Octopod wrote:Ok. So I am now thinking maybe buy a cheap laptop for school and a new desktop for games and stuff. Maybe I will try to build the desktop, it would be good for me I think.
I would definetely say do this.
My buddy bought a maxed out laptop for gaming and work. He hates the thing, it runs hot, the battery dies in about an hour, and the thing cost an arm and a leg. Worst is it became outdated very quickly and is difficult to upgrade. Desktops upgrade very easily... even when new processor seats or controllers change, you end up only getting a new mobo and processor (possibly RAM... possibly). Where as the laptop comes with all kinds of needed changes that usually won't fit into the laptop resulting in getting a whole new laptop.
Personally I don't own laptops. I'm usually with in feet of a desktop no matter where I am. I have never been out of my house, and not near a computer, and said to myself "you know, I wish I had a high powered computing device to do something on." Most anything I'd want to do I can do on my cell phone (call someone, or simple google).
School may be different I guess... but I spent 13 years in primary and secondary school. And 2 years in college. Never once did I really want a computer for any of it.... that couldn't wait for when I got home (and that was only in college that I needed it at home).
Really I think laptops are useful only for those who don't have a consistent dwelling to call home. Business men who travel, truck drivers, homeless art fags who live in their car, etc. That and minimalist livers who don't want power, i.e. my mom who lives in a small efficiency and would only use a PC for word processing, or my girlfriend who lives with her mom and spends most her time at my house, again only using it for listening to music and surfing the interwebs.... heh, Mac users... no wonder mac sells mostly laptops!