So, I’m planning on buying myself a (second-hand) laptop once I get the money. I’m nowhere near tech-savvy so it has to be easy to use, but also I want something that is built to last, as opposed to certain (looking at you, Apple) devices that are desinged to become unusable within a next couple of years.
Any recommendations?
What is your budget and needs? Used thinkpads from a certain time period are very hardy, but they’re getting old enough now for performance to be an issue for anything beyond basic web browsing and word processing.
Framework also makes laptops with the explicit goal of being more repairable. Even if you decide not to work on it yourself, it would be trivial for a repair shop to fix most things that could go wrong.
I always buy 2-3 years old Dell, Latitude or Precision, some resellers on eBay have thousands of them, they come from companies replacing them, some are completely grade A like new, for a fraction of the price.
Do you gave an example link?
Here’s a 11th gen for instance
https://www.ebay.ca/itm/226292442648
Just search for “dell 11th gen laptop” or 12th gen etc
As a freelance IT consultant I could help you choose a laptop if you’d like as this was something I used to do back before the Reddit implosion
Well… Why don’t you do it then :D this is what the thread is about, you don’t need to state your credentials
Fair enough
although I asked as I didn’t want to flood this thread from the back and forth but thinking again maybe it’s ok?@hungryphrog@lemmy.blahaj.zone I’ve got a couple of questions:
- What’s your approximate budget?
- What will this primarily be used for? [Work, school, personal] <- could be specialized or a mix of any.
- What’s your experience with Operating Systems? (Windows, Linux. Mac) <- (asking here as you stated wanted something “easy to use”).
- From your previous comment above what do you mean by scrolling and playing? I’m assuming web browsing and gaming? If this is correct what kinds of games do you typically play?
Please read the section below before replying with answers for the above
As you can see, some of these questions I typically ask can get a bit personal hence why I ask that I have private conversations unless the person in question consents and acknowledges that they’re ok with sharing potentially private information (like even writing this out makes me sketched out as mishandling any type of private information can be a serious legal risk)
Get a used Framework 13. It’s totally repairable and upgradeable over time with excellent build quality.
Framework laptops are built to last with nearly every part designed to be consumer-replaceable. They’re a bit expensive, though, and this Gateway laptop from Walmart has served me well.
I am in the same kind of situation. I personally hate both windows and mac. I have no tech rizz, but I ran ubuntu for the last 6 years (before surging currents killed my laptop) as win 8 gave my laptop “cancer”. My guess would be some kind of think pad with a linux distro on it. And don’t worry, if you can use a search function finding a linux distro and installing it is so easy even I managed.
I guess it depends on what you intend to donwith the laptop as they’re not all built the same.
Gotta give us a budget and tell us what you do on your computer. I’ve been eyeing the Asus px13 but that’s only because of my specific needs
People saying Thinkpad are correct. I would also recommend Framework (I have neither, but Framework is built for repairs). Disclosure: I’m an Apple guy.
What are your usage/performance needs?
What operating system are you planning to use? If you are a Linux user or open to it, you can get amazing performance on older hardware than with Windows. The difference is astonishing, especially compared to Windows 10 or 11.
If you post some details about your budget and needs, it will be easy to make a recommendation.
Need DVD drive?
Need lightweight?
Stuff like that.In general you can usually trust brands like Asus, Toshiba, and older units like Thinkpads when they were still IBM. Seriously the most vital criteria is whether you are okay with Linux vs Windows. Huge difference in what you would need.
Framework or used ThinkPad.
Second hand thinkpad. I have a thinkpad t14s gen 1 and thinkpad t14 gen 3 they run great. The further you go back, the better the keyboard will be though, not too much of a fan of the gen 3
Look up an iFixit teardown or technicians manual for whatever model you fancy.
Decide on what you’re seeing if it’s too much of a bother. Avoid models that use glued assembly, try to aim for a model that supports eGPUs.
You’ll also want to consider putting a fresh SSD in whatever laptop you find.
If you can get your hand on a ThinkPad that would be great. They are usually rugged and built to last. You can install windows or Linux on it.
I think you’ll need to give some more information to receive good advice:
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What’s your budget
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What’s your use case? Just web browsing, light office work or something more demanding like gaming or editing?
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What form factor? Want a larger screen or something lighter and more compact? Touch screen/convertible yes or no?
I’m nowhere near tech-savvy so it has to be easy to use,
Easy to use or easy to repair? As far as use goes pretty much every windows laptop will be feel the same to use, same as with apple. I mean it is the same operating system, just depends on what you are used to, but neither are complicated. It’s only Linux where you have a larger variety of variants, some easier to use, others geared more towards advanced users. Bur you haven’t indicated that you specifically want to run Linux.
I want something that is built to last, as opposed to certain (looking at you, Apple) devices that are desinged to become unusable within a next couple of years.
Generally laptops aimed at businesses are more durable than consumer lines. Don’t go too cheap unless you are buying used business laptops. And if something is heavilu leaning towards thin and light, then usually it is at the expense of some durability.
Apple is actually decently durable and I’ve seen quite a few MacBooks running for over a decade while still being ok. Where they fall short is repairability, when something does break and their lowest specs paired with no real way to upgrade later (especially with the newer models that don’t even have SSDs that can be swapped) is bad for future proofing, if demands change. And they make you pay through your nose for reasonable configurations.
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