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Is it just me, or are...

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  • O obermd

    You must be a graphics designer. That's the only reason I can think to have that much memory in a laptop. The price you're seeing is a result of the memory and SSD, nothing else.

    J Offline
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    Jeremy Falcon
    wrote on last edited by
    #25

    I do like me some multi-tasking and future proofing. When it comes to laptops especially, since most are non-upgradable with their parts, better to go large once every 5 years because the next few versions of OSes to release will always take more umph.

    Jeremy Falcon

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    • J Jeremy Falcon

      Then, I dunno how the price breakdown is. I just know that for the laptop I want, what used to be a $3k laptop is now is $4k for the same thing (high end at the time of purchase).

      Jeremy Falcon

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      Nelek
      wrote on last edited by
      #26

      I don't know if Europa vs US has something to do with the price...

      M.D.V. ;) If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about? Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.

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      • J Jeremy Falcon

        ...computers getting too expensive? So, here I am, trying to stop myself from buying a new laptop since my current one is about 5 years old. Ain't gonna lie, I'm this close to it. But for a new higher end laptop and monitor (to last another 5 years) it's about $5.6K USD once you add in the extended warranties so the company you buy from doesn't tell you to p1ss off if something goes wrong. That's like 6K... homes used to cost that much. Probably 1K of that is just the GPU. How on Earth do companies honestly expect non-techy folks to drop that kinda money?

        Jeremy Falcon

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        B Offline
        BernardIE5317
        wrote on last edited by
        #27

        i bought this refurbished desktop [^] for peanuts . maybe you can buy 35 of the same and have quite a shop .

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        • P PIEBALDconsult

          Right. And maybe new/more RAM. And probably a bigger M.2 drive.

          Right. And maybe new RAM. And probably a larger M.2 drive.

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          T Offline
          trønderen
          wrote on last edited by
          #28

          PIEBALDconsult wrote:

          Right. And maybe new/more RAM. And probably a bigger M.2 drive.

          "A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money". Certainly, this statement (if Everett McKinley Dirksen ever made it - people dispute that) was not about PCs but the US state budget. And then: It dates back to around 1960. We've seen some inflation since then. (In Norway: A factor of 16 since 1960.) I dug up some old BYTE magazine for a few random picks. (For inflation factors: Check that up. I used Norwegian factors. Your country's mileage may differ!): March 1976 - For inflation, multiply by 6-7: 4K RAM - $180, or $45,000,000 for a gigabyte. Video card, 16 lines, 32 characters (no graphics, grayscale or color) - $230, add $25 for 64 ch/line. Complete system: 4K RAM (expandable to 8K), 6800 CPU, keyboard, built-in TV interface (16 lines, 21 chars) & CC player interface for data storage. All of this can be yours for just 860 (1976-)dollars! March 1989 - For inflation, multiply by around 2.5: Complete system: 386/25 MHz, 1 MB RAM, Color VGA, diskette drive, 101-keyboard, LPT/COM*2 ports, 322 MB disk - $9,099. 2 MB RAM (on board with sockets for expansion to 10 MB) - $1195, or $611,840 for a gigabyte. 16 MHz 80387 math coprocessor - $695. Logitech Mouse - $139. Hayes SmartModem 2400 bps - $439. HP Laserjet - $1750. Sept. 1995 - For inflation, multiply by 2: CD burner (SCSI controller included) - $1495. Complete system: 133 MHz Pentium, 8 MB RAM, 540 MB disk, 15" CRT, 4X CD-ROM, SoundBlaster, speakers, keyboard, mouse: $2499. Add $109 for network interface. Portable IBM ThinkPad 755CX 5/75 810MB - $6999. Apple Color Laser 12/600 - $6989. Tektronix Phaser 540 - $8995. 21" NEC XP21 - $2169. Pentium 133 CPU - $999.

