In <https://marc.info/?l=openbsd-misc&m=173604207306423&w=1>, Courtney Hicks wrote: > I'm looking at replacing my current laptop, so I wanted to see what's good > that other people are using.
Since so many attributes of a laptop are mutually exclusive, the answers to "what's a good laptop" depend greatly on what you want. E.g.: * what size screen do you want? * do you want/need a 4K screen? * how much CPU power do you want/need? * how much memory do you want/need? * does an "embedded" GPU suffice for you, or do you want/need a more powerful "discrete" GPU; for the latter, how much performance do you want/need? * do you want/need very long battery life? * what I/O ports do you want/need? * how much weight can you tolerate? * do you want lots of expandability and user servicibility, or are soldered-in components (e.g., memory, SSD) ok? * for high-performance laptops: do you want/need ECC memory and/or slots for multiple SSDs? * for larger laptops: do you want/need a separate numeric keypad on the keyboard? Many of these attributes can be traded off amongst each other (and against cost), so it would be useful to know a bit more about which attributes are important for you, and which attributes you're ok with sacrificing. And finally, Murphys's law applies to laptops: they break, often at quite inconvenient times. The worst OpenBSD laptop I've ever owned was the one I had to buy (around 2008) at a small-town big-box retailer in a snowstorm the night before I was flying to a foreign country, after my previous laptop died 2 days earlier. After that experience I switched to owning pairs of slightly older/cheaper laptops, so I always have a spare on hand. -- -- "Jonathan Thornburg [remove -color to reply]" <dr.j.thornb...@gmail-pink.com> currently on the west coast of Canada "[I'm] Sick of people calling everything in crypto a Ponzi scheme. Some crypto projects are pump and dump schemes, while others are pyramid schemes. Others are just standard issue fraud. Others are just middlemen skimming off the top. Stop glossing over the diversity in the industry." -- Pat Dennis, 2022-04-25