you only solder the first thing in development by hand, and in PC design no thing manual.Charley_Deallus wrote:Dumb that down please.
the consumer does not even need to know what soldering is ^^
you only solder the first thing in development by hand, and in PC design no thing manual.Charley_Deallus wrote:Dumb that down please.
Exactly right. Just consider it to be really expensive Lego that can only go together in one combination.Cornflakes_91 wrote:you only solder the first thing in development by hand, and in PC design no thing manual.Charley_Deallus wrote:Dumb that down please.
the consumer does not even need to know what soldering is ^^
maybe two, you can choose which piece of ram goes in which slotHowSerendipitous wrote:Exactly right. Just consider it to be really expensive Lego that can only go together in one combination.Cornflakes_91 wrote:you only solder the first thing in development by hand, and in PC design no thing manual.Charley_Deallus wrote:Dumb that down please.
the consumer does not even need to know what soldering is ^^
True enough.mcsven wrote:I've had enough of building these things myself. To be honest these days the cost benefit just isn't really there. In the UK, an online retailer like scan.co.uk will build you a really nice machine and offer a multi-year warranty for virtually the same price as the components themselves. Let them worry about making it all work!
Did you pull the trigger? I've been keeping an eye on those latest Dell XPS 15 laptops for a friend, which look pretty nice and powerful (the bottom of this page). Kind of pricey though.rens282 wrote:Update: since i graduated high school and going to study next year I am needing a beast of a laptop to run CAD programs. I'm looking ATM for a good compact working comp.
I'm keeping one eye to the fact it should run ltheory but it stays my primary school laptop, any suggestions?
like you said kind of pricey , but i am the new proud owner of a dell latitude E5420 with 8 gigs of ram an i5-2520M at 2,5 ghz and an intel HD3000 with 1 gig of memory and possible up to 1,6 gigs with help from the RAM, i think just bordering the edge for LT. but that XPS15 may be an upgrade for later since this one only cost €350.-mcsven wrote:Did you pull the trigger? I've been keeping an eye on those latest Dell XPS 15 laptops for a friend, which look pretty nice and powerful (the bottom of this page). Kind of pricey though.rens282 wrote:Update: since i graduated high school and going to study next year I am needing a beast of a laptop to run CAD programs. I'm looking ATM for a good compact working comp.
I'm keeping one eye to the fact it should run ltheory but it stays my primary school laptop, any suggestions?
The HD 3000 is Intel's integrated graphics, and an older model too. It may or may not run LT, depending on how things developed since the early days when Josh announced a laptop as one of his development PCs.rens282 wrote:like you said kind of pricey , but i am the new proud owner of a dell latitude E5420 with 8 gigs of ram an i5-2520M at 2,5 ghz and an intel HD3000 with 1 gig of memory and possible up to 1,6 gigs with help from the RAM, i think just bordering the edge for LT. but that XPS15 may be an upgrade for later since this one only cost €350.-mcsven wrote:Did you pull the trigger? I've been keeping an eye on those latest Dell XPS 15 laptops for a friend, which look pretty nice and powerful (the bottom of this page). Kind of pricey though.rens282 wrote:Update: since i graduated high school and going to study next year I am needing a beast of a laptop to run CAD programs. I'm looking ATM for a good compact working comp.
I'm keeping one eye to the fact it should run ltheory but it stays my primary school laptop, any suggestions?
These aint laptops, but they are compact and small thoughrens282 wrote:Update: since i graduated high school and going to study next year I am needing a beast of a laptop to run CAD programs. I'm looking ATM for a good compact working comp.
I'm keeping one eye to the fact it should run ltheory but it stays my primary school laptop, any suggestions?
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