don’t have the money to grab a quad core/HQ that’s ok, but it leads to my next point.

If you can’t get an HQ processor, try to at least get a U processor accompanied by a dedicated graphics card! Some dgpu’s in a decent price range that work well for sims are the Nvidia GeForce 940m, or MX150 made by the same company! Ultra settings could benefit from a Nvidia GeForce GTX1050 or above (1050,1060,1070,1080). That’s basically it!

The first option is only recommended if you’re on a tight budget. You can get more bang for your buck if you go for a desktop, ie. better processor/graphics card for less money but you use the portability factor. I like to game in bed and also have college to worry about so I need my machine to be portable.

Here are some good laptop choices

If you’re on a really tight budget (ie. first option):
Acer Aspire E 15 E5-575-33BM 15.6-Inch FHD Notebook (Intel Core i3-7100U 7th Generation , 4GB DDR4, 1TB 5400RPM HD, Intel HD Graphics 620, Windows 10 Home), Obsidian Black https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01K1IO3QW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_oHeJAb87X98XF

Have a bit more money to spare:
Acer Aspire E 15, 15.6" Full HD, 8th Gen Intel Core i5-8250U, GeForce MX150, 8GB RAM Memory, 256GB SSD, E5-576G-5762 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075FLBJV7/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_nIeJAbZFVCXT4

Other pricier ($600+) but better choices:
Dell Inspiron 15 5000 5577 Gaming Laptop - (15.6" FHD (1920x1080), Intel Quad-Core i5-7300HQ, 1TB HDD, 8GB DDR4, NVIDIA GTX 1050 4GB, Windows 10 - Black) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B06XFG7157/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_iJeJAbCQ911ZA

HP Pavilion Power GTX 1050 Gaming Laptop - 15" Full HD, Intel Core i7-7700HQ , 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD + 1TB HDD, Windows 10 Home, Black - 15-cb077nr https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075VT9LFD/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_6KeJAbYG1C2XN

Acer Nitro 5 Gaming Laptop, Intel Core i5-7300HQ, GeForce GTX 1050 Ti, 15.6" Full HD, 8GB DDR4, 256GB SSD, AN515-51-55WL https://www.amazon.com/dp/B074Q54GSR/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_wLeJAb9TZ7ZEH





u/hbarSquared · 5 pointsr/civ

Civ isn't a massive performance hog, so that price range should be reasonable. If you can bump up your price by $100 you get into the range for gtx 1050Ti graphics cards, which are going to be solid cards that last you a long time. You probably don't need a full 8GB of ram for Civ, it might help in the late game but it's realistically out of your budget anyway.

MSI w/ i7, 1050Ti

Dell w/ i5, 1050Ti

Acer w/ i5 1050Ti

My wife and I both have MSIs and we love them - the keyboards especially are best in class for laptops, IMO. You might also try over in r/gaminglaptops, there's not always a lot of answers but you might get lucky.

u/ThisUsernameIs20ltrs · 5 pointsr/dragonage

I'd go for something with an Intel 4th-6th gen i3/i5 CPU, 8GB of RAM and a relatively roomy SSD (&gt;250GB).

You don't really need a laptop with a dedicated GPU, intel integrated graphics post 4th gen is more than enough for running DA:O

Other than that maybe go for a large and nice screen?

Personally I'd maybe go for this one: https://amzn.com/B01CGGOUJM
Extremely good CPU (i5, 6th gen), Big SSD (256GB), 8GB of RAM and the display is 1080p.

This is a lot of computer for your money and it's definitely worth it. I did look at some of the cheaper ones, but seeing as you're also going to be using it for school and such, I'm thinking you're going to want to invest a teeny bit more. Trust me, I've worked with a lot of cheap laptops and the low price is almost never worth it. The cheaper ones are going to last a couple of years before they become outdated, but the one I suggested is going to last a lot longer (as long as you're careful with it).

If you got any opinions/wishes/questions just mention them and I'll do my best to help you ;-)

u/OrangeBuck · 5 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

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.

u/The_Adviser100 · 5 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

For school in this price range I would advise you to check one of those laptops

laptop name | Acer Swift 3 | ASUS VivoBook | ASUS VivoBook S15
--- |---- |---- |----
CPU | Quad core 8th Gen I5-8250U | Quad core 8th Gen I5-8250u | Quad core 8th Gen I5-8250U
GPU | Intel UHD Graphics 620 | Intel UHD Graphics 620 | Intel UHD Graphics 620
Screen "| 14"" FHD IPS" "| 15.6"" FHD" "| 15.6"" FHD"
Ram | 8 GB | 8 GB | 8 GB
SSD | 256 GB | 128 GB | 256 GB
HDD | 0 | 1 TB | 0
Weight | 3.2 Lbs. | 3.7 Lbs. | 3.5 Lbs.
Battery life | 8.5 Hrs. | 4.5 Hrs. | 6 Hrs.
Price | 600~700$ | 600~700$ | 650~750$
Pros | One of the best bang for the money in the market. | Very light . | Great all-metal chassis with a stilsh colour .
Pros | Very light . | Decent storage .. | Very light .
Pros | Great battery life . | Decent battery life . | Great battery life .

u/LonerIM2 · 5 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Yes, 99% of the time they are, and the one you linked seem genuine, reason it is lower than the other laptops you are comparing it to is because of few things:

  • 1.This one comes with HD screen not full HD which is very old resolution and shouldn't be available in this somewhat high price range.
    1. This is sold with 3rd party company called "Oemgenuine" not by Lenovo directly, what they do is buy a cheaper lower configured laptop, open it up and "upgrade" it with more ram or more storage, which is much cheaper than buying them preconfigured from Lenovo directly.

      With that if your main usage is going to be gaming then I wouldn't recommend either, GPU on both is weak, and that has a big affect in gaming performance so instead If you could push your budget a little then this is your best option it comes with great value for money, it has high refresh rate with 1080 resolution like you wanted and it is just about 5 lbs.

      If you can't push your budget then your second best option is this Acer Nitro 5 because of the following:

  • The display cover has a brushed-metal look to it and you can open it with one hand.
  • Ram is easily upgradeable, SSD is also upgradable but it needs a little more work.

  • Keyboard is backlit chiclet keyboard (only red) and it can be turned on and off, with good travel and precision.

  • Touchpad supports multi-touch gestures and it is big enough to use them, with clear pressure point.

  • Screen is not super bright, so it might struggle in direct sunlight, and color coverage is also not great but slightly above average at 40% RGB and 62% sRGB.

  • Screen doesn't have Screen flickering / PWM and it has IPS panel so the viewing angles are great, but response time is not great too.

  • CPU throttle a little and gets hot (to the point that it is painful to use on your lap), but for general usage and most games it shouldn't have a big negative impact.

  • GPU is powerful enough to run Runescape on medium to high settings, you can view the expected FPs from this link

  • https://www.notebookcheck.net/NVIDIA-GeForce-GTX-1050-Ti-Notebook.168400.0.html

  • Fan noise is very low during idle or light usage, but rather loud during gaming, but that is to be expected.

  • Battery life during non gaming usage is very good for a gaming laptop at around 5.5-6.5 hours.
    If you want to check similar option make sure to check my post a list of gaming laptops
u/Atulin · 4 pointsr/webdev

That's curious, especially after you compare this with, for example, this.

u/count_smith · 4 pointsr/bapcsalescanada

https://www.amazon.ca/Lenovo-Convertible-Touchscreen-Processor-81SS000DUS/dp/B07TWHYTSQ/

600$. 2-in-1 14" Touchscreen/pen for notes, 3.5 lbs. 3500U/Vega 8 should handle minecraft fine. Don't think you will find better for 600$ and specs are great for that price.

u/crushendo · 4 pointsr/NCSU

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.

u/Michiganders · 4 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

The Dell Precision Xenoflower linked has pretty solid build quality considering its price. It may be a bit big if you're looking for an ultrabook though, as it has a 15.6" display and weighs in at 5.16 lbs.

If you really want great build quality in this price range you'll probably have to buy used/refurbished or stretch your budget a bit. A refurbished business-class laptop, such as the Thinkpad T480, Latitude 7480, or HP Elitebook G4 would fit the bill quite well.

Two more I'd say to consider are the Lenovo Flex 14 for $530. It meets most of your requirements with a Ryzen 5 processor (similar to an i5), decent integrated graphics card, 256GB PCIE SSD, and comes in at 14". I wouldn't expect amazing build quality but it could still last a while if treated well.

You could also consider the 14" Lenovo THinkpad L480 that's on sale at TigerDirect. It's not quite as well built as the T-Series thinkpads but should still be a bit better than most consumer laptops in this price range. It also doesn't have an SSD but you could install one yourself.

u/GuyYoureThinkingOf · 4 pointsr/LaptopDeals

This is not a sale - it's been this price for most of the time that it's been listed on amazon: https://camelcamelcamel.com/Lenovo-Convertible-Touchscreen-Processor-Graphics/product/B07PB5M8DS

u/Vandyyy · 4 pointsr/LaptopDeals

At a nearly $1800 budget, I'd personally be more ambitious than a 1660Ti. I mean, the MaxQ variant with Ryzen chips can already be had for $1100. Depends on where your priorities are, sure, but I'd think above $1200 is where you should expect better than "overall value" shopping and can be a little choosy.

u/Vegito_Sama · 4 pointsr/GamingLaptops

I'd recommend the ASUS TUF 505. It has a Ryzen 3750H which is a decent CPU. For the GPU it has a full desktop grade 1660ti. It also has a 120HZ IPS panel with great colour accuracy. All this for just $1099.

Amazon link : https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B07QQB6DC1/ref=ox_sc_saved_image_3?smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER&amp;amp;psc=1

u/Gordo_51 · 4 pointsr/laptops

size is a big one for students. 15.6in is good, but if you have a small pack or need it to be smaller 13 inch laptops are out there. since students would be using their computer a lot to open things like word documents or spreadsheets, so you need a fast but efficient processor and a good amount of ram like maybe 8 or 16gb, like a ryzen 5 3500u.

the amd laptops are cheaper and offer similar performance to intel laptops. look for laptops with ssds, so it starts up fast and is snappy. though ssds are small in capacity unless you need to have large photoshop or 3d modeling stuff on the laptop, ssds are definately the better option for students.

look for either high quality plastic chassis or metal chassis, as these are durable and are good for taking out/putting away a lot, and are generally light as most metal laptop chassis are aluminum these days.

you should also look for laptops with a good battery life, at least around 19~14 hours. also look for USB-C charging capable laptops as a lot of phones have them nowadays, so you only have to carry one charger if your phone uses USB-C, and you can transfer files between your phone and laptop quickly if you need to.

also look for thin designs as these are easy to carry, usually lighter than textbooks and dont make you tired carrying around all day.

here are some good examples of what i just said: https://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-330S-15ARR-Laptop-Memory-Platinum/dp/B07HGTFTZB/ref=sr_1_7?keywords=ryzen+5+3500u+thin+light&amp;qid=1574045426&amp;sr=8-7 according to reviews of this, as long as you remove McAfee "antivirus" it is blazing fast

https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-VivoBook-R5-3500U-Graphics-F512DA-EB51/dp/B07QQB7552/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=thin+light+laptop+amd&amp;qid=1574045773&amp;sr=8-2 fast cpu and good amount of storage. REMOVE MCAFEE if its there

edit:formatting

u/kverberk · 4 pointsr/chromeos

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&amp;amp;ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1483770071&amp;amp;sr=1-2&amp;amp;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&amp;amp;ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1483771163&amp;amp;sr=1-1&amp;amp;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&amp;amp;ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1483771046&amp;amp;sr=1-1&amp;amp;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&amp;amp;ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1483771756&amp;amp;sr=1-1&amp;amp;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&amp;amp;ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1483771819&amp;amp;sr=1-2&amp;amp;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!

u/sharkysnark · 4 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

===
13-14"
===
ASUS Zenbook UX303LA - 128gb SSD, Haswell, FHD Display, 3.2lbs, 8GB RAM - $899

ASUS Zenbook UX31A-DH71 13.3-Inch(1920 x 1080) i7-3517U 4GB 256GB SSD -
256GB SSD, Ivy Bridge, Matte FHD IPS display, 2.9lbs, 4GB RAM, 5hrs battery life, [review]
(http://www.ultrabookreview.com/1445-asus-ux31a-review/) - $999

Asus Zenbook UX303LN - 256gb SSD, Haswell, 13.3 inch, 3200x1800 Touchscreen IPS Display, 3.2lbs, 12GB RAM, 5-8hrs battery life, review, GT 840M - $1,299


===
15.6"
===

Asus N550JK - 1TB, Haswell, 15.6in, 1920x1080 IPS touchscreen, 6lbs, 8gb RAM, review, NVIDIA GTX 850M - $1,059

u/whomad1215 · 4 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

The newest macbook air has the best battery life.

