Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Any recommended gaming laptops?




Terry


I want to get a gaming laptop that can play almost any game. Thanks in advance!


Answer
These laptops can handle that for you.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16834231089
Core i7 4700HQ(2.40GHz) 17.3" 12GB Memory 1TB HDD 5400rpm DVD±R/RW NVIDIA GeForce GTX 765M 1920 x 1080 1 Year Accidental Damage/30-Day Zero Bright Dot

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16834231090
Core i7 4700HQ(2.40GHz) 17.3" 16GB Memory 256GB SSD 1TB HDD 5400rpm DVD±R/RW NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770M 1920 x 1080 1 Year Accidental Damage/30-Day Zero Bright Dot

Brand buying advise

You get what you pay for. Systems with high end parts with low prices are to be viewed with suspicion. They have to cut corners somewhere to get the price down. What cost you less today is going to cost you more tomorrow.

Apple makes a good quality laptop. The problem comes when it requires service or minor upgrades. It is near impossible to do anything with them. They even glue the battery and hard drive down so you can not change it. They solder the ram to the logic board so you can not increase it. They lock up most of the software so your stuck with what they approve.

Lenovo has serious stand behind their product problems. They bought IBM PC division and proceeded to drive the quality of the system into the ground. Their customer service is well below par. They even makes Dell customer service look good. Lenovo will not allow people to read instruction on how to access the BIOS menu or to get info on their puters on their web site unless you connect to them thru Facebook. They do this so they can spy on their users. The last and final thing to remember about them is they are a Chinese Government own company. It is up to you if you want to trust them.

Toshiba, Panasonic, Sony should be avoided because of their heavy modification of Windows and the drivers. If you remove some of the bloat they install, you can cripple the system.

Acer, Gateway, and eMachines should be avoided period. Low end system that are driving the race to the bottom.

Dell once made a good system and fell from grace. They are now struggling to regain their place in the market. Customer service is one of many problems with this company.

Alienware are glorified Dells and are more name then product. Priced extremely high for what you get. They do perform but you can get the same for less by looking around, just not packaged to be eye candy to the gamers.

Samsung has a history of using cheap parts in critical areas. Capacitors has been one area Samsung has a known history of going cheap, causing units to fail early. For that reason I would avoid them.

ASUS and HP do not modify Windows as bad as the other manufacturers. They have excellent build quality. They might add a lot of bloat but they also makes it easy to get rid of it.

Ultrabooks are the higher end of Wintel laptops but they have some of the same concerns as Apple. They make it next to impossible to change any hardware in them. Service of them will have to be done by the manufacturers. With most of them, you can not change your own battery or hard drive. They are designed to catch your eye but they are not any more special then other laptops except for the fact that they are slim or thin. Your paying for it being thin and slim. For the money your going to spend on it you can buy a much better laptop with more power.

Chrome books are useless. They are designed by Google to make you dependent on Google. If you can not access the web then you can not do anything.

Hybrids are the worse of the worse. The flip or detachable touch screens are just a disaster waiting to happen.

Never buy an All In One. They are far worst then laptops of any kind to service and they have a higher failure rate.

Choose wisely.

:)

im interested in game design and programming i want to know what kind of laptop to get?




JohnMichae


for making games not for playing games im a begginer so nothing real complicated like what brand and what features it needs


Answer
For game programming, you don't need much. I use a seven-year old Toshiba with Ubuntu and Windows.

Most game programming isn't about the graphics. It's about understanding data. Learn a programming language or two. I like Python as an early language, but eventually you'll need C++.

It will take you years to learn enough programming to write simple 2D games, and you should start there.

If you're doing 3D graphics, you'll eventually need a machine with a real graphics card. Cheap laptops often have a 'shared memory' graphics adapter. This will not be sufficient for 3D modeling (although it will be fine for programming.) Look for a laptop with a big-name graphics adapter: NVidia or AMD/ATI. Stay away from the Intel shared memory adapter. It won't be able to handle the higher end graphics features. If you can't see texture and lighting, for example, it's going to be hard to program.

Graphics acceleration is expensive in a laptop because the cards usually have to be built into the machine, and can't be easily added in as they can on a desktop tower.
3D Graphics cards also produce a lot of heat, and this is a big problem in a laptop. You'll need a good fan and plenty of ventilation, or your laptop will overheat when you're testing your graphics-heavy games.

In short, the best laptop for writing high-end 3D games is the best for playing them. You won't need this kind of horsepower for quite some time, though, so you can get away with just about anything in the meantime.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Title Post: Any recommended gaming laptops?
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author: Unknown

Thank FOr Coming TO My Blog

No comments:

Post a Comment