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          • J Jeremy Falcon

            Yeah... I mean... I won't go broke... but.. ya know... that's also the price of a car or one hell of a weekend with a call g*** (can't say and be kid sister friendly).

            Jeremy Falcon

            R Offline
            R Offline
            Roger Wright
            wrote on last edited by
            #29

            Jeremy Falcon wrote:

            that's also the price of a car or one hell of a weekend with a call g***

            I'm guessing "goat."

            Will Rogers never met me.

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            • J Jeremy Falcon

              ...computers getting too expensive? So, here I am, trying to stop myself from buying a new laptop since my current one is about 5 years old. Ain't gonna lie, I'm this close to it. But for a new higher end laptop and monitor (to last another 5 years) it's about $5.6K USD once you add in the extended warranties so the company you buy from doesn't tell you to p1ss off if something goes wrong. That's like 6K... homes used to cost that much. Probably 1K of that is just the GPU. How on Earth do companies honestly expect non-techy folks to drop that kinda money?

              Jeremy Falcon

              R Offline
              R Offline
              Richard Deeming
              wrote on last edited by
              #30

              Jeremy Falcon wrote:

              so the company you buy from doesn't tell you to p1ss off if something goes wrong

              I admire your optimism. :laugh:


              "These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined." - Homer

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              • J Jeremy Falcon

                ...computers getting too expensive? So, here I am, trying to stop myself from buying a new laptop since my current one is about 5 years old. Ain't gonna lie, I'm this close to it. But for a new higher end laptop and monitor (to last another 5 years) it's about $5.6K USD once you add in the extended warranties so the company you buy from doesn't tell you to p1ss off if something goes wrong. That's like 6K... homes used to cost that much. Probably 1K of that is just the GPU. How on Earth do companies honestly expect non-techy folks to drop that kinda money?

                Jeremy Falcon

                M Offline
                M Offline
                maze3
                wrote on last edited by
                #31

                like I view Photoshop pricing or Visual Studio Pro license, if its what helps me make the money for my job, then its a tiny amount to what my income is If its a hobby that do 1 hour a week, way too much. A hobby that do 2-3 hours a night - gaming, and smooth no jitter is what I want, sure If just watching videos, and browsing internet, uhm no. And yeah, computers in 1995 still cost more then comparable product range today.

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                • J Jeremy Falcon

                  I do like me some multi-tasking and future proofing. When it comes to laptops especially, since most are non-upgradable with their parts, better to go large once every 5 years because the next few versions of OSes to release will always take more umph.

                  Jeremy Falcon

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  Riz Thon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #32

                  In case you're not familiar with Framework Laptop, they allow you to easily open and change things. I thought their original 13.5" screen was too small. They now have a 16" version. Unfortunately for me, it doesn't ship where I live...

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                  • R Riz Thon

                    In case you're not familiar with Framework Laptop, they allow you to easily open and change things. I thought their original 13.5" screen was too small. They now have a 16" version. Unfortunately for me, it doesn't ship where I live...

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                    J Offline
                    Jeremy Falcon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #33

                    That's cool. Thanks.

                    Jeremy Falcon

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                    • P PIEBALDconsult

                      My wife wants a new laptop -- she said her current one cost about $600 USD, and that she expects to pay around that. I told her I would expect to pay about $2000 USD if I ever buy one for myself (I have no plans to buy myself a laptop). I might build myself new desktop (mini-tower) PC soon, and probably $2000 USD would be about right, but I have no idea now that Fry's Electronics is gone ( :sigh: ) -- I suppose NewEgg may be in my future. Edit: My needs are simple, I'm a developer, I don't game, I don't watch video on a PC, I can make do with the on-board graphics just fine.

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                      C Offline
                      Cpichols
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #34

                      I don't ever use my personal laptop as a laptop, so I'm considering a mini/micro PC with all of the hookups so I can just keep using the same monitor and keyboard. Might get an additional monitor since I do use the one on my current laptop. These run much cheaper, as they should, and I'd get exactly what I want without having to build it myself. I am considering putting Ubuntu on it - or getting one with it installed.

