Starscream Wrote:For those who picked the second option, I'd like to hear some solid arguments for what it is exactly that the laptop SlickDragon was talking about in the first post is not capable of doing that a desktop only is. Some answers have already been given, but lets go through them so I can get unconfused.
I already answered this VERY thoroughly in both of my posts. Take another read:
NaturalViolence Wrote:Laptops have always been able to do everything that desktops can do even back in the late 80s. They are both PCs. However desktops have always been better at doing certain things (gaming, server, workstation, media center) and this has also always remained true. We're still in the same situation we've always been in whether people realize it or not. Only two things have really changed are:
1. Laptops are finally "good enough" for most people. Whereas in the past they weren't. However this is subjective. The definition of "good enough" is different from person to person. For most people they are good enough for not for everyone depending on what you plan on doing with your PC.
2. A lot of the problems with laptops have been fixed or improved. Battery life and reliability used to be shit in most laptops.
Like shonumi was trying to say laptops can do everything a desktop can and vice versa. But sometimes desktops are better at a particular task. This has now been repeated over and over so I'm not sure what it is that you're still not getting.
Starscream Wrote:zurginator is implying that I cannot use Photoshop and CryEngine with a top-of-the-line laptop like an i7 3920xm and a 7970m?
No, zurginator never implied that. YOU are implying that he meant that. Reread what he said:
zurginator Wrote:I have a professional laptop as well as a monster desktop.... and trust me, it's nice having a powerful desktop when messing with Photoshop and CryEngine.
Where does that say he can't run photoshop or cryengine on a laptop? You're putting words in his mouth.
Starscream Wrote:Lets be serious and try to think about it, when I power up that laptop, you'd better be sure that it is physically impossible for whatever reason and that the laptop in question is just not able to perform whatever task you're about to list. That would be the only way you could justify picking the second poll option, so lets hear it. Who knows, maybe I'll be all about desktops after hearing all these reasons, or maybe not. Smile
You seem to be misunderstanding the poll option. Read it:
Poll Wrote:Yes, laptops aren't good for everything.
That says nothing about a task being impossible. It's stating that desktops are better at certain things.
Starscream Wrote:I'm not really following that too much. Keyboard? That's the reason? That's a really weak excuse to use a desktop over a laptop, but okay, if that's your preference, I can live with that.
He listed one example of how a desktop can be better at something. He didn't say that would be his only reason to buy a desktop over a laptop. Please stop putting words in peoples mouths.
Starscream Wrote:He said it's "better" and the poll option is worded as "laptops aren't good for everything", but the laptop processor is every bit as good as his desktop processor in this case, so he must not be talking about the CPU.
I'm confused. Who is "he"?
Starscream Wrote:So what exactly is "better"? I can lay the laptop on the desk, turn it on and do exactly what he's going to do, so what am I missing? I just really want to get to the bottom of where this is coming from and so far, there is no satisfying answer. Somehow I have a feeling that people still have the age-old misconception about laptops and are just not able to get away from that argument for whatever reason even though it makes no sense anymore. Maybe things will become more clear as others post and then this thread can come to its eventual end.
Better is better. Faster is better. Easier/more convenient is better. The word "better" is not restricted to one piece of hardware.
If you are instead trying to ask "what about a desktops hardware/setup is better?" well then that's something that has been talked about already but to reiterate:
-bigger higher resolution screen
-faster cpu, gpu
-ability to have more ram
-3.5" HDD support
-high end internal audio cards/peripherals
-convenient for multimonitor setups
-ergonomic keyboard support
If you are trying to ask "what tasks can a desktop perform better?" well that too has already been answered but I will state some examples again:
-media centers
-servers
-high end gaming systems
-workstations (especially for scientific, engineering, image processing, video processing, video encoding, and programming applications, all of which are highly multithreaded)
Shonumi Wrote:As NV said, it's not an issue of hardware, so I too don't think anyone here is trying to (or should) argue which one has superior specs.
Starscream Wrote:I think that is the main concern.
What!!?!?! How is this not a major concern. Desktops have access to higher end hardware than laptops at a fraction of the price. How is that not a major issue?
Starscream Wrote:Why can't I have surround sound on my laptop?
You can, but it would be inconvenient. It would require a large complex speaker setup throughout the entire room that you would have to plug/unplug every time you want to move your laptop, which kind of helps defeat the convenient mobility factor of a laptop. Plus without a big screen and a proper chair/couch 5-10 ft. away from the front speakers you're going to seriously diminish the advantage of a surround sound setup.
Starscream Wrote:Why do I need 12 threads?
You don't but it helps when you're running slow multithreaded apps like professional 3D rendering software (maya, 3dstudio max, etc.), engineering software (autocad, etc.), video encoders,
Starscream Wrote:Which laptops tend to suck at multi-monitor support?
All of them. Have you ever tried it? Having more than two monitors is usually not even supported, you have to change your configuration if you unplug the second monitor, and you can't get the monitors to line up vertically which makes switching between them while working a pain.
Starscream Wrote:Why can't I have a 3TB storage drive?
Because 3TB laptop HDDs don't exist. You need an external drive or a very special laptop with a 3.5" bay to do that.
Starscream Wrote:Why do I need 14 USB ports?
Because you have a dozen usb devices hooked up to your system at once and you don't want messy hubs everywhere, like me.
Hooked up to my desktop right now I have 9 usb devices:
-wireless keyboard
-wireless mouse
-usb webcam
-usb microphone (the one in my webcam sucks)
-logitech rumbepad 2 controller for emulators
-xbox360 controller for certain pc games
-external HDD for data backup
-wireless LAN adapter (not necessary for a laptop)
-flash drive with my schoolwork on it
I can plug all of these in at the same time without the need for a hub thanks to 8 rear usb ports and 2 front usb ports.
Starscream Wrote:Some of this is just ridiculous.
He's just listing examples of potential advantages. Since you keep acting like desktops couldn't possible be better than laptops at anything and asking us to provide example of those advantages he decided to respond. Whether YOU need these things is irrelevant, SOME people may benefit from these things. So if you're going to try and make the case that laptops are always the better choice then you basically have to pretend that there are no advantages to the desktop design.
Shonumi Wrote:For zurginator, some of it's not that laptop hardware itself is in some way inferior, just that the current form factor prohibits things such as RAID 0 SSD arrays, 14 USB slots, and in some cases multi-monitor displays. If you want this to be a thread regarding laptop and desktop hardware and specs and what each is capable of, then you've got to do something about the posts that are comparing laptops and desktops based on their form factors. It'd probably be less frustrating in the long run.
Well the form factor of a laptop limits the hardware capabilities a lot. However they're still seen as two separate issues. There is no question that desktops win the top hardware award, like I discussed before for most people it's more of an issue of:
-is this laptops hardware "good enough" for me?
-how much more does it cost to buy a laptop with similar specs compared to a desktop?
-do I actually need the mobility offered to me by a laptop?
These should be the three questions anyone should ask themselves when they go to decide whether to buy a laptop, buy a desktop, or build a desktop.