I hope CSS doesn't join this thread.
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There was a link in todays' Insider. 10 high-tech gadgets I can live without[^] that offer many opportunities to the conspiracy theorists amongst the membership. However I am posting this in relation to item 3 only and in particular the last sentence of that item. "Ever try developing on a laptop?". I have seen many of you posting that you have VSwhatever installed on your lappies. So, is doing dev work on a laptop as bad as the article indicates? Is it easier/harder, better/worse than developing using a desktop?
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
I have never owned a desktop machine, and have always worked on a laptop. I find the performance perfectly adequate as a dev. machine - it hits a 6 on the Win 7 Ultimate (32 bit) performance scale, except for gaming (5.2 - and I don't game anyway). The only essential extras are two smallish additional screens, one of which goes with me when I travel. With 4 gig RAM (all available) and 8 gig readyboost (exFAT). The main software I currently have installed is:- VS2005 Pro VS2008 Pro VS2010 Premium SQL server 2008 VMWare workstation (3 VMs) Virtual PC (1 VM for VS .net 1.1) XP mode for dodgy stuff Office 2007 Ultimate Office XP (Access and Excel only) Since I spend a lot of time working* in other people's offices, a desktop machine is just not practical. * Please note - the CP lounge counts as work :cool:
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There was a link in todays' Insider. 10 high-tech gadgets I can live without[^] that offer many opportunities to the conspiracy theorists amongst the membership. However I am posting this in relation to item 3 only and in particular the last sentence of that item. "Ever try developing on a laptop?". I have seen many of you posting that you have VSwhatever installed on your lappies. So, is doing dev work on a laptop as bad as the article indicates? Is it easier/harder, better/worse than developing using a desktop?
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
What's this guy's problem? I think he should start writing about farming, or something similar... actually, strike that, I guess there's too much technology in there, too for him.
Henry Minute wrote:
Ever try developing on a laptop?
I got two dev machines, both laptops and don't consider getting a desktop ever again. It's nonsense to say that lap tops are underpowered compared to desktops these days. The perks remain, however.
We are using Linux daily to UP our productivity - so UP yours!
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There was a link in todays' Insider. 10 high-tech gadgets I can live without[^] that offer many opportunities to the conspiracy theorists amongst the membership. However I am posting this in relation to item 3 only and in particular the last sentence of that item. "Ever try developing on a laptop?". I have seen many of you posting that you have VSwhatever installed on your lappies. So, is doing dev work on a laptop as bad as the article indicates? Is it easier/harder, better/worse than developing using a desktop?
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
I have a 4-year old laptop that was top-of-the-line when I got it (or darn near) and it does well for me. It has a 17" 1900x1200 display, 2Gb RAM and a 128Mb video card. It runs on Win7 32bit (becuase I can't get 64 bit drivers for some hardware on it). I am running VS2010 and 2008. This was my workstation for 3 years (with two external displays attached) and it was a treat to work on, other than the PITA another posted mentioned when having to disconnect the displays. I bought a second hard drive tray and now use it to flip between two Win 7 images: one for video editing and one for development/writing.
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There was a link in todays' Insider. 10 high-tech gadgets I can live without[^] that offer many opportunities to the conspiracy theorists amongst the membership. However I am posting this in relation to item 3 only and in particular the last sentence of that item. "Ever try developing on a laptop?". I have seen many of you posting that you have VSwhatever installed on your lappies. So, is doing dev work on a laptop as bad as the article indicates? Is it easier/harder, better/worse than developing using a desktop?
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
I haven't read the article, but I just can't stand laptops for development. There is no such thing as a good laptop keyboard. I can live with one for limited dev on the run, but not for daily dev. 4GB RAM severely limits your access to VMs, so it is difficult to run more than one at a time. A docking station so you can quickly hook up a good keyboard, mouse and monitor would make a laptop usable, but I would much rather have a nice desktop for daily dev and a nice light laptop for travel. My current desktop only cost me about $400 (just the box) and a nice light laptop would add another $600. That would be much preferable to lugging around a larger powerful laptop...best of both worlds.
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There was a link in todays' Insider. 10 high-tech gadgets I can live without[^] that offer many opportunities to the conspiracy theorists amongst the membership. However I am posting this in relation to item 3 only and in particular the last sentence of that item. "Ever try developing on a laptop?". I have seen many of you posting that you have VSwhatever installed on your lappies. So, is doing dev work on a laptop as bad as the article indicates? Is it easier/harder, better/worse than developing using a desktop?
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
I definitely prefer a desktop to a laptop for development, but I don't think all laptops are bad for it. I have a 17" Dell Studio, and as long as it has a mouse connected, I can use it about as well as any desktop. And I've found it has enough processing power to build my VS projects quickly. There's no reason I couldn't use it daily for development, but desktops are just my personal preference.
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I have never owned a desktop machine, and have always worked on a laptop. I find the performance perfectly adequate as a dev. machine - it hits a 6 on the Win 7 Ultimate (32 bit) performance scale, except for gaming (5.2 - and I don't game anyway). The only essential extras are two smallish additional screens, one of which goes with me when I travel. With 4 gig RAM (all available) and 8 gig readyboost (exFAT). The main software I currently have installed is:- VS2005 Pro VS2008 Pro VS2010 Premium SQL server 2008 VMWare workstation (3 VMs) Virtual PC (1 VM for VS .net 1.1) XP mode for dodgy stuff Office 2007 Ultimate Office XP (Access and Excel only) Since I spend a lot of time working* in other people's offices, a desktop machine is just not practical. * Please note - the CP lounge counts as work :cool:
Chris C-B wrote:
it hits a 6 on the Win 7 Ultimate (32 bit) performance scale
Yeah, but my 5 year old desktop goes to 11. :laugh: (on the Henry scale, anyway)
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
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Chris C-B wrote:
it hits a 6 on the Win 7 Ultimate (32 bit) performance scale
Yeah, but my 5 year old desktop goes to 11. :laugh: (on the Henry scale, anyway)
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”