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My husband has an HP touchsmart or whatever with a core I3, and it comes with an ATI mobility radeon card... So it's possible. 🙂
You're not going to play Crysis on one.
anyhow, yea, i know i don't have to have one, but i generally don't trust them due to my bad experience with one single ultra-portable laptop. it can't even fullscreen videos without dropping the frame rates, which gave me headaches. supposedly the digital microscopy software will be graphics intensive, so i don't want it to lag on me 3 years down the road when it goes through the old age slow down.
Also, it's girly - it has all these pretty swirls on it. Which is fine for a girl, but less so for the husband. 🙂
lissarae also has this laptop, so she can provide some feedback on it as well.
Husband doesn't really like it that much, but he's picky. One good point he makes, though - the screen/hinge system is heavy and makes it really hard to sit in your lap while it's open. It tips backwards. Also, it's girly - it has all these pretty swirls on it. Which is fine for a girl, but less so for the husband. 🙂
Okay for the person that sucks with technology what would be the reasoning for having the graphics card? I am pretty set on the Lenovo and don't know if the whole graphics card is gonna spoil that?
Okay for the person that sucks with technology what would be the reasoning for having the graphics card? I am pretty set on the Lenovo and don't know if the whole graphics card is gonna spoil that?
in my opinion, based on anecdotal evidence, PC slow downs that comes with age (2-3 years) tend to be slightly less of a problem with anything graphics related (full screen videos, large image files aka. digital microscopy slides) when you have a dedicated graphics card. on the flip side, decreased battery life that comes with age tend to be a larger problem with a dedicated graphics card.
someone correct me if i'm wrong or observed otherwise.
I haven't noticed any real slow downs that are hardware related. A good wipe and re-install usually fixes any issues. If you're exposed to a newer computer, you might perceive that the older one is slowing down. I had a Tandy 1000EX when I started college and it was just as fast in 1994 as it was in 1986. It just seemed to have slowed because of all the 200 and 300 MHz chips in the newer machines.



wow, my dad got a ibm 386 around 1990! hahaha, god, i don't even know where it is right now (and why he got one, he doesn't program). it is probably in pieces somewhere.tandy 1000ex............wow, my dad got a ibm 386 around 1990!