(11-21-2012, 12:35 PM)ulao Wrote:Quote:It doesn't matter if it's a laptop or not.Wow you must have failed physics. You really think a small little box is going to be as efficient as a desktop? Laptops can't magically transcend the laws of physics, the limited amount airflow because of
space for heat dispersion inside a laptop shell means that
the mobile gpus/cpus have to be significantly much smaller and lower clocked
chips.
If you get board read this.
http://www.thedailyopinion.co.uk/are-gaming-notebooks-worth-it/
I think its was well said here
"The laws of physics just cannot be bent – power equals heat and a sleek
slim form factor like that of the MacBook Pro just cannot contain that
much heat produced by the much more powerful components inside."
There are tuns of advantages getting a laptop top but butting heads with the top of the line processor desktop vs laptop will not win you 1st place.
We've already had the desktop/laptop conversation on this forum and I'm not about to go into it again. Next time instead of taking a small snippet out of my post and acting as if there was nothing else that goes along with it, read or quote the entire thing. I suggest you go back and read my comments again until they make sense. No one said a laptop is as efficient as a desktop. Please stop making things up.
Asus Laptop: K53TA
OS: Windows 7 Home Premium, 64-Bit - SP1
CPU: AMD Llano A6-3400M, Quad-Core, 1.4GHz-2.6GHz (Overclocked)
GPU: AMD Radeon HD6650M, 1GB GDDR3 (Catalyst 13.1)
RAM: Samsung 4GB DDR3-1333
OS: Windows 7 Home Premium, 64-Bit - SP1
CPU: AMD Llano A6-3400M, Quad-Core, 1.4GHz-2.6GHz (Overclocked)
GPU: AMD Radeon HD6650M, 1GB GDDR3 (Catalyst 13.1)
RAM: Samsung 4GB DDR3-1333