I'll recommend the Asus Zenbook 303LN for a windows alternative.

u/edit1754 · 4 pointsr/laptopgaming

If you want the best game performance for the price, these are slightly over but probably the best value, with the 6GB GTX 1060 and also IPS / 72% NTSC displays.

u/The---Technician · 4 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

You are on the right track with those two you mentioned; exactly the two I would have thrown out to you if you are running away from the gaming appearance. The XPS has a little better display than this NITRO but the Nitro has a much better graphics card which is crucial in especially high level CAD tasks...The Nitro also has a bigger storage.

u/poopyheadthrowaway · 4 pointsr/laptops

Portability + power is a bit of an issue. That said, here are some sub-$1500 suggestions from Amazon:

u/GameStunts · 4 pointsr/pcmasterrace

Dell Inspiron 15 7567 $839 with a 1050Ti, 256GB ssd (user questions note that there is space for another hard drive)

Eluktronics N850HK1 $998 I've linked the version with the 1060, 128GB ssd, but there are other variations with more memory bigger SSD etc

Both taken from /r/SuggestALaptop's FAQ &amp; Quick Pics side bar, more suggestions there too. I have no direct experience with either laptop.

u/glymao · 4 pointsr/laptops

At $800 you can buy brand new gaming laptops with way better specs. RAM isn't the most important thing for a PC and they can be upgraded easily later.

https://www.amazon.com/Dell-Inspiron-7567-Laptop-i5-7300HQ/dp/B07793DRK9

I would not put more than $450 for the Alienware.

u/Centaurd · 4 pointsr/pcmasterrace

If you want slim with some ability to play games you should think about this. http://www.amazon.com/Zenbook-UX303LN-DB71T-Quad-HD-Display-Touchscreen/dp/B00KTL21RA

I just recently bought this bad boy and while its slimmer than a macbook pro, it also has a higher resolution screen and a gt 840m which is by no means a power house but I can still play Dota 2 at 1600x900 at a silky 60fps. It even plays other games like Titanfall, FIFA, and Cities: Skyline at lower resolutions.

u/starchaserro · 4 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Hi,

Based on your requirements I have made this noteb search

You can see and change the search parameters using the "Refine results" button in the upper-left part of the search results page. You can also click on the laptops for more information.

An option for you might be this one: Dell Inspiron 15 7577 Gaming - combines power and low cost perfectly - you can find the configuration I gave you here for 750$ or on amazon from 940$

Another option might be this one: Dell Inspiron 15 7567 Gaming - this one is slightly weaker but with a better battery life - you can find the configuration I gave you on amazon for 780$

u/balloonanimalfarm · 4 pointsr/AskProgramming

I don't know of any laptop you'd want to keep for 6-7 years. You'd be better off buying a $1000 laptop every 3 years. Even at that price point you can get excellent machines and you skip the problem of having outdated hardware. Take a look at this Zenbook. Computers today have much better SSDs, faster RAM, better peripherals, more power efficient CPUs and better GPUs than those 2-3 years ago.

u/CanadianCyanide · 4 pointsr/pcmasterrace

Suggestions:

u/massivewang · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I suggest the XPS 13, included other options though.

HP Spectre x360

  • 1440p screen
  • i7 6500U
  • 8GB ram
  • 256gb SSD
  • 12.79" x 8.60" x 0.63" (HxWxD); 3.2lbs (thinner than MBA, only .2 lbs heavier)

    Dell XPS13

  • i5-6200U
  • 8gb ram
  • 256gb ssd
  • 3200 x 1800 resolution with touch screen
  • 12.0 x 0.6 x 7.9
  • 2.78 lbs (actually lighter than the MBA!)

    Zenbook Ux303UA

  • 1080p screen
  • i5 - 6200U
  • 8gb ram
  • 256gb ssd
  • 8.8 x 12.7 x 0.8 inches
  • 3.2 lbs
u/psm510 · 3 pointsr/UltraBooks

UX303UA for $850. It just went back up recently coming from $799. For $350 more you could get the UB which has double Memory, +4GB ram, dedicated GPU, and a jump from an i5 to an i7.

There is also the UX305 which is an older edition that only comes in gold. Not worth it IMO if you could get an even better one for $100 more.

u/thelphelper · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Welcome to suggestalaptop. I recommend getting the ASUS ZenBook UX303UB laptop because it is in your budget range and it fits all the criteria that you have outlined . It is very powerful , sporting a quad core Powerful 6th-generation Intel Core i5-6500U processor, also it is 13.3inchs and a touchscreen as you perferred, 8 GB RAM , and a nice 256 GB SSD. The weight is awesome 3.2lbs is a dream weight for the quality that this laptop carries.

u/Dullorasses · 3 pointsr/UltraBooks

The UX303UA has a backlit keyboard. Why would anyone skip a major feature like this? It's awesome.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B014VHW24Y?psc=1&amp;amp;redirect=true&amp;amp;ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o05_s00

u/GloriousEggroll · 3 pointsr/linux_gaming

I use this:
https://www.amazon.com/Dell-i7559-5012GRY-3840x2160-Touchscreen-i7-6700HQ/dp/B015PYZI8E/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1488237062&amp;amp;sr=8-5&amp;amp;keywords=dell+inspiron+i7

i got just the normal 1080p screen (not the 4k or touchscreen, but those are options)

also if you get it through dell you can get financing for easy payments.

It runs arch linux just fine, nvidia optimus runs fine on it as well. (dont bother with bumblebee). it also comes with an m.2 slot. I upgraded mine to 16gb ram, 256gb m.2 ssd, along with the 1tb sshd it comes with. The keyboard is full sized so i have my num keys, and the touchpad is nice quality and isnt overly sensitive, and doesnt get in the way of my palm. the battery life is great also!

I got this around may of last year and love it.

u/supergnaw · 3 pointsr/FL_Studio

It's a dell inspiron. I got it specifically for its expandability because I already had an M.2 and ram that would fit it from a couple of older computers. As much as I wanted to grab a fancy razer or other "top tier" laptop, I couldn't justify the price. Another factor that drove me to this "type" of laptop was its build quality. I needed something that would be more durable than my previous laptops. I find myself being overly cautious with my electronics and even then sometimes they just don't stand the test of time. This laptop, however, I have zero complaints about. It's actually my most favorite laptop I've purchased, and it's not even remotely close to the most expensive. Disclaimer, I don't know how it performs without the M.2 or extra RAM since I installed them immediately, but I expect this laptop to last me for a while. Here's links to the laptop and M.2.

Laptop: https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B015PYZI8E/ref=ppx_yo_mob_b_inactive_ship_o0_img?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;psc=1

M.2 Drive: https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B07822Z77M/ref=ya_aw_od_pi?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;psc=1

Sorry for the wall of text lol.

u/The--Technician · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

That ASUS F556UA-AS54 lapotp really look a good choice and fits your needs perfectly. It has a decent processor, as well as memory and the 256 GB SSD will give you some much needed speed.

u/Beeecup · 3 pointsr/pcmasterrace
u/OddLawnGnome · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Since Steam In-Home streaming relies on the source computer to do all the processing, the actual laptop it's being streamed to doesn't have to be all that powerful. Your primary concern for a stream laptop is going to be your network card. With that in mind, I suggest this Asus
or this Acer.

The Acer has everything the Asus has, is within .2 lbs of weight (5 pounds for either) with the addition of a dedicated graphics card. I'm more inclined to suggest the Acer as a better overall deal, since for an extra $20 you get the capability to game reasonably well on the go. The Asus, however, does have a slightly larger battery (38wH vs ~31wH on the Acer) so I would estimate you're looking at about an hour difference in favor of the Asus. Say 4-5 hours for the Acer and 5-6 for the Asus under normal usage. Not a colossal difference, but it might affect your usage plans for it. As far as Steam streaming, both have dedicated Ethernet ports- which I would absolutely prioritize over relying on WiFi. Especially if you're playing a fast-paced game like Overwatch.

u/SweetTomatoes · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

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:

  1. Portable gaming notebooks (if you are restricted by travel especially) like the MSI GS60(GTX870M + quad core) for $1800 or the Lenovo Y50(860M + dual core) for $900.

  2. Huge, crazily powerful desktop replacements like the Asus notebooks, or the MSI ones that aren't in the GS series. I remember though that one of the MSI models is horribly flawed because it only has one fan to handle so much heat, so watch out.

    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 &lt;$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.
u/ChangenowMS · 3 pointsr/smashbros

Hey,

I found this one:
http://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-15-6-Inch-Gaming-Laptop-59418222/dp/B00K6ZIO2K

Looks like it even has a better graphics card and its cheaper.
it does have an i5 instead of an i7, but like KallyWally said,
you can safely go down to an i5.

u/fourdots · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

The Asus UX303LN is what I'd suggest. High-resolution screen, and a reasonable GPU which should be more than fast enough for SC2 and LoL. Also very pretty, though I prefer the UX301LA.

You can get an external blu-ray drive pretty cheaply - search "blu-ray usb" on Amazon, for instance.

u/elvinelmo · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

You can get a lightweight laptop with tons of power ideal for students like the ASUS VivoBook F510UA

  • FHD WideView Laptop,
  • 8th Gen Intel Core i5-8250U,
  • 8GB DDR4 RAM,
  • 128GB SSD+1TB HDD,
  • USB Type-C, ASUS NanoEdge Display, Fingerprint Reader
  • 3.7 lbs

    If you are into gaming you might want a dedicated graphics card so let me know
u/ACS1029 · 3 pointsr/FL_Studio

This is the laptop I use

Granted I know it's above your price range, but I got it "used" for $370, but there was nothing wrong with it and you can't even tell it was used. Very solid laptop, good battery life, lots of storage, and I haven't had it run into any problems with FL yet. If you can find it used or on sale I highly recommend this one

u/Ganrokh · 3 pointsr/WorkOnline

I've been working from home for a little under two years now. My setup is a little pricey, but I've paid for it working completely online, so that's a nice feeling.

I currently don't have a desk (won't have room until I move in with my girlfriend in a few months), so I work on a laptop for now. The laptop is a gaming laptop. I have a gaming laptop because, I'm not looking to simply "work" for an income. During the day, I work online while my laptop mines a cryptocurrency in the background. Crypto mining has definitely been a profitable venture for me. In the evening, I stream for a few hours on Twitch. I'm not a big established streamer, but I've made a little bit of income from streaming.

Because of not having a desk, I don't really have room for a second screen. However, I do have a Acer R11 Chromebook that I usually keep a couple Chrome tabs open to monitor various things. The touch screen is really nice as well.

My mouse is a Razer Naga. I am a man of efficiency and I believe that, for online workers like ourselves who are usually getting paid by getting work done and not by the hour, efficiency and productivity are key. The keypad on the side of the mouse work wonders. Being able to program different keys and even scripts to them is amazing. Some people prefer the Logitech equivalent to it.

The headset is going to ultimately come down to personal preference. There are many, many different headsets out that that come in all sorts of shapes and styles. Do you want over-the-ear? On-ear? Do you want the band to go over the head? Behind the head? Do you need a wireless headset because you have kids at home and you need to get up often? Reviews may not be too reliable as well. For example, with gaming headsets, if you go to any gaming forum or subreddit and ask about gaming headsets, people will have you believe that the HyperX Cloud II Headset is the greatest headset put on God's green earth. It just wasn't for me. It was a little tight on my head and the audio was a bit too "in my head", which gave me headaches. I much prefer the Astro A40 TR Headset.

Finally, you're going to want to protect your eyes. If you work online, you're going to be staring at a screen for hours on end. If you're looking at a screen, you're exposed to artificial blue light. Artificial blue light is meant to emulate sunlight. Exposing your eyes to it will strain your eyes, which can disrupt your sleeping patterns, cause headaches, elevate stress, etc. That's only in the short term. In the long term, well, screens emitting blue light haven't been around long enough yet, so we don't really know what the long term effects of it is. Still, you need to protect your eyes. There are a handful of companies that make glasses designed to specifically filter out blue light. When I used to wear specific glasses for this, my preferred brand was Gunnar Optiks. I say "used to wear" - I had to get prescription glasses recently and my eye doctor offered blue light protection in my glasses. I believe it's called "Prevencia". If you have to wear prescription glasses, ask about it next time you see your eye doctor.

Hope this helps!

Edit: I forgot to mention F.lux. F.lux is a program that reduces the amount of blue light your screen emits based on the time of day, emulating a sunset. At night, it gives your screen a red/orange lighting. At night, after the sun has set and F.lux kicks on on my screen, I take my glasses off. It's a very nice program.

u/qizah · 3 pointsr/chromeos

The Acer R11 is a really great Chromebook. I picked one up for much more than $200 (Canadian price lol) but it's worth it, it's a really great machine. I've been using it for ~ a week now. I see it listed for $259.99 on Amazon.com; not bad!

u/Chooch3333 · 3 pointsr/nvidia

https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Aspire-Gaming-GeForce-VN7-593G-73KV/dp/B01N35Z1DA This is my vote. I have the ACER Predator Helios 300 and love it (it was on sale for quite a bit, and had similar specs to this) but the Acer looks professional and not like a gaming laptop, which I hate about the Helios 300.

u/Orangematz · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

What about this?

u/by_a_pyre_light · 3 pointsr/laptops

The Acer Triton 300 is the cheapest laptop you can get with a full 6GB GTX 1060 graphics card in it right now, at ~$1,049. That will max out all the games you listed without issue.