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                      • J Jeremy Falcon

                        Yeah, like a starter, teenager car. Then again, I might be showing my age. :laugh: Cuz you know, _back in my day..._

                        Jeremy Falcon

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                        G Offline
                        Gary Wheeler
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #35

                        Kids on your lawn Jeremy? :laugh:

                        Software Zen: delete this;

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                        • M maze3

                          like I view Photoshop pricing or Visual Studio Pro license, if its what helps me make the money for my job, then its a tiny amount to what my income is If its a hobby that do 1 hour a week, way too much. A hobby that do 2-3 hours a night - gaming, and smooth no jitter is what I want, sure If just watching videos, and browsing internet, uhm no. And yeah, computers in 1995 still cost more then comparable product range today.

                          J Offline
                          J Offline
                          Jeremy Falcon
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #36

                          I'm a professional. Although I do have work computers and this one is my personal one. My main want with this is 64GB of RAM in a laptop. Turns out, any laptop with that don't come cheap.

                          Jeremy Falcon

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                          • J Jeremy Falcon

                            I do like me some multi-tasking and future proofing. When it comes to laptops especially, since most are non-upgradable with their parts, better to go large once every 5 years because the next few versions of OSes to release will always take more umph.

                            Jeremy Falcon

                            R Offline
                            R Offline
                            Rich Shealer
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #37

                            In March of 2018 I purchased my next 5+ year desktop. I sprung for an AMD ThreadRipper 1900X. I like the idea of the extra cores to run virtual machines. Two and a half years later it was obsoleted by Windows 11. Still runs great with Windows 10 which I will run on it towards October of 2025 when mainstream support ends and try again. So I guess it will last me 5 years, it was just dissapointing to be shut out half way through.

                            J 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • J Jeremy Falcon

                              ...computers getting too expensive? So, here I am, trying to stop myself from buying a new laptop since my current one is about 5 years old. Ain't gonna lie, I'm this close to it. But for a new higher end laptop and monitor (to last another 5 years) it's about $5.6K USD once you add in the extended warranties so the company you buy from doesn't tell you to p1ss off if something goes wrong. That's like 6K... homes used to cost that much. Probably 1K of that is just the GPU. How on Earth do companies honestly expect non-techy folks to drop that kinda money?

                              Jeremy Falcon

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              MikeCO10
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #38

                              Wow Jeremy. Are you sure you're not over spec'd on your needs? I think the problem with laptops is that raising some given requirement ups the whole package. I guess if you're a gamer that needs a $1k GPU, then it is what it is. My laptop is a three-year old, lower-end gaming box that cost $1200, adding an SSD, plus $200 for the 2nd monitor. From a work perspective, I'm amazed at what it can have running without missing a step. VS, Corel, two IDE editors, two browsers with multiple windows (and more tabs than I can count), Outlook, Teams, Word and Excel with multiple docs, Zoom, etc. And, I keep it in sleep mode many nights so not rebooted often. The price today isn't much different than it was.

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                              • J Jeremy Falcon

                                I'm a professional. Although I do have work computers and this one is my personal one. My main want with this is 64GB of RAM in a laptop. Turns out, any laptop with that don't come cheap.

                                Jeremy Falcon

                                D Offline
                                D Offline
                                dandy72
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #39

                                64GB is an awful lot of memory for a laptop. I have a VM host with that much, and I'd like it to have more, but that's a VM host. What do you realistically need in a laptop that requires it to have 64GB of RAM?

                                J 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • J Jeremy Falcon

                                  ...computers getting too expensive? So, here I am, trying to stop myself from buying a new laptop since my current one is about 5 years old. Ain't gonna lie, I'm this close to it. But for a new higher end laptop and monitor (to last another 5 years) it's about $5.6K USD once you add in the extended warranties so the company you buy from doesn't tell you to p1ss off if something goes wrong. That's like 6K... homes used to cost that much. Probably 1K of that is just the GPU. How on Earth do companies honestly expect non-techy folks to drop that kinda money?

