Monday, February 12, 2018

what is the best laptop i can buy as a CS student

In this post you will know which is the best laptop for computer science students.The very basic thing a programmer need is to a laptop which has good speed. The focus should be on the processor speed, it should be minimum 2GHZ or more. The laptop RAM should not be less than 4GB.

The most basic of laptops will get the job done, so anything above that is for your own comfort. To be honest, you can just use the school's lab computers. However, my philosophy has been to go for a lightweight laptop with long battery life, as high a resolution screen as you can get, and a good keyboard.

  • Apple MacBook Pro 13" or MacBook Air (11" or 13")
  • Dell Vostro 1440, 3450, and V131
  • Lenovo Thinkpad T and X series
  • Toshiba Portege R830 and R835

The MacBooks are nice , but you'll probably load Windows on them, just to keep things easy. Keep in mind that you will buy something new when you graduate, so plan your purchase around what you can afford to replace in 2 years. Processing power, HD capacity, etc. are not important, especially for a computer that can easily get stolen or broken.

Also, if you end up taking any digital logic courses, you will want a few extra USB ports and will definitely need Windows, because most of the IDEs for FPGAs and micro controllers are only available on Windows.

The very basic thing a programmer need is to a laptop which has good speed. The focus should be on the processor speed, it should be minimum 2GHZ or more. The laptop RAM should not be less than 4GB.

WHAT TO LOOK FOR IN A LAPTOP FOR PROGRAMMING?

The very basic thing a programmer need is to a laptop which has good speed. The focus should be on the processor speed, it should be minimum 2GHZ or more. The laptop RAM should not be less than 4GB.

Laptop Starting price in India:



I will say the specs or some of the features to watch out for when buying a laptop. Because, the same model with the same specs is not available in all parts of the world.

CPU : Intel i5/i7 (6th/7th gen preferably, and buy one with a quad-core rather than a dual-core processor)

RAM : Minimum 8 gigs, buy one with 1*8 GB rather than 2*4 GB , with an expandable slot.

Display : Full HD (either 13.3 or 15.6 inches) , you’ll clear notice that there’s a great difference between the 1366*768 and the 1920*1080 displays.

GPU -:Nvidia GTX series graphics (only if you are a gamer and do some heavy Photoshop work, else the built in Intel HD graphics would suffice)

HDD :1 Terabyte. SSD’s are costlier, but they reduce boot time.

Backlit keyboard : They are definitely useful when you work during late hours. The keyboard layout is very important since certain laptops with tightly packed keys are not comfortable for typing.

OS :Instead of buying one with Windows, choose one with the DOS or Linux. It will definitely save you few thousand bucks and you can always install an OS later as per your wish.

Ports -:USB 3.0, HDMI ports are a must, type-C port is a bonus.
Laptops with ultrabays are better since they can be used in multiple ways (GPU/Optical Drive/SSD)

Optical drive : Not necessary as the CD’s and DVD’s are replaced by USB drives nowadays.

The Macbooks are very good for programming but if you are looking for a laptop for coding/designing/playing games/watching movies you should consider an alternative. The Thinkpad series of Lenovo, Envy series of Hewlett-Packard and the Dell ultrabooks are very good options to consider for CS students.

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