Reviews:

  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=No5RbW1A2Ss

  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvID5D_Bkl4

    ASUS's GL502VM is also the same price on sale right now, and is sleeker and I believe thinner. Looks a bit nicer too, IMHO. I had two of the ASUS GL502VS last year, which are the slightly thicker versions with the GTX 1070.

    Overall, a good, solid portable gaming laptop but with Gsync battery life was crap, so keep that in mind.

    If you want to step up a little bit, I'd highly recommend the Acer Aspire Nitro 15" because it looks like a business laptop, not some gaming eyesore. That means you can take it to school, work, the library, coffee shops, etc. without people judging you. Plus, it starts at $1,299 so it's not much more expensive.

    Beyond that, you go up in price a bit for laptops with more metal in their builds and sleeker, thinner, lighter chassis. All of the laptops I've mentioned so far are between 5.5 and nearly 8 pounds. Not the worst thing, but noticeably heavier than thin and light ones in daily use.

    Start with the new Sager NP8950, which is well under an inch thick and packs the same specs as the other laptops mentioned, in a plastic and thin metal chassis. It also has a 3 or 4 zone RGB keyboard, which some people love. At $1,499 it's right at the edge of your budget, but the thinness, weight reductions, sleeker design, better building materials, included RGB-lite keyboard, and expandable storage and RAM options make it worth it, IMO.

    From there, things quickly go outside of your budget with the MSI GS63VR, Gigabyte P35 and Aero 14/15, Razer Blade, etc.
u/BestBeating · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I would go with this version of Dell Inspiron 15

  • 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
  • Weight: 5.78 lbs

    More details
u/hamcat · 3 pointsr/GamingLaptops

I have exactly the same question and these are the ones I’ve seen so far near this price point (some BF/some available now). There are probably others. Best of the bunch? No idea.

1050ti

u/Breadfish64 · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop
u/martymcflyer · 3 pointsr/laptops

Or I would recommend the acer e 15, or inspiron 15 5000 5577

Link to all 3 on amazon:



Acer inspiron 15

Acer Aspire E 15

Acer Aspire 5

u/FITS97 · 3 pointsr/blackdesertonline

First off, while your GPU is always the priority while gaming, black desert is fairly CPU and RAM intensive as well. Cheaping out on either of those will really hurt you, especially the CPU. I’d personally have 12-16GB of RAM.

If you’re looking for a laptop, I bought this on Black Friday. Runs the game well on medium settings, 40-60 FPS outside of cities. It can run it alright on high as well, but remastered or ultra will suffer major performance drops. https://www.amazon.com/Dell-Inspiron-7567-Laptop-i5-7300HQ/dp/B07793DRK9/ref=redir_mobile_desktop?_encoding=UTF8&amp;amp;psc=1&amp;amp;ref_=ya_aw_od_pi

Also use a monitor and peripherals personally, so my experience is mostly with the internal components

Edit: I also added another stick of 8GB RAM, as well as a SSHDD.

u/squired · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I'll second that and would love to hear any recommendations as well. I came to make a thread but it looks like we're looking for the exact same thing, budget and all.

The UX303LN looks to be absolute perfect, save for that damn QHD screen! From the scaling issues to the yellow issue, I'm just really wary of it. I wish they'd just offer it in 1080/FHD. I don't even care if it is touch capable.

u/NeverRealNano · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Don't know how much that helps you, but I'm looking for a notebook and have similar requirements (specs, budget) as you have. I'm most probably going to get the new Asus Zenbook ux303ln ! (Even though here in Europe we get one with slightly different specs (FullHD screen instead of QHD screen for one))

Otherwise I would always recommend Dell! I had a few Dell laptops already and never had any serious complaints, just the price range for their XPS laptops is a little high. (And I guess it's time for a new XPS series soon)

u/A4NRK9 · 3 pointsr/UltraBooks

ASUS ZENBOOK UX303LN-DB71T

  • Price: $1,163.99 (Amazon.com)
  • RAM: 12GB DDR3 [4GB (On-board) + 8GB (Removable)]
  • CPU: Intel i7-4510U (2 GHz) [More Information]
  • GPU: nVidia GeForce 840M (2 GB DDR3) + Intel HD Graphics 4400
  • Storage: 256 GB SATA III SSD
  • Screen: 13.3"; 3,200 x 1,800 (QHD+ w/ Touch Screen)
u/Balethorn · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16834152668&amp;amp;cm_re=msi_laptop-_-34-152-668-_-Product
Personally I like the nvidia mobile series and since it is a gaming machine it will potentially get hot. At just about 6lbs it isn't too heavy for a gaming laptop. On sale currently.

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MMMMMX2/ref=psdc_565108_t3_B00NNQDZRI#customerReviews
Above you have the ASUS Republic of Gaming laptop with weighs in at just over 9lbs if you're willing to put up with that. Slightly better graphics card and more ram.

Both run Windows 8.1 if you're alright with that. As someone who plays league and some triple A titles I would probably buy the lighter one if I were carrying it around campus. The heavier asus is really a desktop replacement. Both laptops are 15.6 inches and do not unfortunately give the battery life in hours. Any other questions I'd be happy to do more research.

With the $50 saved on the first option, buying a carrying bag wouldn't break the bank. Best of luck to you.

u/cismalescumlord · 3 pointsr/linux4noobs

One of these? If so, very nice!

I have one of these and it runs Kubuntu almost perfectly. The things to watch out for:

  • Mine had no legacy mode bios so I couldn't install any distro that didn't work with EFI.

  • I had to manually build the drivers to get the wifi working. As the little vivobook has no Ethernet port, I was lucky enough to have a wireless dongle that was recognised immediately.

  • The trackpad is hyper-sensitive and doesn't have Linux drivers yet. It was recognised as a mouse so tweaking the mouse settings calmed it down a bit.

u/march20rulez · 3 pointsr/LaptopDeals

That opens up a lot of options. I believe there are some Microsoft surface deals for the holidays going around. They look decent and are really portable. Convertibility into a tablet is also pretty awesome for a dorm room.

Your requirements are pretty low so there are too many options for me to list. Look for a SSD. Keep your CPU choice below an I5. Doubt you'll need more than 4 or 8 Gb of ram. You should be able to stay well within your budget.

On second tthought here is a laptop that I wanted to get on black Friday :D

ASUS Zenbook UX305LA 13.3-Inch Laptop (Intel Core i5, 8GB, 256 GB SSD, Titanium Gold) with Windows 10 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B013KKANTE/ref=cm_sw_r_awd_DWZFwb1MD7PPV

u/balefrost · 3 pointsr/chromeos

If your budget is as high as $899, chances are that a lot of traditional laptops are also in your price range. I mean, just looking quickly on Amazon, I found this 13" Acer. It has the same RAM, a better processor, 4x storage, and the same integrated graphics core. I can't speak to build quality, but the screen is double-hinged, so you can use it as a (presumably very bulky) tablet. Or this one, which has a weaker processor (though still more powerfull than the Dell's) and with only a traditional clamshell design, but which is $100 cheaper. These aren't gaming laptops (though those are also in your price range), but they're also not underpowered.

Then again, the most expensive Dell CB13 is only $650 from their site, so I'm not sure where you got $899 from. Maybe you're not in the US? Nevermind, there's a second page that I missed.

I'd say that you should understand what you're getting into with ChromeOS. Stock, it's simpler and (arguably) more convenient than a Windows, Mac, or Linux box, but it's also more restrictive. Crouton works around those limitations, but now you're essentially running a second environment from within the first. And Crouton, great as it is, isn't perfect. For example, there's currently (unless it was recently fixed) a bug related to keyboards locking up while installing it.

I have a Pixel and am considering a Dell CB13 as well. (And honestly, if the Dell was around when I bought my Pixel, I probably would have gotten it instead.) But I started with a cheap Acer C720. I didn't spend a lot on a Chromebook until I knew that ChromeOS met my needs, though I still feel like I'm frequently running into things that it doesn't handle well. It might be useful to know what degree you plan to pursue. An English major might do just fine with a Chromebook, though I think I'd recommend something else to a Computer Science major.

I haven't used a Dell CB13 myself, but most signs point to it being an excellent device. The build quality is allegedly great, and the hardware is about the best you can get below a Pixel. I suppose that if ChromeOS doesn't pan out for you, you could always remove the write-protect screw and install a Linux distro on it.

I guess you have to decide how brave you are. Are you willing to take a chance and deal with the fallout if it doesn't pan out? Or would you rather walk the safe road?

u/Dubhan · 3 pointsr/linuxmint

If you really want to go light look at the ASUS Zenbook 305. I just got one and installed Linux on it with almost no issue. It was a little bit of work to get the wi-fi working during the install, but that's only because I was putting Debian on it and they don't include any non-free components on their standard install media so I had to figure out how to get it to load the binary firmware. A less stringent distro like Mint shouldn't even have that problem.

It's very lightweight, very thin, very powerful &amp; has a beautiful screen.

u/IrtahkEnt · 3 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Asus Vivobook S14 i7 + MX150 is the fastest laptop I know of in this price range.

https://www.amazon.com/VivoBook-i7-8550U-GeForce-NanoEdge-Display/dp/B07B7VFTN9/

14" FHD, Intel Core i7-8550U, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, GeForce MX150, NanoEdge Display, Backlit Kbd, FP Sensor

Weight : 1.45 kgs (3.2 pounds)

Note : This is the recommendation since you want something thin and light. If that's not the case then gaming laptops will serve you much better. But they're usually thick and definitely not light at this price range.

u/PM_Your_Naughty_Vids · 3 pointsr/pcmasterrace

Heres the same thing with a slighter better GPU for cheaper. Best Buy is usually the worst buy.

Acer Nitro 5 AN515 Laptop: Core i5-8300H, 15.6inch Full HD IPS Display, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, NVidia GTX 1050 Ti 4GB Graphics https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07C715KNT/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_9fizDb45GNM8P

u/zkilling · 3 pointsr/KSU

Hi long time Mac user, so if your not already good with macs or Linux/Unix it’s going to be harder on you and your wallet to get a Mac. Don’t get me wrong I love macs and my wife even has a work Mac for her Dev job.

That being said most professors won’t know how to help you with Mac set up of your IDE and other software and at least a few times your going to have to run a VW with windows to get the software you need for class.

Honestly I would say get something like this NITRO V I have had my larger Acer predator since my MacBook Pro became unreliable and have recommended it and purchased several for my family. It’s above average hardware at that price and the screen it’s a crappy TN panel. Also it’s easy to get into the laptop if needed for upgrades down the road. But that should be plenty for your classes and fast with that SSD. Only real downside is it’s not a thin and light but it’s also not the monster that my predator is.

Good luck finding your new best friend for the next 4-6 years

u/Fierrero86 · 3 pointsr/argentina

No, para el uso que le vas a dar conseguir notebooks mas baratas.

No te puedo recomendar un modelo especifico pero si las caracterisitcas que tiene que tener. Busca modelos "ultrabook" que son mas finos y livianos, pantalla no mas de 14" con resolucion FHD y panel IPS. Procesador no menos de un i3 7° gen. Ram al menos 6 o 8 GB, si es mas mejor. Nada de disco duro mecanico, si o si SSD no menos de 240GB, compra la que tenga mas espacio porque con las SSD cuanto mas llenas, mas rendimiento pierden. Teclado retroiluminado si trabajas de noche en lugares con poca luz.

Algo asi

https://www.amazon.com/VivoBook-i7-8550U-GeForce-NanoEdge-Display/dp/B07B7VFTN9/ref=sr_1_2?s=pc&amp;amp;ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1549549672&amp;amp;sr=1-2&amp;amp;keywords=ultrabook&amp;amp;refinements=p_n_feature_twelve_browse-bin%3A9521908011%2Cp_n_size_browse-bin%3A2423840011

u/androgynyjoe · 3 pointsr/GirlGamers

Alright, so, if I were going to buy a laptop I'd go with this dell: https://www.amazon.com/Dell-Gaming-Laptop-G5587-5859BLK-PUS-Anti-Glare/dp/B07CD3MRZD

It's listed for $800 on Amazon but it might be the best you're going to do in a laptop. It's hard to find a laptop much lower than that. This one, though, at least has a lot of storage. There's a 128GB boot drive and then a 1TB drive for storage (though you can install games on it if you want). When I was looking for my gaming laptop I found the folks at r/gaminglaptops to be pretty helpful. Here is some of their recommendations at various prices: https://www.reddit.com/r/GamingLaptops/comments/ca2fzv/best_gaming_laptops_of_2019/

If you want to dip down around $600 a popular choice is the Acer Aspire e15: https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Aspire-i5-8250U-GeForce-E5-576G-5762/dp/B075FLBJV7?th=1

I'm going to warn you that this isn't a powerful laptop. There are games out today that it won't run. However, for $600 I've been told that it is a solid laptop.

