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When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
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Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
Windows 10.
No, seriously! My Windows 7 machine suffers from everything on that list apart from the hard disk failure, and I still prefer it to the supposedly superior Win 10 machine. I've had it 12 years, and it runs day and night without complaint, and I'll put up with the hassle of having to take a proper monitor with me when I go away rather than suffer the multiple freezes, crashes and unpredictable sulkiness of the W10 device (it's also a question of the software - so many of the versions optimised for W10 are "new, improved, enhanced user experience packed with additional features" crapware that isn't half as good as the older versions).
No, seriously! My Windows 7 machine suffers from everything on that list apart from the hard disk failure, and I still prefer it to the supposedly superior Win 10 machine. I've had it 12 years, and it runs day and night without complaint, and I'll put up with the hassle of having to take a proper monitor with me when I go away rather than suffer the multiple freezes, crashes and unpredictable sulkiness of the W10 device (it's also a question of the software - so many of the versions optimised for W10 are "new, improved, enhanced user experience packed with additional features" crapware that isn't half as good as the older versions).
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Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
I'm going to try out Chrome OS Flex on an old laptop here to see how it works out
Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
Generally it's been battery life coupled with updates swallowing resources that forced me in the past to replace laptops every 4/5 years or so. My solution now is to use a desktop rig that I upgrade components and it keeps chugging along.
Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
forgot to mention my 2019 Asus Rog Strix: Battery is shot due to bad firmware. And Asus knows about it. And don't care. Using it always plugged in.
Ah well, playing no serious games at the moment, have bigger fish to fry!
Ah well, playing no serious games at the moment, have bigger fish to fry!
Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
The last time I got rid of a laptop was when I changed to a MacBook. 2012. Still works perfectly well. ROCK SOLID STABLE. I use it as a media centre hub.
Currently running a 2020 16” MacBook Pro, and I absolutely love it. Great hardware and ROCK SOLID STABLE operating system for work use.
Have a 2022 MacBook Air for personal/home use. Nice machine too. Fast, silent, ROCK SOLID STABLE.
I have replaced every Windows machine at home and at my workplace since then. Whatever about the varied hardware experiences and performance, Windows was an absolute pain in the hole. A dirtbox regarding stability. Totally disruptive. Never quite realised how much I hated it until MacOS entered my life. I’ll never waste another minute of my life with a Windows machine.
Currently running a 2020 16” MacBook Pro, and I absolutely love it. Great hardware and ROCK SOLID STABLE operating system for work use.
Have a 2022 MacBook Air for personal/home use. Nice machine too. Fast, silent, ROCK SOLID STABLE.
I have replaced every Windows machine at home and at my workplace since then. Whatever about the varied hardware experiences and performance, Windows was an absolute pain in the hole. A dirtbox regarding stability. Totally disruptive. Never quite realised how much I hated it until MacOS entered my life. I’ll never waste another minute of my life with a Windows machine.
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- Posts: 178
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Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
TBH If you spent as much on a PC as you did on the MacBook Pro it would run Windows beautifully with little issue
Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
Little issue? It's Windows. There's always an issue, always.
I did spend MUCH more than the price of a good MBP on Wintel machines. Several times. €3300+ on a Dell M series workstation. €4000+ on a fully built out Dell workstation. €2900 on a Lenovo T Series, fully loaded.
The lowest common denominator, Windows, was what absolutely f'n ruined the experience of having very nice hardware.
And that's at the end of a nearly 20 year Windows user journey. There WERE some superb Window OS versions throughout the years. Really good operating systems. Post Windows 7, not worth the aggravation and unless you have an application dependency that requires Windows, truly not worth the effort.
But some folks like Windows OS, and Android phones. I don't. Decades working in IT have completely worn out any patience I had once upon a time for this stuff not just working. Every. Single. Time. Without. Issue.
EDIT: I came from the VAX/VMS world, through Unix, Novell, Linux and Windows server OS, NT3.51, NT4, XP and on up. Windows 7 Ultimate was the last desktop OS from Microsoft that worked anywhere close to reliably, but brought with it ENDLESS FECKIN' HOTFIXES and updates, constantly pestered to apply them and never as seamlessly and rapidly as MacOS. XP Service Packs and Hotfixes could at least be handled via SMS and policies to happen without user interaction at a time when it wouldn't piss people off, myself included.
I did spend MUCH more than the price of a good MBP on Wintel machines. Several times. €3300+ on a Dell M series workstation. €4000+ on a fully built out Dell workstation. €2900 on a Lenovo T Series, fully loaded.
The lowest common denominator, Windows, was what absolutely f'n ruined the experience of having very nice hardware.
And that's at the end of a nearly 20 year Windows user journey. There WERE some superb Window OS versions throughout the years. Really good operating systems. Post Windows 7, not worth the aggravation and unless you have an application dependency that requires Windows, truly not worth the effort.
But some folks like Windows OS, and Android phones. I don't. Decades working in IT have completely worn out any patience I had once upon a time for this stuff not just working. Every. Single. Time. Without. Issue.
EDIT: I came from the VAX/VMS world, through Unix, Novell, Linux and Windows server OS, NT3.51, NT4, XP and on up. Windows 7 Ultimate was the last desktop OS from Microsoft that worked anywhere close to reliably, but brought with it ENDLESS FECKIN' HOTFIXES and updates, constantly pestered to apply them and never as seamlessly and rapidly as MacOS. XP Service Packs and Hotfixes could at least be handled via SMS and policies to happen without user interaction at a time when it wouldn't piss people off, myself included.
Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
My 'other issue' was overheating as the fan went on old HP machine and could not be sorted DIY. I am delighted with my present laptop, Microsoft, neat slim design and beautiful keyboard as well as lovely screen for viewing video/TV /photos.
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Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
I blame this thread.
Windows 10 has seemingly killed my "new" laptop. It's been hassling me for a week to install yet another update, threatening to do it "outside acive hours" - as if I'd leave a computer inactive for predictable hours. But while I was out shopping and dancing yester afternoo & evening, the feckin OS decided to do the update anyway ... and now the laptop won't restart properly.
As usual, the ancient Win7 machine has had to step in and provide emergency services.
The Win10's place on the worktop has now been taken by an iMac.
Windows 10 has seemingly killed my "new" laptop. It's been hassling me for a week to install yet another update, threatening to do it "outside acive hours" - as if I'd leave a computer inactive for predictable hours. But while I was out shopping and dancing yester afternoo & evening, the feckin OS decided to do the update anyway ... and now the laptop won't restart properly.
As usual, the ancient Win7 machine has had to step in and provide emergency services.
The Win10's place on the worktop has now been taken by an iMac.
Re: When you had to replace your laptop and say goidbye
Think that I still have a working Amstrad NC1000 notebook around somewhere. Used to get 15 hours or so from four AA batteries. It couldn't run MS-DOS or Windows. Have had a few laptops since then but the main problems were batteries, fans and harddrives. There was one laptop I remember where the power connection was designed by an idiot and caused failures because of the stresses the power lead put on the connection. Basically, the power socket used to detatch from the laptop's PCB. Apart from that, the laptop was rock solid.
As for Microsoft's idea to store a backup copy of the Windows 10 OS on laptops with a 32GB SSD, that really confirmed that the stupid decision in Windows 8 to remove the start button and replace the interface with a click and drool display was not an isolated case of cluelessness.
Regards...jmcc
As for Microsoft's idea to store a backup copy of the Windows 10 OS on laptops with a 32GB SSD, that really confirmed that the stupid decision in Windows 8 to remove the start button and replace the interface with a click and drool display was not an isolated case of cluelessness.
Regards...jmcc