Originally posted by hobnob
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Reply to: Entry level laptop comparison for coding
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Previously on "Entry level laptop comparison for coding"
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You are quite right and a good call. He's actually already two months in to the course and he's not mentioned not being able to meet the requirements so far and has not mentioned linux. He's a maths grad rather than computing and engineering so he wouldn't know anything about linux and would have mentioned it so assume it's not linux but I'll ask. Hejust mentioned in passing his laptop is slow and this one got offered to me basically free. I'm just not sure another entry laptop is worth it and the fact the old i3 still equals the new one I'm not sure it's actually upgrade for coding.
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Can't you dual boot these days?Originally posted by hobnob View PostHowever, if he wants a Windows machine for other stuff (e.g. writing his dissertation in Word), you're either looking at a second machine or a Linux VM
Even without Windows there's always OpenOffice and Google Docs, which are fine unless the Microsoft product is definitely needed.
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It's probably worth looking up the course page for the relevant uni, to find out what programming language they use. (I'm surprised that the course would be an MA rather than an MSc.)
Taking Manchester as an example:
Software for Robotics - course unit details - MSc Robotics - course details (2025 entry) | The University of Manchester
"Students will use the Linux OS, which is widely used in the robotics community and programme in Python."
If the laptop is currently running Windows and you wipe it to install Linux, that will get rid of accumulated rubbish. I'd expect Linux and Python to both run pretty well on that spec of machine.
However, if he wants a Windows machine for other stuff (e.g. writing his dissertation in Word), you're either looking at a second machine or a Linux VM. That's going to be more demanding, particularly in RAM.
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Entry level laptop comparison for coding
Need a bit of help on laptop speeds please.
The laddo is doing an MA in Robotics which requires some level of coding. He has a four year old Aspire 3 i3 laptop which I seem to think was an entry level jobbie back in the day. He says its slow in general which I'd expect being four years old and the rubbish he's accumulated on it over those years.
We've been offered an AsusVivobook 15 X1500EA with Intel Pentium Gold 8 gig ram so thought that might be an upgrade. It's definitely a entry level laptop though. Interestingly a few benchmark sites put the i3 above the Pentium Gold albeit like a few % so not sure it's actually going to be an upgrade. Might be worth just re-formatting the Aspire and continuing with that. Vivo has 8 gig ram, not sure about the Aspire but would have thought upgrading that might be worthwhile instead.
Any coders got any experience with robotics and could share some wisdom on laptop choice for uni? Either of these an option or is this type of stuff going to need a bit more beef?Tags: None
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