As for pre-built desktops it's tough to find the best deals online. One I did find was the Acer Nitro 50 for $480: https://www.microcenter.com/product/609860/nitro-50-gaming-desktop-pc

Again, not the best computer in the world, but it is solid for the price.

I would recommend finding whatever electronics stores are near you (Best Buy, etc) and look for deals. Open box deals are great, there are regular sales, and if you go regularly for a few weeks you'll likely find a solid deal.

There's one thing you're looking for: a dedicated graphics card. Every computer has "onboard" graphics that are built right into the motherboard. This is fine if you're just using a browser and word processing but not fine for games. A gaming PC needs to have a special graphics card that is added onto the motherboard. When you're looking at a computer's specs it will have a listing for "graphics." If it says something like "integrated" or "on-board" under graphics then it's not going to be for gaming. If you see something made buy Nvidia or AMD listed under graphics then you're looking at a PC made for gaming.

Let me know if you have any other questions!

u/esc0rz · 3 pointsr/ffxiv

the ASUS ROG Zephyrus S GX531GS is what I've been usimg as my daily driver since December and it's handled everything perfectly fine! The price is a little high, but for my use it's perfect. It's also very slim and lightweight. on the downside, it sounds like a fucking jet engine when under load lol

overall, very worth imo.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07G5Z9H8R/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_qmhzCbABSV1WQ

u/rhydonmyknee · 3 pointsr/buildapcsales

Literally just bought this today. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07PB5M8DS/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_YTxsDbNG51E3T?pldnSite=1&amp;amp;utm_source=share&amp;amp;utm_medium=ios_app

Should I buy the laptop in this post instead? Looking to use it for some gaming, Apex, WoW, Hearthstone and school stuff.

u/Pairan_Emissary · 3 pointsr/Amd

Hmmm. Well the 3500u is better than the 2200 u processor wise. It's on the newer 12 nm node:

https://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-Convertible-Touchscreen-Processor-Graphics/dp/B07PB5M8DS/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?keywords=lenovo+ryzen+2+in+1&amp;qid=1557083671&amp;s=electronics&amp;sr=1-1-spons&amp;psc=1

The above model has a few reviews as well. The 256GB SSD is also a plus, at least vs. the 128 GB models.

It's at the upper end of your price range, but is a bit faster. Here's a quick benchmark comparison:

https://www.cpubenchmark.net/compare/AMD-Ryzen-5-2500U-vs-AMD-Ryzen-5-3500U-vs-AMD-Ryzen-3-2200U/3123vs3421vs3152

https://www.notebookcheck.net/AMD-Ryzen-5-3500U-Processor.391081.0.html

&amp;#x200B;

There may be some reviews of a laptop that has the 3500U somewhere on the notebookcheck site, to give you a better feel for the processor (and APU) performance.

u/246Louie · 3 pointsr/Clemson

My freshman year (2 years ago) I ended up buying an $1100 laptop off Amazon with a i7 7700HQ and 1050 ti (4GB). This was plenty of hardware for my solidworks (similar to CAD) class. My issue with all of the laptops that Clemson recommends are that you are paying almost twice as much for a slim, sleeker laptop. I'm not gonna lie, it is nicer to have a laptop like this though. I have a very nice Desktop (which I also had in my dorm in RiSE), so I sold my bulky, heavy gaming laptop and bought a $350 laptop and a $80 SSD specifically for class and couldn't be happier. I should also note I'm in IE, not ME.

I also want to explain that, in my solidworks class, A LOT of people had Macbooks, of all things. Clemson has a server or something that you can connect to to run Solidworks. I'd assume this is the same for CAD, but wouldn't be sure? If I had known this I never would have wasted my money on that first "gaming" laptop.

I also just found this laptop on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-IPS-Type-R7-3750H-GeForce-TUF505DU-EB74/dp/B07QQB6DC1

I believe this laptop will outperform any that you have listed above. I'm actually shocked how good this laptop looks, and slim as well.

u/MightyBlubb · 3 pointsr/SteamVR

You need a laptop with at least a GTX 1060 (closest to the gtx 970 listed on the game's steam page). The laptop you linked does not have a dedicated GPU but only the integrated Intel thing, which can't do anything beyond facebook games. Personally, I would look for a laptop with at least a GTX 1660 Ti (if it has to be a laptop and can't be a desktop), since that would at least be a tiny bit future proof.

For example:

GTX 1060

https://www.amazon.com.au/Acer-Predator-Helios-Black-i7-8750/dp/B07CTHLX8C/ref=dp_ob_title_ce

https://www.umart.com.au/Infinity-17-3in-FHD-144Hz-i7-8750H-GTX-1060-256GB-SSD-Gaming-Laptop--S1060-CD_50812G.html

or

GTX 1660 Ti https://www.amazon.com.au/ASUS-Gaming-Laptop-15-15-99-inches/dp/B07QQB6DC1/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=laptop+gtx+1660&amp;qid=1559039759&amp;s=gateway&amp;sr=8-3 (CPU isn't the greatest however)

&amp;#x200B;

If you happen to have a display (or you'd have to buy a cheap one) a Desktop PC would be either quite a bit cheaper for similar / slightly better specs or way more powerful at a similar pricepoint, e.g. https://au.pcpartpicker.com/list/WFg2vn (RTX 2060/2070 as GPU and higher CPU if you want more power, Windows can be found online for cheap)

u/rugerty100 · 3 pointsr/CanadianHardwareSwap

How's this Asus VivoBook from Amazon for $529.99?

u/UsePreparationH · 2 pointsr/LaptopDeals

Personally I would just do the crucial one since it is $1 cheaper from Amazon and the g.skill one should run at the same latency/timings once installed. If it doesn't, playing around in the BIOS may not be fun for some people.


This review also used the crucial ram for the upgrade. It does note you need a T5 screwdriver.
https://www.amazon.com/hz/reviews-render/mobile-media-feed/B07PB5M8DS/ref=cm_cr_dp_mb_crsl_img_3?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;physicalId=813bTgs3NYL&amp;amp;imageExtension=jpg&amp;amp;reviewId=R3YXQR0H4QD6O

u/Traegs_ · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace

This 2 in 1 is a pretty good deal, it was just feature in a linus tech tips video with a lot of praise. It's got Vega 8 graphics so it can handle some light gaming too.

It's not under $500, but honestly anything under that isn't worth getting.

u/Soldium69 · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace

ASUS TUF

Great looking 120Hz screen, 1660ti, plenty of IO, and a good keyboard. It's great for the price :)

u/Onui · 2 pointsr/GamingLaptops

If you are in US, IMO this is better than what you listed and is cheaper.

u/sid41299 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Here's one I just looked into for myself, and seeing as our requirements are similar, I think this will work for you as well. Asus TUF FX505DT-EB74. This spec comes with a Ryzen 7 3750H, 16gigs of RAM, GTX 1660Ti, 15.6in 120Hz Full HD display, and 256GB+1TB of storage. It also has MIL-STD-810 military grade certification, so at the very least, build quality should be good

u/C41n · 2 pointsr/LaptopDeals

This isn't that great of a deal IMO.

For $150 more you get 16 gigs of ram, another 1TB harddrive, and a 120hz screen on the same model.

https://www.amazon.com/R5-3550H-Processor-Graphics-FX505DT-AH51-Keyboard/dp/B07QQB6DC1/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?keywords=asus%2Btuf%2Bfx505dt&amp;amp;qid=1570479848&amp;amp;sr=8-3&amp;amp;th=1&amp;amp;psc=1

u/pzrapnbeast · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

What ya think of this Asus VivoBook equipped with AMD? Looks to be on Prime sale right now https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-VivoBook-R5-3500U-Graphics-F512DA-EB51/dp/B07QQB7552/ref=dp_ob_title_ce

u/TheVortex05 · 2 pointsr/buildapcsales

What are some good and cheap laptops for school and light gaming? My budget is around $600 USD, but I want to spend as little as possible.

I’m currently looking at the ASUS VivoBook 15 or the Acer Aspire 5.

u/AStorms13 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I would not buy that. There is no reason for 32GB of ram. If there is you'd be buying a much higher end system with better specs overall. Make sure it has at least a 1080p panel as well. That screen will not look good. Check out the ASUS F512 and Lenovo 530s. Also the Lenovo S340 seems to be a good deal between 500 and 600 (depending on specs obviously). But filter Newegg and other sites looking for similar specs at similar prices and pick what you like. Also, the ASUS can be upgraded to 12GB of ram (buy an 8GB stick and install yourself; 4GB permanently installed), and the 530s can be upgraded to 16GB (buy 2 8GB sticks).

https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-VivoBook-R5-3500U-Graphics-F512DA-EB51/dp/B07QQB7552

https://www.officedepot.com/a/products/2553990/Lenovo-IdeaPad-530S-Laptop-14-Screen/?cm_mmc=Affiliates-_-CJ-_-1122587-_-11263938

u/Xenoflower7 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

New 2019 Lightweight Zenbook Amd Ryzen Laptop From Asus is Greatest Choice

ASUS VivoBook 15 Thin and Light Laptop, 15.6” Full HD, AMD Quad Core R5-3500U CPU, 8GB DDR4 RAM, 256GB PCIe SSD, AMD Radeon Vega 8 Graphics, Windows 10 Home, F512DA-EB51, Slate Gray

https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-VivoBook-Lightweight-WideView-Fingerprint/dp/B07QQB7552/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=zenbook&amp;amp;qid=1567433119&amp;amp;refinements=p_36%3A-55000%2Cp_89%3AASUS&amp;amp;rnid=2528832011&amp;amp;s=computers-intl-ship&amp;amp;sr=1-1&amp;amp;th=1

Only $549

u/WhiteHawkGaming · 2 pointsr/feedthebeast

I use a $500 Asus Vivobook with Ryzen 3500u and I've never had problems running MC on it. I'm currently playing on the Roguelike Adventures and Dungeons pack and I'm averaging in the high 50s with some tweaking in Optifine.

Mind you these tweaks are the same I run on my much more powerful desktop so I'm not really cutting quality down.

Edit: Product Link

u/h_1995 · 2 pointsr/Amd

F512DA-EB55 link seems to be missing, but F512DA-EB51 is still intact.

looks good. maybe the webpage isn't ready yet. looks like an ultrabook grade since the intel version is indeed ultrabook

u/Inevitability9214 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

This Asus vivobook should match what your looking for pretty well. https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B07QQB7552/ref=sspa_mw_detail_1?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;psc=1

u/DL7610 · 2 pointsr/laptops

Lenovo Flex 14 2-in-1 with Pen may fit your need as far as new laptops go. There are many different configurations at different prices, this one has intel i5 8th gen, 8gb ram 255 gb ssd at $579.99: https://www.newegg.com/p/1XV-0001-00SP5?Description=flex%2014&amp;cm_re=flex_14-_-9SIAEYJ9MJ8109-_-Product

Amazon has one with AMD Ryzen 5 3500U, 12gb ram, 256 gb ssd for $579.99 also: https://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-Convertible-Touchscreen-Processor-81SS000DUS/dp/B07TWHYTSQ/ref=sr_1_5?keywords=flex+14&amp;qid=1567560461&amp;s=gateway&amp;sr=8-5

&amp;#x200B;

Review by Lon Seidman, his test unit is a higher level config, though (16 gb ram): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pu6WuyzmNQU

&amp;#x200B;

You can find used/refurbished unit for cheaper on eBay, just make sure the seller is reputable.

&amp;#x200B;

As far as older models go, I have a Fujitsu T936, bought on eBay auction: http://www.ebaystores.com/Fujitsu-Computer-Store/2-in-1-/_i.html?_trksid=p4634.c0.m322&amp;_fsub=3&amp;_sid=100217907&amp;Also available refurbished through Newegg, with warranty for $359 US: https://www.newegg.com/p/N82E16834705325?Description=lifebook%20t936&amp;cm_re=lifebook_t936-_-34-705-325-_-Product

u/EINHAMMER · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace

under $1000 you're probably not going to get a lot performance wise. this might be your best bet: Dell Gaming Laptop G5587-5859BLK-PUS G5 - 15.6" LED Anti-Glare Display - 8th Gen Intel i5 Processor - 8GB Memory - 128GB SSD+1TB HDD - NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 6GB, Licorice https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CD3MRZD/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_CpC2CbABERW6Y

u/theyre_whores_im_in · 2 pointsr/deals

Entire article with spam/referrals removed

Please report this post and user u/mnluxury11 to the mods for breaking the rules for personal profit.

Best Overall

  1. HP Envy 13 Touchscreen Laptop

    KEY SPECS

    • 10th-generation Intel Core i7 CPU

    • Intel graphics

    • 8 GB of RAM

    • 13-inch Full HD IPS touchscreen

    • 256 GB of SSD storage

    • Built-in fingerprint sensor

    • Built-in switch for disabling the webcam

    • Thunderbolt 3-capable USB-C port, two full USB-A ports, microSD
    card reader

    • Bang &amp; Olufsen-tuned stereo speakers

    • Up to 17 hours of battery life

    &gt;By offering a perfect blend of cool design, exceptional craftsmanship, excellent performance, and a host of handy hardware features, the latest generation 13-inch HP Envy is the best touchscreen laptop. Lightweight and elegant, it has a speedy and futureproof Intel processor, a Full HD touchscreen with thin bezels, a superb set of wired and wireless connectivity options, and epic battery life.

