• kirklennon@kbin.social
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    1 年前

    At that point, why even go for a laptop, vs. what would clearly be a high end desktop station?

    Because you can take that high-end computer with you across the room, on a plane, or anywhere else.

    • dukk@programming.dev
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      1 年前

      Yeah, that’s all true, but who really needs that kind of power?

      For some people it’s worth it. For most people? Probably not.

      IMHO the MacBook Airs and the M1/2 MBPs are looking pretty good right now.

      • kirklennon@kbin.social
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        1 年前

        Yeah, that’s all true, but who really needs that kind of power?

        The people featured in the presentation: music and video production people, medical researchers, machine learning experts. The MacBook Air is their most popular notebook. The MacBook Pro is for people who actually need more (with a new lower-tier MacBook Pro added for morons who insist they need a “pro” model but really don’t).

      • bamboo@lemm.ee
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        1 年前

        Today I sat in a meeting I didn’t care much for and was able to run my project’s unittests. They take a long time to run, like an hour and a half if run on a single thread. But with an M2 Max I can run it all in ~10 minutes or so, and the power efficiency is such that I don’t have to worry about it. I previously had an XPS 15, and it both took longer and also I could kill it in an hour doing this, so any intensive tasks like this were only for when I had wall power.

        It’s definitely not necessary for casual use, but there are definitely use cases that benefit from having a ton of power in a laptop.