• @Custodian1623
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    37 months ago

    I’d personally look into Dell and Lenovo enterprise workstation laptops; same tech, but designed to be used instead of just looking flashy on a shelf.

    • @[email protected]
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      37 months ago

      Dell and Lenovo enterprise models are excellent for enterprise use, but struggle with gaming in my experience. It’s just not what they’re built to do.

      • @Custodian1623
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        17 months ago

        How is it functionally different from running video editing or CAD software?

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          Enterprise laptops for CAD, etc. still prioritize battery life over performance. Switchable graphics are a pain to setup and troubleshoot for gaming, the screens are not optimized for gaming (almost always 60Hz), thermals can be questionable, and they’re loud. Gaming laptops are built for that purpose, and they do it better than trying to shoehorn in a laptop built for an entirely different purpose.

          • @Custodian1623
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            17 months ago

            Thank you for your input - I think a lot of that depends on the specific model and price point as well. Imo at the end of the day it’s good to go for a laptop thick enough to accommodate a heatsink and look up any firmware restrictions on performance beforehand. Plenty of workstation laptops hit point one but I haven’t gamed on them enough to speak for point two