    &gt;The keyboard and the trackpad impressed me a great deal during my testing. The latter in particular offers a massive leap in quality and precision over the previous generations. A built-in fingerprint sensor is also on board, as are a webcam kill switch and stereo speakers tuned by Bang and Olufsen.

    &gt;Most importantly, when it comes to pricing, this HP Envy variant is impossible to overlook, especially considering its hardware specs and the build quality it offers. I tip my hat to HP for pricing the notebook well below $1,000!

    Price: $970

  2. Lenovo Flex 14 2-in-1 Laptop

    KEY SPECS:

    • AMD Ryzen 5 3500U CPU (quad-core)

    • Radeon Vega 8 graphics

    • 12 GB of RAM

    • 14-inch 360-degree touchscreen with Full HD resolution (1,920 by 1,080 pixels)

    • 256 GB of SSD storage

    • Two full USB 3.0 ports, USB-C port, HDMI port, SD card reader

    • Up to 10 hours of battery life

    &gt;Priced just a tad above $500, the Lenovo Flex 14 has a pleasantly understated design, as well as top-notch hardware specs. It has a versatile 360-degree touchscreen with a bundled stylus pen, a powerful AMD processor, and a rich set of connectivity features. A Windows Central review editor referred to the notebook as a “worthwhile budget convertible.”

    &gt;The 14-inch Full HD touchscreen could use higher brightness and more vibrant colors, but it’s plenty good for a product this affordable. And the included stylus pen is all but guaranteed to come in handy for a plethora of tasks.

    &gt;The backlit keyboard and the trackpad of the notebook are good for its price range. The built-in fingerprint sensor on the other hand, is a pleasant surprise. The same goes for the built-in webcam shutter.

    &gt;The notebook can last for up to 10 hours between battery charges and, once that’s up, you can replenish its battery up to 80% in just 1 hour with the bundled charger.

    Price: $550


    The Apple User’s Pick

  3. Apple iPad Pro (12.9-inch)

    KEY SPECS

    • Apple A12X Bionic chip with a built-in Neural Engine

    • 12.9-inch Liquid Retina display

    • Optional Apple Pencil

    • Up to 1 TB of built-in storage

    • TrueDepth camera with Face ID

    • Thunderbolt 3-capable USB-C port

    • Up to 10 hours of battery life

    &gt;I said this before and I’ll repeat it again: the 12.9-inch Apple iPad Pro is a legit laptop replacement for several reasons, starting with its insanely capable A12X Bionic chip, which, according to Laptop Mag, “rivals or beats” most laptops. Equipped with Apple’s Smart Keyboard Cover, the tablet is a phenomenal productivity tool. Best of all, the iPad Pro is lightweight (it weighs only 1.4 pounds!) and versatile beyond belief.

    &gt;The 12.9-inch Retina wowed me, and is “one of the best, most accurate mobile displays you can look at,” according to The Verge. In addition to being sharp and vibrant, it has a maximum refresh rate of 120 Hz. The latter makes every task you perform on the iPad Pro fast and fluid. The screen is also a perfect canvas for the optional second-generation Apple Pencil — the best input device of its kind.

    &gt;Apple’s iPadOS is also crucial in making the big iPad Pro a formidable laptop replacement. The mobile platform has intuitive user interface, superb multitasking capabilities, and a fantastic selection of apps that are tailor-made for a big screen.

    Price: $943

    The Chrome OS Pick

  4. Asus Chromebook Flip C434 Touchscreen Laptop

    KEY SPECS

    • Eighth-generation Intel Core m3 or Core m5 CPU (dual-core)

    • 14-inch 360-degree touchscreen with 1,920 by 1,080 pixels; 360-degree hinge

    • Built-in stylus by Wacom

    • 4/8 GB of RAM; 64 GB of eMMC storage

    • Two USB-C ports, one full USB port, microSD card reader

    • Up to 10 hours of battery life

    &gt;If you prefer Chrome OS, then the ASUS Chromebook Flip C434 is the best pick worth your attention today. It has a gorgeous design and craftsmanship, a versatile 360-degree display, and top-notch performance. The product is also the “favorite Chromebook” of a Laptop Mag review editor.

    &gt;Intel’s Core m processors found in the C434 are not the most powerful in the business, but they are plenty capable for Chrome OS. During my testing, every task I performed on the Chromebook Flip happened instantly.

    &gt;I only wish that the Google Play store had more apps and games optimized for a large-screen experience. The ASUS Flip C434 is also a tad pricey for a Chromebook, but, given its design and performance, it’s well worth the splurge.

    Price: $530


    The Hardest Working Pick

  5. Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon (7th Generation) Touchscreen Laptop

    KEY SPECS

    • Eighth-generation Intel Core i7 CPU (quad-core)

    • Intel graphics

    • 16 GB of RAM

    • 14-inch matte touchscreen with Full HD resolution (1,920 by 1,080 pixels)

    • 512 GB of SSD storage

    • Windows Hello sign-in with a fingerprint sensor

    • Two full USB 3.1 ports, two Thunderbolt 3-capable USB-C ports, HDMI port,
    microSD card slot

    • Built-in webcam shutter

    • Up to 18 hours of battery life

    &gt;Lenovo’s touchscreen-equipped ThinkPad X1 Carbon is made for hard work on the go. It’s insanely lightweight yet impressively powerful and capable of easily making it through a full day (and beyond) on a single battery charge.

    &gt;The product’s wired and wireless connectivity features are also exceptional. According to a PCMag review editor, the ThinkPad X1 Carbon “is as close to the ultimate business laptop as you can get.” I couldn’t agree more.

    &gt;I was really blown away by the battery endurance of the variant with a Full HD display I tested. I also enjoyed using its quiet and precise keyboard, as well as its excellent trackpad. I like that Lenovo opted to install a webcam cover on the ThinkPad X1 Carbon, too.

    Price: $1500
u/StarWistStuff · 2 pointsr/LaptopDeals

Hey, I'm going to update my request. I posted earlier in the week and had time to think this weekend.

Reflections:


  • Shopping for laptops is stressful; almost every lower-budget machine has big trade-offs these days!
  • Lots of cheaper machines make compromises on basic quality of life; screen, keyboard, touchpad and so on..
  • I really like the aesthetic of the Asus Zenbooks with the Ergo-Hinge, but they're all very different model to model.
  • I've noticed QA issues amongst the reviews for products with the R5-3500u/3700u as well as heat/noise concerns. In retrospect these are issues that I don't want to gamble on; which also makes the Lenovo Flex 14'' &amp; APU's less attractive.
  • The Flex 14'' is a really good value and has a pretty secure spot at being a 2nd or 3rd choice.
  • Something I've realized is that I don't really need a dedicated GDDR5 GPU like the MX150 or MX250.

    General Usage Habits:


  • 10-15 Firefox Tabs
  • Youtube, Spotify, Pandora.
  • Netflix, Amazon Prime, Streaming.
  • I'd like to play around w/ Linux.

    Budget: Initially; $400-600; but concern with build quality pushes me towards &lt; $1000

    Country: USA ~Getting to a Microcenter, BestBuy or Walmart isn't a problem.

    Screen size: 13-14'' -- 1080p; prefer SSD &amp; 8GB of RAM.

    Screen resolution: Prefer 1080p with solid brightness &amp; good viewing angles.

    Heat:

    Sound: I'll likely bring my soundbar/headphones, but sound isn't unimportant.

    Touch screen: Depends; I think it's almost mandatory for Chromebooks &amp; less so for laptops.

    Battery Life: I want something that's fairly powerful but can last a full school day (5-10 hours).

    Weight**: Less than 5 lbs; considering various Chromebooks &amp; Ultrabooks; the lighter the better.

    Tl;DR - Laptops &amp; Chromebooks that I'm considering:

    Laptops:


  1. Asus Zenbook UX333FA-DH51 $840
  2. Asus Vivobook S14-S432 &amp; S15-S532 $750-900
  3. Acer Aspire Slim 5: A515-54G-53H6 $650
  4. Lenovo Flex 14'' R5-3500u $560
    https://www.lenovo.com/us/en/laptops/ideapad/ideapad-flex-series/Lenovo-IdeaPad-FLEX-15IWL/p/88IP8FX1272 (Lenovo Holiday sales ~ 10th Gen Intel = nice integrated graphics (for me anyway..)
  5. ASUS ZenBook 13 UX333FA-DH51
  6. HP Spectre x360 15-ch011dx Convertible

    I know that I could get better "value" - with a 10th gen i5 &amp; an MX250 w/ the Acer Aspire Slim 5. The hardware is better, but I find the build quality concerning because this is a machine that'll go pretty much everywhere with me. The Vivobook, while less expensive loses a lot of battery life compared to the UX333FA; which I'm considering picking up used or possibly on Ebay because I love the aesthetic and getting it for ~ $700 is a much more competitive deal for me.

    Edit (adding some Microcenter deals) UX333FA-DH51 is @ $800 &amp; HP Spectre x360 is at $850/800 too.
u/pixol22 · 2 pointsr/buildapcsales

Keep an eye on this guy, it went on sale for around $450 on Prime Day and I expect it to go on sale for Black Friday too! I own the Ryzen 7, 3700U version from Costco and I love it! It's got a great Windows Precision trackpad, above average keyboard with backlighting, fingerprint sensor that works well, active pen support, touch screen, and it's a convertible. Battery life is average with around 5-6 hours in my use. Powerful little machine.

Ryzen 5 3500U, 256GB, 12gb of ram, w/ pen, may go on sale later: https://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-Convertible-Touchscreen-Processor-81SS000DUS/dp/B07TWHYTSQ/

Ryzen 7 3700U, 512GB, 12gb of ram, w/o pen, 5% surcharge without membership: https://www.costco.com/lenovo-flex-14-2-in-1-touchscreen-laptop---ryzen-7---1080p.product.100513252.html

Video: https://youtu.be/Nfz46HXvPLc

u/honggiakhanh · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Would you consider i3 8250U MX150 &gt; Ryzen 5 3500U Vega 8?
Also, this looks like it should be on the list also, Lenovo Flex 659$ with 12GB Ram Ryzen 5 3500U Vega 8: https://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-Convertible-Touchscreen-Processor-81SS000DUS/dp/B07TWHYTSQ?ref_=ast_sto_dp.
What do you think?

u/koningdied · 2 pointsr/laptops

If you are returning it, have a look at this laptop it is also 400 dollar. It is a bit short on storage, but if you are just planning to use it for content cunsuming, word and work mostly in the cloud it should do the job.

https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-VivoBook-i3-8145U-Windows-F512FA-AB34/dp/B07RK5M35T/ref=sr_1_6?keywords=laptop+400+dollars&amp;qid=1570962262&amp;sr=8-6

If you have the monney to step up to a 500 dollar budged you have a mutch wider range of laptops to chose from.

This is a accepteble laptop for 500 dollar. https://www.amazon.com/Acer-i5-8265U-Keyboard-Fingerprint-A515-54-51DJ/dp/B07RF2123Z/ref=sr_1_17?keywords=laptop+500+dollar&amp;qid=1570962516&amp;sr=8-17

If you have 550 dollars, want touchscreen and pen support, this is a verry good option.

https://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-Convertible-Touchscreen-Processor-81SS000DUS/dp/B07TWHYTSQ/ref=sr_1_10?keywords=lenovo+yoga&amp;qid=1570962650&amp;sr=8-10

u/Stupid_Triangles · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

When you say "processing pictures and making videos" I'm assuming that you will be editing hi res photos and video. You will still need a decent GPU to handle that as integrated graphic are shit, unless you go for an AMD-based system.

Dell has 3 laptop product lines that would fulfill your needs.

XPS - this is their premium line that will have the best display quality, build quality, and internals. However, that gets a bit expensive. A used 9560 should fit in your price range, though would be pushing it if your country has a VAT and shipping costs.

Precision - this is dell's workhorse. It's a professional laptop made for doing videocediting, CAD work, etc. However, these too are a bit expensive, but you can find used or refurbished machines on ebay well within your price point. Check out the 2016 and 2017 models.

G3/5 g this is their gaming line. They will have not so good build quality, clunky, shit battery, but will do the job as all of the frills will be sacrificed for the specs. I'm in the US so this is a US link but will point you in the right direction. Its $800, has an 8th gen i5 processor (its quad core and the i7 only gives a slight boost that isn't worth the upgrade) and a gtx1060 that can handle video editing fairly well, unless you're dealing with raw 4k video. The display isn't the best. It's mostly made of plastic and weighs about 5 lbs (3.5-4kg) and the battery life isnt good. However, it will do what you need it to do.

u/aleishabb · 2 pointsr/LaptopDeals

Have a look at the ASUS ROG Zephyrus S . It is a good light weight gaming laptop that can run games well without getting too hot

  • 15.6” 144Hz IPS Type,
  • Intel Core i7-8750H CPU,
  • GeForce GTX 1070,
  • 16GB DDR4,
  • 512GB PCIe SSD,
  • Metal Chassis, Win 10 Home - GX531GS-AH76
u/pfury · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace

Well I think if you wait and look around you can find much better hardware for money. Just avoid any MaxQ gpus.