                                  Jeremy Falcon

                                  B Offline
                                  B Offline
                                  BBar2
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #40

                                  My min desirements always gets me over $2K. From my first 1988ish 286 desktop, to my most recent 2020 Rizen 5 desktop build. My newest computer is a 2TB, 32GB, M2 MacBook Pro. It is my first computer that costs over $3K, and that is with a family discount, and I love it. Worth every penny. I know CP is mostly Windows developers, but I turned to the dark side and switched to Macs around 2011. I still keep a PC around, but may not turn it on for 6 months at a time. Maybe that topic is better suited to a new thread. Hope you like your new $$ computer too!

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                                  • B BBar2

                                    My min desirements always gets me over $2K. From my first 1988ish 286 desktop, to my most recent 2020 Rizen 5 desktop build. My newest computer is a 2TB, 32GB, M2 MacBook Pro. It is my first computer that costs over $3K, and that is with a family discount, and I love it. Worth every penny. I know CP is mostly Windows developers, but I turned to the dark side and switched to Macs around 2011. I still keep a PC around, but may not turn it on for 6 months at a time. Maybe that topic is better suited to a new thread. Hope you like your new $$ computer too!

                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    Jeremy Falcon
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #41

                                    BBar2 wrote:

                                    I know CP is mostly Windows developers, but I turned to the dark side and switched to Macs around 2011

                                    :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: To be honest, the only reason I can't go fulltime Mac is because I cannot use my thumb to copy and paste. I'm a pinky kinda guy.

                                    BBar2 wrote:

                                    Hope you like your new $$ computer too!

                                    Thanks man.

                                    Jeremy Falcon

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • P PIEBALDconsult

                                      My wife wants a new laptop -- she said her current one cost about $600 USD, and that she expects to pay around that. I told her I would expect to pay about $2000 USD if I ever buy one for myself (I have no plans to buy myself a laptop). I might build myself new desktop (mini-tower) PC soon, and probably $2000 USD would be about right, but I have no idea now that Fry's Electronics is gone ( :sigh: ) -- I suppose NewEgg may be in my future. Edit: My needs are simple, I'm a developer, I don't game, I don't watch video on a PC, I can make do with the on-board graphics just fine.

                                      N Offline
                                      N Offline
                                      NightPen
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #42

                                      Wow, I had forgotten the pain of "I have to upgrade my computer every two years issue", I use to have. I switched to OSX, WSL, and ubuntu years ago and since they I only had to upgrade about once ever 8 years or so. When I need windows I just run parallels. Say what you want about Apple, their hardware even when running windows lasts.

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                                      • R Rich Shealer

                                        In March of 2018 I purchased my next 5+ year desktop. I sprung for an AMD ThreadRipper 1900X. I like the idea of the extra cores to run virtual machines. Two and a half years later it was obsoleted by Windows 11. Still runs great with Windows 10 which I will run on it towards October of 2025 when mainstream support ends and try again. So I guess it will last me 5 years, it was just dissapointing to be shut out half way through.

                                        J Offline
                                        J Offline
                                        jochance
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #43

                                        If you mean just not showing on the supported hardware lists, it'll likely work just fine all the same.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • D dandy72

                                          64GB is an awful lot of memory for a laptop. I have a VM host with that much, and I'd like it to have more, but that's a VM host. What do you realistically need in a laptop that requires it to have 64GB of RAM?

                                          J Offline
                                          J Offline
                                          Jeremy Falcon
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #44

                                          dandy72 wrote:

                                          What do you realistically need in a laptop that requires it to have 64GB of RAM?

                                          640K ought to be enough for anybody. - Bill Gates

                                          Jeremy Falcon

                                          D 1 Reply Last reply
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