Friday, April 27, 2012

Are laptops marketed as business laptops not fit for gaming?

The Dell Latitude & Sony Z series have some really powerful laptops. They score over gaming laptops like Alienware M17x because they're comparatively cheaper(Not all of them, though). However, they are marketed as business laptops. But with quad-core processors and powerful video cards, aren't they fit enough for gaming?|||Yes, they are enough. It just depends on what "The User" is looking for and wanting. If you play a lot of game's many people choose the Computer's which Intensify the Games and Experience which they are wanting to achieve. As far as "Best Laptops" which are the best in using and for ease, I have years of experience since I've used so many different Brands. I can tell you based on my Personal Experience that the Best which I have found to be Dependable as well as the best use of my money goes, this would be: Toshiba, Acer, and Sony Vaio. HP is usually a Hit or Miss so I got over dealing with their products except for my All-In-One Printer. It's wonderful but the Computer's aren't all that. Dell and E-Machine and these type of Computer Lines, Honestly you are going to get what you pay for! They are cheaper, YES. However they are also very Unreliable and have so many issues it is not worth having to deal with so many of them! Sometimes you actually get exactly what you Pay For! If you read all of the "Specs" and the description's on What Drivers, USB'S, Dual Processing, Core Processor and so on you know what your getting for your money and if it is worth what are being charged for them. I would Strongly suggest that you don't waste your time at the "Computer Stores." Meaning Best Buy and these type of Company's. You will end up spending much more for anything you are purchasing! You may e-mail me if you like and I will give you the Resource's which I have went through and received the Exact Same Products (Brand New) from the Factories and these Resources utilized will be of Great Savings to you! I don't believe in spending more than what it is actually worth so I do my research and find the Best Ways of achieving my needs and for the Best Prices.



I hope this is helpful to you and gives you more of an idea what directions you may want to gravitate more towards. Best of Luck to you! : )|||Generally business laptops won't have good graphics - the focus is on durability, reliability, and getting work done, which means good battery life and ergonomics, along with CPU and RAM. A good graphics card won't help you do Excel spreadsheets or handle IT better, while 2 hours more of battery life or a comfortable, well designed keyboard will.



That being said, the only business laptops with good graphics generally are workstation models - they're mainly designed for 3D and CAD, which does sometimes call for good graphics. They'll generally have good workstation graphics (Nvidia Quadro, ATI/AMD FireGL) that'll work okay for gaming. Look at Lenovo's Thinkpad W-series line, Dell's Precision line, and HP's Elitebook series with a w at the end of the model name.



Mobile workstations are very expensive for the specs you get - a comparatively spec'd Alienware or Asus will likely be $300-$1000 cheaper than a Dell Precision or W-series Thinkpad. However, you're guaranteed to get a solid, well built laptop - they're designed for businesses and corporations that demand the utmost in reliability. They're going to be very tough because they're built for road warriors that abuse their laptops day in and day out. Precisions and Elitebooks have a magnesium alloy chassis, while Thinkpads have a magnesium alloy frame and a plastic skin. Support is going to be very good. And they won't be flashy, but will have a humble, utilitarian look, and the design is gong to be very well thought - function isn't sacrificed for looks.|||Most games don't really need tremendous processing power. The overriding determiner for how well a computer will be at gaming is in the video card/processor. If you're just getting a laptop for gameplay, you'd be wasting a lot of dollars on those CPUs. It's not that they're bad, it's just not efficiently spending the money.|||Hardware is hardware. It does not matter how a laptop is advertised, if the hardware is fine, it is good enough for gaming. A "business laptop" can be just as good or even better than a "gaming laptop", it all depends on the hardware, mostly the graphics card.|||No it doesn`t have video card good enough

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