Just quick look found this for same money..

https://www.amazon.com/Zephyrus-i7-8750H-GeForce-Military-Grade-Chassis/dp/B07G5Z9H8R/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?

u/realducksquack · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

If you are going to stretch to $2000, I will recommend you to take a look at this -&gt; ASUS ROG Zephyrus S.It packs a GTX 1070 Max-Q, a 8th gen processor, 16GB DDR4 and 512GB NVMe SSD. Design wise it has a 15.6" 144Hz display in a mil grade metal chassis. Check it out and see if it works for you.

u/starcherro5000 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

The problem is the xps 15 has loads of issues, just go r/Dell and have a look at them. You are paying too much for the Zephyrus M or the Zephyrus S:

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Daps&amp;field-keywords=asus+gm501

https://www.amazon.com/Zephyrus-i7-8750H-Military-Grade-Customizable-GX531GS-AH76/dp/B07G5Z9H8R/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1540049780&amp;sr=8-2&amp;keywords=asus+gx531

Alternatively you can just get the Asus gl504, it's pretty much the same except the thunderbolt 3 port is exclusive for the Zephyrus M gm501:

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Daps&amp;field-keywords=asus+gl504

u/ZFLloyd · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

The Asus Zephyrus S would fit the bill (1900$ on amazon), I wouldn't recommend other thin and light gaming alptop atm as there are still a lot of thermal issues. So far the Zephyrus S seem to have the best thermals and thus longevity.

u/TechnoCurry · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

ROG Zephyrus S
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07G5Z9H8R/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_exr4Bb7WXWA1C

GTX 1070 and i7-8750H
512GB NVME SSD

made of aluminium, fully rgb keyboard, slim and simple on the outside.
omg look at the touchpad/ numpad its amazing
its like a sheet of aluminium with a gtx 1070

u/FlatTextOnAScreen · 2 pointsr/techsupport

Since you're paying for a new laptop that has a thunderbolt3 port (the Y530 doesn't have that, a decent 15" would be around $1000) + eGPU (w/enclosure+gpu can go for ~$500) you're getting close to ASUS Zephyrus range (~$1800). Amazon link

For $300 more you get a 144hz screen, 1070 MaxQ, decent thermals, decent cpu, nvme ssd etc.

It also depends on the games you want to play. If you can do without VR then you'll have cheaper options with 1050/1060 laptops without bothering with the eGPU or something that costs $1300+.

Here's a recent list of laptops with TB3 ports

u/Imsquishie · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace
u/PhantomFlame308 · 2 pointsr/LaptopDeals

Lenovo Flex 14 (3500u, 8gb ram, 256gb nvme, 2-in-1) or the Huawei Matebook D (2500u, 256gb nvme, 2-in-1) for Unity/College and light gaming like League of Legends?

u/JagSKX · 2 pointsr/laptops

Perhaps the following 14" Lenovo Flex 14 2-in-1 with an AMD Ryzen 5 3500u APU, 1080p touchscreen and pen included. It also comes with 8GB of RAM and 256GB PCie NVMe SSD. At least according to the specs Amazon lists, the laptop weighs in at 3.52lbs so that means it will have a small batter (typically the heaviest component in a laptop). However, you have to make the ultimate sacrifice to spend less than $600.

&amp;#x200B;

https://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-Convertible-Touchscreen-Processor-Graphics/dp/B07PB5M8DS/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=AMD+Ryzen+5+3500U&amp;qid=1563909997&amp;s=pc&amp;sr=1-3

u/thodeman · 2 pointsr/McMaster

The lenovo flip 14 is a nice option people who need want a cheaper 2 in 1. https://www.amazon.ca/Lenovo-Convertible-Touchscreen-Processor-Graphics/dp/B07PB5M8DS/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=flex+14&amp;qid=1563394686&amp;s=electronics&amp;sr=1-3

The vega 8 most likely will be enough for inventor. At 730 price tag, this is a great option if you also want to take notes using your laptop.

u/TheBoed9000 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I recently picked up this Lenovo from Amazon. Typing on it right now. It's my work laptop/living room "iPad" all in one. Pen included in purchase. Can even take notes on it if I feel the need (pen + one note).

Limitations are the SSD - it's super fast, but 250gb isn't a lot of storage - and the RAM. The RAM is actually 4gb soldered on for the Vega integrated graphics, and a 4gb removable; so you can actually upgrade it. I'll probably throw in an 8gb from my retiring gaming laptop when I upgrade the SSD.

Do not regret spending the money at all.

u/PomfAndCircvmstance · 2 pointsr/TwoBestFriendsPlay

I actually have done some PC gaming before so I'm plenty familiar with Steam/GOG/etc. I just haven't been able to run anything more graphically intensive than CS:GO or Skyrim and know fuck all about actual computer hardware.

As for the laptops I've looked at so far this is the [Acer] (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CTHLX8C/?coliid=I2XEIN4MPDL79P&amp;amp;colid=1DG0XRXJ2X4HS&amp;amp;ref_=lv_ov_lig_dp_it&amp;amp;th=1) and this is the [Dell G5] (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CD3MRZD/ref=twister_B07FKR9DDX?_encoding=UTF8&amp;amp;coliid=ISCN5X5CSN26H&amp;amp;colid=1DG0XRXJ2X4HS&amp;amp;th=1).

I mainly just want something that'll last for a few years and be able to run new games at mid to high graphics without turning into a slideshow.

u/NOT_AN_APPLE · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

The Asus Zenbook is, in my opinion, better.

First, brand-wise, Asus has a higher standard of quality control. Any Asus you buy has been through more extensive tests than any dell you buy. Dell uses cheaper generic parts like the motherboard or the webcam in my experience and that's what usually fails.

Specification wise, the Asus has 3 USB 3.0. The dell has 2 USB 3.0. The dell is tenths of an inch smaller. The asus has micro HDMI and mini displayport while the Dell has only mini displayport.

Also I think the ASUS is cheaper on amazon. It also looks cooler.

If you have the money, you could jump to the pimped out version of the ASUS which is pretty much a gaming machine that looks like an ultrabook. It's one of the best values out there.

u/drswnemo · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

This seems to meet all of your needs, except the U series processor. I'm considering buying this model myself, the specs look really nice for the price.

u/scheise_soze · 2 pointsr/technology

What's your budget?

I recently picked up an Asus Zenbook 13" for $1300 on Amazon.

It has:

13.3" Quad-HD touchscreen display (3200 x 1800)
Intel Core i7-4510U 2 GHz.
12GB RAM
NVIDIA GT840M 2GB VRAM.
256GB Solid State Storage
802.11 A/C. 8-hour battery life.
3x USB 3.0
1x HDMI
1x miniDisplayPort
Bluetooth 4.0
SDXC slot

And it weighs next to nothing:

3.2 lbs

12.7 inches x 8.8 inches x 0.7 inches ~ 0.8 inches

u/2cats1dog · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I think the Asus Zenbook line would meet your criteria pretty well, although some of them are slightly over 3lb. I'm currently writing this from a ASUS Zenbook UX303LN-DB71T and so far it's treating me very well. At $1250 it would be under your budget and I think provides almost everything on your list.

u/Dub2921 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I'd have a look at the following laptop OP:

ASUS Zenbook UX303LN-DB71T 13.3" Quad-HD Display Touchscreen Laptop
1,249.99 on amazon.com with FREE shipping.

Pretty much ticks all of the prerequisites you have listed. Very light weight at only 3.2 pounds plus it features a Core i7 and SSD meaning it will fly through the various applications in adobe creative suite. Ultrabooks in general are great because the battery life is long lasting. In the this case, it lasts 8 hours.

u/ShyFilmsStudios · 2 pointsr/gopro

I'd look for something with 8-16 GB ram, an Intel Core i7 Processor and a good graphic card. Something like this. Its a little expensive, but the main issue is rendering with weak laptops. They are essentialy useless to do other things with whilst rendering. Of cource you have to decide youreself what you want to spend on it. Its just a suggestion.

u/xgunnyx504 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I would recommend the Asus GL551. I got one one sale for $1000, threw in my old SSD and have been quite happy with it. The display isnt amazing, but i dont notice any problems. Its handled all my games like Titanfall and BF4 no problem with noise or heat. Its also an Asus and I trust them plus the free year accidental damage coverage, the only thing i can think to compare it to would be the Lenovo Y50. If you need portability it might be better but the Asus's screen and cooling is superior.

www.amazon.com/GL551JM-DH71-GeForce-GTX860M-Optimus-Technology/dp/B00MMMMMX2

u/totalprocrastination · 2 pointsr/dragonage

$500 is not going to buy you a new gaming laptop that will be up to date for DA:I, even at low settings.

Generally speaking, Asus's Republic of Gamers line of laptops are solidly built gaming laptops sold at reasonable prices, but the cheapest model I can find on Amazon is the 15' ASUS ROG GL551JM-DH71 which is currently $1,089.99.

It comes with a GeForce GTX 860M which I believe will play DA:I at High settings at 720p resolution based on these benchmarks.

So I'd recommend discussing with your parents if they would be willing to front you more money and/or you save up your own to chip in, and/or look for some used ones on ebay.

u/d0rchadas · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace

Asus ROG 15.6 gaming laptop GTX 860 2gb graphics card, thats better than whats in my shrine!

u/KnewHere · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop
u/Rapid_Sausage · 2 pointsr/TibiaMMO

You can look for one of the older asus zenbooks without the dedicated gpu, these are very sturdy, and don't heat up kuch (just don block the air intake, goes for all laptops)

&amp;#x200B;

Check this one (obviously try to find it used for cheaper)

https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-UX305-13-Inch-Laptop-model/dp/B013KKANTE

&amp;#x200B;

u/SlurmzMckinley · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I just bought the ASUS Zenbook UX305LA, and it's great. It's a metal build that's lightweight and durable. The i5 processor runs Fallout: New Vegas very well, and it also handles photo editing well.

The battery life is pretty damn good. I've read mixed things about the screen resolution, but I've been impressed even through photo editing.

I'm not a huge fan of the track pad. It's not very responsive, but it isn't awful. I could get used to it. I use a mouse, so it wasn't a concern of mine.

Here's a link to it on Amazon. It's $750. http://www.amazon.com/Zenbook-UX305LA-13-3-Inch-Titanium-Windows/dp/B013KKANTE.

If you have any questions about it, I'd be happy to answer them.

u/nesamdoom · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace
u/Lamnent · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I just downvoted my own reply above, I came to say this was the one that I settled on.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07793DRK9/ref=ox_sc_act_title_1?smid=A23CZPYVSM5C9C&amp;amp;psc=1

There is also a 1tb(no ssd) 1050(not ti) for 75$ less.

The problem I found after watching a ton of reviews with the Acer Nitro 5 was the heat buildup, which my laptop also had an issue with and it's very frustrating. The only "fix" I saw involved needing to undervolt the CPU and taking the whole thing apart and re applying better thermal paste, I'd really rather not NEED to do that after spending nearly a grand. The 7567 has a MUCH better setup with it's heat pipes and fans and the one with the SSD also has an easy to access port to add on an HDD later.

From the review I saw they were able to run W3 on Med at a fairly consistent 55-60 FPS.

Also it was by far the most sturdy build of all the 700-1000$ range laptops which is very important to me considering how my other one just kinda fell apart on me. The sound quality is also better than average from what I saw.

I'm definitely happy going with 7567.

u/FreezingIrony · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0795W86N3

The version with SSD costs $620, but the version without costs $510. Is the SSD really worth $110?

What makes theirs so special? Or I'm I not noticing an additional feature?

Edit: Should I buy the $510 version without an SSD and add a cheaper SSD or should I just get the $620 version which already has an SSD.
https://www.amazon.com/Kingston-240GB-Solid-SA400S37-240G/dp/B01N5IB20Q

This ssd for instance is only 30 bucks

u/RyoReaper · 2 pointsr/LaptopDeals

ASUS Vivobook (1TB HDD + 128 gb SSD)

Acer Aspire E15 (256 gb SSD)

Both of these are solid choices with what you're looking for.

u/Sralladah · 2 pointsr/laptops

That's the laptop I have and used for university to do web development (and still do). Its fantastic. Beautiful display and long battery life. Never had any issues.

EDIT: Sorry, i didn't see you wanted i7 specifically. Still, you might want to consider it and keep some extra cash on hand, your choice :)

u/ruddy2108 · 2 pointsr/LaptopDeals

For general use the 8gb should be fine though, correct?

