QUOTE(evofantasy @ Mar 10 2015, 11:04 PM)
more processing power means lower battery life still (and would require better cooling as well).
it is always a trade-off.
SSD matters for casual users as it would affect the load speed which many general user would relate as "lag" especially when windows is doing their indexing.
for my tasks, i would require a i7 though considering most of my tasks are now ran on the grid, that is getting irrelevant now compared to longer battery life on the go.
ps: as much as I would love a SSD, the amount of fileIO i am doing would kill the SSD within 6 months.
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XPS had multiple ports still whereas NewMAC unfortunately use the same USB-C for its power adapter as well ie 0 ports if you are plugged in.
Well yea. But sometime even with SSD, if you multi task a lot, you will still feel the "lag" as your processor is not powerful enough for the task. it is always a trade-off.
SSD matters for casual users as it would affect the load speed which many general user would relate as "lag" especially when windows is doing their indexing.
for my tasks, i would require a i7 though considering most of my tasks are now ran on the grid, that is getting irrelevant now compared to longer battery life on the go.
ps: as much as I would love a SSD, the amount of fileIO i am doing would kill the SSD within 6 months.
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XPS had multiple ports still whereas NewMAC unfortunately use the same USB-C for its power adapter as well ie 0 ports if you are plugged in.
Some user tend to open a lot of browser tab along with other program like MS Word. When they switch between them, you will still feel "lag". Well it is all personal preference.
Yes, the new Macbook is a really big let down. No port to use when plugged in. Apple sure know how to earn money. But the design is indeed very elegant. They traded the port for a more slim design. LOL
Mar 10 2015, 11:16 PM

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