I’ve been juggling a few laptops to choose this Black Friday.

What do you think? Is the one listed here still the better choice for the price?


ASUS VivoBook
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0795W86N3/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_VEW8BbWNE4C9H


Acer
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=1TS-000X-00UY5&amp;amp;ignorebbr=true

u/Dan6erbond · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Since you won't be doing anything requiring much performance you can get a basic i7 laptop and if you want to do a little gaming, you can take a look at some Ryzen Mobile systems although they do have some driver issues:

  • Asus VivoBook
  • Acer Aspire E15
  • Dell Inspiron 15
  • Acer Swift 3
  • Dell Inspiron 13
  • Lenovo IdeaPad 15.6"

    The Aspire E15 is the only one with a dGPU if you want to play some games, it's great. But the Ryzen Mobile systems perform really well in a small package, especially the Acer Swift 3 and if you don't care about performance AT ALL, get the VivoBook as it's a great thin and light which is well built and performs quite well. If you're interested in a 2in1, get the Inspiron 13.
u/hungrydano · 2 pointsr/intel

Where do you live?

In the states you can get a vivobook for ~630 with an 8250U, 8gb Ram, and 128 ssd + tb HDD.

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 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0795W86N3/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_NPa4CbDVXP0AV

u/realmain · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I am not good with 2-in-1 suggestions, but the ASUS VivoBook F510UA is a great laptop.

u/fifa2003 · 2 pointsr/LaptopDeals

The 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 would be a good selection for you.

u/ooojustin · 2 pointsr/laptops

avoid getting a gaming laptop if you'll be using it for school. you'll make sacrifices on portability and battery life. for games like csgo and rocket league an mx150 is sufficient, and there are plenty of ultrabooks that have one.

&amp;#x200B;

here's a thin/light 14" laptop that looks pretty good: https://www.amazon.com/VivoBook-i7-8550U-GeForce-NanoEdge-Display/dp/B07B7VFTN9

&amp;#x200B;

not sure if you can open it with one hand, but according comments you should be able to add more storage: https://i.imgur.com/iFIWnGh.png

https://i.imgur.com/Cv30F3x.png

u/Corval3nt · 2 pointsr/UCSantaBarbara

IMO, I would definitely not get that laptop unless you would want to run games with very low settings and still hit a poor fps score. It only uses Intel's integrated graphics card and only stands up to very light titles and general windows usage.

At $800, it would be hard to balance between the portability and battery life versus the gaming performance you want. Are you planning to use your laptop to take notes on? Or are you more of the type to like physically writing down notes to review later? If you don't mind giving up a bit on battery life and portability, you can try to grab something with a 1060 gpu in it for much better gaming performance. It's a shame that you asked this literally a day right after Intel's Gamer Day sales ended, otherwise I would have suggested if you could push the budget a bit for Acer's Predator Helios 300 model from last year. If you want still, you can get a certified refurbished one for $800 on eBay ( https://www.ebay.com/itm/Acer-Predator-Helios-300-Intel-i7-8750H-16GB-Ram-256GB-SSD-W10H-NH-Q3FAA-001/254049080476?_trkparms=ispr%3D1&amp;hash=item3b2681549c:g:QNMAAOSwqaNcvf4v&amp;enc=AQAEAAAB4BPxNw%2BVj6nta7CKEs3N0qXuA3M7IxeHPxPU0iOMfihz50e%2F5Hu6C2kPupUGV%2B1pulLkRAYsBPHHzygOZeX8bWDJZnSlMPLu36huncMtpn%2BI7%2FsqJIAtmZvVRhhx8Ae%2Fd2wehotTNC8WELYhV%2FEejvdSed95F9y6rr%2FoXoDCn4QLK4nwhD%2B%2F0u%2F0BM0flXxCm7iJT%2FH%2FXDLIMUJmvrUq1UWEF2gXqcx8%2BWhdrKffEXPnF1uGjBCOtyoH326iUyD0PypzJshEoLoHWaJIix71iECnDKgtC9TssKPurjVQRDUCbbA%2Fg2DtRe%2Bp7AoRU2h0h1zXzMzZ7oXGNn429GXCCkfRHWs3EoJXNNlx%2F0fLITqORvEUfGfd6znre6xPHX9RIpOuCqQ5etKijUAuhKecjEEUVVA7oVrkHSxrkI2wzNvyMKKgQ%2Bl1rhYBt44Xf5KC%2FFj7TpcHTWtbk263IzqM7wFuX54opy3OFjx2FrOCG%2B455%2FNijYwjG%2BDkSel37TRAbFLhE2v4zuxv7BXbEDQWzhLIvC7TMsXqoSsp6jsEc54JhQN1846fMLwqtJtuNhrBlPKIW4u5rQ5cM3O5ptXidbh1uOPYFz2FbfjlTCoZ%2Bhu1Qd14QKGoCO0yrkCSy6UAgw%3D%3D&amp;checksum=254049080476b1c787bfe3ca4291894e764b60b8ccf2 ) (Wow, that is a long link). At this price point, if you don't mind the little bit more gamery top lid, nothing for gaming comes close to it at this price point.

If you want something with a bit more portability to it and design, you'll have to drop down to a 1050 or mx150 for gpu. You'll see longer battery life, but your gaming performance will take a fair hit. If you want something more portable, go for a MX150 option like https://www.amazon.com/VivoBook-i7-8550U-GeForce-NanoEdge-Display/dp/B07B7VFTN9/ref=sxin_7_ac_d_rm?ac_md=2-2-bXgxNTAgbGFwdG9w-ac_d_rm&amp;keywords=1050%2Blaptop&amp;pd_rd_i=B07B7VFTN9&amp;pd_rd_r=79541585-e1f2-4211-9b5e-4d8ecf298f03&amp;pd_rd_w=aV7ij&amp;pd_rd_wg=6SJDJ&amp;pf_rd_p=d29bc9bc-49e2-46b8-bc05-387917c341ec&amp;pf_rd_r=23EHCWG183SCVY1NW4RE&amp;qid=1568016931&amp;s=gateway&amp;th=1 . For a 1050 option, everything looks to be of similar bulk at this price point so I would still go with the acer predator on the eBay link above.

u/shopineer · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

For general usage I think you should look for 8 GB of RAM and an i5 CPU.

If you are looking for a light 13" laptop with a reasonable battery life and a decent build quality, what about the [ASUS Zenbook UX303UA-DH51T] (http://www.amazon.com/ZenBook-UX303UA-13-3-Inch-Touchscreen-Windows/dp/B014VHW24Y)?

Intel Core i5-6200U 2.3 GHz, 13.3", 1920 x 1080, 8 GB RAM, 256 GB SSD, Intel HD Graphics 520, Windows 10 Home 64-Bit, 7 hours battery life, 3.2 lbs.

It only has integrated graphics but it should be able to handle Minecraft and Sims 3 reasonably well:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mp0H7mXNZFs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3Veg3AWopM

u/berzerknova · 2 pointsr/UVA

Try this

u/bazilbt · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I've liked Asus Zenbooks. This one here looks like it meets your specs. There is also a slightly more expensive version but with a better processor here.

u/techneeeq · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Get the ASUS ZenBook UX303UA, it would do a great job for you as it matches perfectly what you are looking for.

u/LtColCarter · 2 pointsr/gadgets

I'd recommend just getting an Ultrabook with a graphics card in and an i5 or something. But here are some for 2 in 1's.

Here are 2 options I found:

Higher-end: http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/laptops/yoga/900-series/yoga-910/?action=testB

Cheaper: http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/laptops/lenovo/flex-series/flex-3-15/?action=testB

Here's options for an Ultrabook that I'd get:

Best choice - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B014VHVZFQ/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_J3nyybHTFCNQ4

Cheaper one, but still very good! - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B014VHW24Y/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_.1nyyb450832N

Hope these help you find a laptop for yourself (:

EDIT - I don't know what I'm talking about dedicated graphics cards in 2 in 1s.

u/benzamine · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

How about an Asus UX303UA? Integrated graphics, but it's a brand new Skylake chip

http://www.amazon.com/ZenBook-UX303UA-13-3-Inch-Touchscreen-Windows/dp/B014VHW24Y

u/LiamColeE · 2 pointsr/Unity3D

But to your actual question. It depends on what you are making. But at that price range, maybe something with a decent i7. A decent graphics card and a fair amount of ram (def no less than 8gb but imo 16 is a god send)

Good laptops:
Dell Inspiron i7559-5012GRY 15.6" UHD (3840x2160) 4k Touchscreen Laptop (Intel Quad Core i7-6700HQ, 8 GB RAM, 1 TB HDD) NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960M, Microsoft Signature Edition https://www.amazon.com/dp/B015PYZI8E/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_1M04Cb6KHV04D

HP Pavilion Power 15-inch Laptop, Intel Core i7-7700HQ , AMD Radeon RX 550, 12GB RAM, 1TB hard drive, Windows 10 (15-cb071nr, Black), Gaming https://www.amazon.com/dp/B071L1VCV6/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_eO04CbGQ4MT02

Dell Inspiron i5577-7342BLK-PUS,15.6" Gaming Laptop, (Intel Core i7,16GB,512GB SSD),NVIDIA GTX 1050 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B06XFC44CL/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_iP04CbG9P4AAV

u/8bitmullet · 2 pointsr/rva

I bought a used Dell Inspiron i7559 and was tripping about the price (my previous laptop I got at Best Buy for $300 three years ago and it did everything I neded for business but not for music) but got an Amazon Store Card and will make some reasonable, zero-interest payments over the next year.

u/whosdr · 2 pointsr/runescape

Getting something with an SSD really does improve load times dramatically (from 2-8 second map load-times, to half a second or so)

I'll see what I can find again..

Edit:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01CGGOUJM/
Dual-core Skylake i5 laptop processor with Intel HD 520 graphics, 1080p monitor, 256GB hard-drive.

Might want to continue this on the RuneScape forums, Tech Support or NXT, so Dooogy0 can weigh-in - he'll know more on the performance levels of integrated graphics.

u/visionaiir · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

You can try the ASUS F556UA-AS54.
This laptop has a 15.6 screen, and all the connection ports that a professor should need (SD cards, VGA, HDMI, USBs). It also has exactly 3 USB ports, 2 being USB 3.0s. It also has an optical drive in a 15.0 x 10.0 x 1.0 inch (WxDxH) form factor. The 6th gen i5 and 256 SSD would make this laptop feel blazingly fast with less than 10 seconds boot up time, and would more than suffice for Microsoft office and statistical packages. Lastly, this laptop is around 5 pounds, and battery should last way past an hour.

You can find it on amazon for around $549:
http://www.amazon.com/F556UA-AS54-15-6-inch-Full-HD-Laptop-Windows/dp/B01CGGOUJM

u/garlikdog · 2 pointsr/computerscience

Well it really depends on your budget at that point. Surfacebook will be fine especially now with the bash subsystem in Windows. But honestly, you don't need anything that fancy. You can probably get just a regular laptop for a lot less.

Something like this is probably fine: https://www.amazon.com/F556UA-AS54-15-6-inch-Full-HD-Laptop-Windows/dp/B01CGGOUJM/ref=sr_1_4?s=pc&amp;amp;ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1478987971&amp;amp;sr=1-4&amp;amp;keywords=asus

u/skip_204 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

There are a lot of choices with gaming laptops so it would be good to list out the specific games you're thinking about and how you would use the notebook. Do you have a size preference? Does it need to be portable? Are you going to need a long battery life?

Like I said, there are a ton of great gaming notebooks, but here are a few that are in your price range.

  • Acer Aspire V7-582PG-6479 Good screen, battery life, and weight but mid GPU so fine for Minecraft, not a good choice for graphics intensive games like Watch Dogs, etc.

  • Gigabyte P35K-CF1 Great screen, noise under heavy load.

  • Lenovo Y50 15.6 Honestly, the Y50 is probably your best choice for price/performance. Screen is crappy, but apparently simple to replace and the GTX 860M is a terrific GPU for most games at decent FPS performance.

u/arcainic · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

http://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-15-6-Inch-Laptop-59418222-Black/dp/B00K6ZIO2K/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top

i5 Y50. The 860M will be the bottleneck in gaming usually, unless it's heavily cpu intensive. If you're rendering video, compiling code, the i7 would be better.

16GB of ddr3 ram doesn't really help with gaming.

That newegg link isn't a good deal, you're not even getting a SSD out of it, you might as well purchase from lenovo website for $1,020 i7 1TB version, last week it was $949 i7 500gb version on lenovo w/ barnes &amp; noble discount.

u/nhebert1987 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I was looking at the Envy's also, but wanted a beefier video card just in case I wanted to play some future games. I settled on the Lenovo Y50 line, 15" screen, 1tb hd +8gb solid-state, 8gb DDR3L and a GTX860M card. Plus is has your critical features (except not sure about taking apart, but I'm pretty sure with all laptops they are hard to take apart unless specifically made for gaming or something like Alienware, I don't know). Im going to the store later today and check them out in person, and maybe buy one.

Heres a model for $899, but it has a I5 processor (for $100ish more you could get an I7)
http://www.amazon.com/Lenovo-15-6-Inch-Laptop-59418222-Black/dp/B00K6ZIO2K/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1406232926&amp;amp;sr=8-3&amp;amp;keywords=lenovo+y50#productDetails

u/ClownsAreATen · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

This Acer should be able to accomplish that.

If you want something closer to the higher end of that budget, the Lenovo Y50 offers much higher graphical performance with a 1080p screen. It was under 900 about a week ago, maybe it'll dip again.

u/Yopperpo · 2 pointsr/EngineeringStudents

If your scholarship has to be directly allocated to buy a computer, 1000 is more than enough.
RAM isn't the biggest factor in running programs like Solidworks and AutoCad, it's your graphics card. I'm was a regular poster on /r/SuggestALaptop (you should go here if you have any further questions). These laptops are 15.6 inch and relatively bulky, because portable laptops sacrifice performance for light weight and battery life. I assume you're willing to trade performance for those things.

First, decide if you need a laptop or desktop. The desktop will have better performance, but the laptop will be more portable. You stated that you want a laptop.

Acer Aspire V15
This would be a great buy. It has a Mid-High range GPU, 1TB hard drive to store all your files. If you want you could buy a laptop with an SSD but I would argue it isn't worth it since you're on a budget.

Asus N550JK
This laptop has a touchscreen, and has the best quality display out of all 3 laptops. If you have to do color specific work, this is the laptop to get. It also has a touchscreen, but the weakest GPU out of all 3.

Lenovo Y50
This last laptop is one of the most popular gaming laptops on the market, mainly due to the branding, backlit keyboard, etc. Many people complain about the display on this laptop, but it has a good price to performance ratio. The processor on this one is weaker than the other 2. There is a model with a stronger processor but it's over your budget.

Usually I would recommend the Lenovo Y50, but that's a great deal on the Acer. I would recommend that one personally because of the discount right now. With regards to the previous poster, my older brother is an ME, he does a lot of Solidworks/AutoCAD stuff and he often talks about how his laptop is convenient for him to work on, so if you feel a laptop would be really beneficial then I would buy one.

If you have any more questions you can message me or visit /r/suggestalaptop .

u/StandishIII · 2 pointsr/Twitch

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00K6ZIO2K/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;psc=1
Here is the laptop I have, I think it should be good enough to run streams at 1080p.

u/Nibiria · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

It'll run League almost for sure, LoL doesn't take up much processing or graphical power (though it probably won't run on anything above Medium, probably on Low is your best bet). I'm not sure how good the screen is because I don't own one, but I am looking at that and the current Asus Zenbook, which has a built-in graphics card. That will 100% be able to run League. However, it is more expensive and the screen has been said to have issues with color reproduction. Hope this helps!

u/ds-h · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

The new ASUS Zenbook UX303LN looks like a good choice. Light and thin with a 3200x1800 resolution and dedicated graphics. Still at the pre-order stage, but I've heard it will begin shipping this month (not sure). Only thing that's different from your desired specifications is the 13.3" screen size.

EDIT: whoops i got beat

u/snobbycookies · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Ha, that is the exact configuration I was looking at as well - 512GB SSD, 16GB RAM, and the GTX 1060. Thanks for the tip about the displays.

So I guess in that $1300 price point, which outweighs the other? The P650 or the Acer? (link to Acer: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N35Z1DA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_dp_T1_t36CzbDH4NKZ0)

u/papatonton · 2 pointsr/laptops

Acer Aspire V 15 Nitro Black Edition

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N35Z1DA/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_5eDezb3DGYB6X

This is what I have, ive been using it for about a month now and it's amazing. it's one of the cheaper laptops compared to those with the same specs if you're looking to save money. It runs a little hot out the box when playing heavy games but after undervolting my CPU it doesn't get hotter than 80°.

u/Tdude2k · 2 pointsr/laptops

I'd pick this Dell, it has a GTX 1050, 8gb ram and a quad core i5 (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B06XFG7157) and it's $636 at the moment.

u/Hunt191 · 2 pointsr/computers

You might want this version, the other one only has a single 256GB ssd compared to a 1tb HDD in this version for cheaper https://www.amazon.com/Dell-Inspiron-i5-7300HQ-GeForce-i5577-5335BLK-PUS/dp/B06XFG7157/ref=dp_ob_title_ce?pldnSite=1&amp;amp;th=1

u/RobbieRSon · 2 pointsr/computers

Also seconded, in the US it's a $650 laptop with specs comparable to a $300 laptop. It's not that it won't be powerful enough, as I think it should be, but it won't live up to the specs of a laptop that costs the same amount. Something like this laptop from Dell would suit you much better.

u/dave284 · 2 pointsr/playrust

https://www.amazon.com/Dell-Inspiron-5000-5577-GamingLaptop/dp/B06XFG7157/ref=mp_s_a_1_4?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1549442670&amp;amp;sr=8-4&amp;amp;pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&amp;amp;keywords=dell+gaming+laptop&amp;amp;dpPl=1&amp;amp;dpID=41zfabBnrLL&amp;amp;ref=plSrch this laptop is the one I have it can run every game but rust in max setting the only problem is ram you need at least 12 gbs of ram or you will get 60-40 FPS on potato with lots of freezing

u/Kart0410 · 2 pointsr/laptops

Dell Inspiron i5577 :Intel Core i5 (up to 3.5 GHz),8GB Ram ,1TB HDD, NVIDIA GTX 1050 a lil bit over your budget its $740 but the best for its price

u/AjCu · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace

For 50$ more u can get this with a GTX 1050... Just don't buy the 940mx https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B06XFG7157?ref_=mw_olp_product_details

u/r420r_ · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace
u/johnnyp42 · 2 pointsr/computers

If it's gotta be a laptop the best you're going to do at that budget is an i5 and a 1050 ti, which should get you 60 fps on Fortnite at high/1080p according to notebookcheck.

This Acer is the cheapest one I can find with those specs at $700

Here's a Dell Inspiron with pretty much identical specs for $800

Maybe make a post on /r/suggestalaptop too, they might have some other suggestions.

Personally I wouldn't go with anything less than a 1050 ti for what you want.

u/BenK929 · 2 pointsr/pcmasterrace
u/Pakaflaka911 · 2 pointsr/Cityofheroes

Picked up my Dell with an i5-7300hq and a 1050ti for 800 a couple years ago, you could probably find one used for 4-500 easy. I think its still around 750 on amazon.


edit: its a 15.6 and not the lightest laptop in the world, but carried it around Ireland in my pack and it wasnt too bad. https://www.amazon.com/Dell-Inspiron-7567-Laptop-i5-7300HQ/dp/B07793DRK9#customerReviews , pretty sure this is the exact model actually and the 144hz screen swap is inexpensive and pretty easy to do.

u/wine-inacan · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

this one! you don't need to though haha I can search for it :)

u/hubbletastic · 2 pointsr/chromeos

If a top-of-the-line CPU isn't a big necessity, the Acer R 11 sounds like it fits the bill. The Asus Flip is another option. It has a 10.1" screen versus the 11.6" with the R 11.

Both of these Chromebooks are convertibles that have Play Store support right now. The 2955U in the C720 seems to get around 12K in Octane, so you'd be getting a slower CPU (at least in single-core applications) with either of the Chromebooks I mentioned (both get around the 7-8K range).

u/Kysersoze79 · 2 pointsr/chromeos

So, you can get an R11 at amazon right now for $250


Its the 32gb (vs 16gb) version, and its a slightly older quad core vs dual core celeron.

So if you figure you can save $70 off that price, but you have to GO to bestbuy on black friday, then sure its totally worth it.

This is on my short list to get for my 7yr old, since it can flip over, and run android apps, and double as a (fat) tablet. They currently use the asus c100 now, so this would be similar. I haven't seen any deals on the asus c101, so i'm thinking the acer might win out.

u/ilikemyrealname · 2 pointsr/chromeos

I think I have the top of the line one, and it's on sale right now on Amazon. Might be helpful, especially if you have Prime. PS. I absolutely love the device. https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Chromebook-Convertible-11-6-Inch-CB5-132T-C1LK/dp/B01J42JPJG/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1487205769&amp;amp;sr=8-1&amp;amp;keywords=r11

u/tildespamzor · 2 pointsr/chromeos

oops, yes.

u/jcoe0723 · 2 pointsr/chromeos

An Acer CB R11 might be what you're looking for.

https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Chromebook-Convertible-11-6-Inch-CB5-132T-C1LK/dp/B01J42JPJG/

11.6" IPS screen...Not 1080p, but at that size 768p should be good enough. It's touch screen and convertible...Don't know if that's something you want or not. It's on sale for $259 right now.


If you don't want a touchscreen/convertible...Here's something that's under your budget:

https://www.amazon.com/Chromebook-C202SA-YS02-Ruggedized-Resistant-Celeron/dp/B01DBGVB7K/

Still 11.6" and IPS (I believe), and enough for what you want.

u/IvGranite · 2 pointsr/hardwareswap

That's because I'm a dingus and listed the wrong this as the model number lol the model is CB5-132T-C1LK, here's an Amazon page for it https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Chromebook-Convertible-11-6-Inch-CB5-132T-C1LK/dp/B01J42JPJG

u/ITman2000 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

How about the Acer Chromebook R 11. This 2 in 1 laptop has pretty decent specs for its price range with an Intel Celeron N3150 Quad-Core Processor 1.6GHz with Intel Burst Technology up to 2.08GHz, 4 gb ram, up to 10 hours battery life, 32 gb internal storage, Intel HD Graphics card. Provides a decent performance for its price. Available on [amazon] (https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Chromebook-Convertible-11-6-Inch-CB5-132T-C1LK/dp/B01J42JPJG/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&amp;amp;ie=UTF8&amp;amp;qid=1506220234&amp;amp;sr=1-1&amp;amp;keywords=2+in+1+laptop+and+tablet&amp;amp;refineme)

u/chaz8900 · 2 pointsr/summonerswar

I use an acer r11. Its a convertible and i love it for the price.
Amazon Link
Ive never had anything but a good experience playing on it.
Touch. Touchpad is utterly useless for most things.

u/S-O-What · 2 pointsr/computers

I strongly suggest stepping up to a Chromebook with a quad core Celeron N3150 or an i3. The N3050 in the Chromebook 3 is quite a bit weaker than the N3150.

This machine has an N3150 and 4GB of RAM... and it's also convertible into a tablet form.

https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Chromebook-Convertible-11-6-Inch-CB5-132T-C1LK/dp/B01J42JPJG/

u/Warzinak · 2 pointsr/chromeos

https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B01J42JPJG/ref=dp_ob_neva_mobile this is the r11 right?(or are there different versions) I just realised it is not rated as "rugged". Do you think the Asus n7 would be more rugged than your r11? (We have a very klutzy dog)

u/1000000100000 · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

Would the pavilion run CAD fine? With regular use how long do you think before it would see a decline in performance? I'm an EE major looking for something to last 4+ yrs.

Also, what is your opinion on this vs. this at the same price?

u/TRDJr · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

I have had good luck with ASUS laptops. I think that they tend to give you that extra bit of quality for the price.

If I were you I would look into the Vivobook line or the ZenBook line. Vivobooks tend to have the best price/performance/build quality whereas the ZenBooks usually don't have a dedicated graphics chip but are thinner, lighter, higher build quality and have better battery life.

This laptop

ASUS VivoBook S Thin &amp; Light Laptop, 14" FHD, Intel Core i7-8550U, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, GeForce MX150, NanoEdge Display, Backlit Kbd, FP Sensor - S410UN-NS74 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07B7VFTN9/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_NG.ZBbXGT81ED

Gives you a 14 inch screen in a 13 inch form factor with a dedicated graphics chip so that you can run a few of the lighter games and do more multimedia work

This laptop

ASUS ZenBook Ultra-Slim Laptop - 14” FHD IPS WideView Display, Intel Core i7-8550U CPU, 8GB DDR4, 128GB SSD + 1TB HDD, Windows 10, Backlit keyboard, 3.1lbs, Quartz Grey - UX410UA-AS74 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B079TBQ4H4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_YO.ZBb3WFNXMZ

Has a better screen and battery life, but no dedicated graphics chip. Probably a higher build quality too but I can't speak to that first hand. It's also a tad pricier.

I have a ZenBook that I have been using for 3 years now and it is still as good as new. I bought it at the time because it was the most macbook-like machine that didn't cost a fortune.

u/ChewbaccaBreath · 2 pointsr/SuggestALaptop

ASUS Vivobook? $800 there's a cheaper option too but it has an i7, 8gb DDR4 ram, 1080p screen, backlit keyboard and an SSD. Im assuming you mean you want something that's going to last 5 years and just gonna break it to you eventually the battery's going to need replacing at least as soon as you get a laptop the battery is dying. This should do everything you want and more but if you wanna save money maybe this Vivobook, don't buy the version with an SSD though you could easily add one for way cheaper.