If you buy a machine that just barely meets your needs and has
nothing extra to future proof it, it is like buying a horse when
you need a car. It might look smart initially, but it is a really
bad idea, as you will more than likely need to upgrade down the
road. But at least for ram usually it is upgradable, not so with
the processor in laptops, though even in desktops you can dismount
it and upgrade.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 5/26/2020 2:47 AM, Gene wrote:
I don't know what you are running
burt I really don't think your experience is representative.
I am very skeptical that typical computer users would come
anywhere near using eight GB of RAM. This needs to be
discussed. My guess is that by adding 8 more GB of RAM to a
machine that already has eight, you may spend one-hundred more
dollars, which is a lot of money to spend if you don't need
to.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2020 10:33 PM
Subject: Re: [TechTalk] Question: Comparing
Performance of Modern 8th, 9th or 10th gen I5 vs I7 Intel
Chips
But the real problem is, will 8gb be enough for the future?
When I was given this laptop, it had had ram downgraded from 8
gb single channel to 4 gb single channel. After a year, to
improve performance, and because ram was being used alot by
windows and the antivirus, I got 8 gb, another 4 gb stick. Now I
would not get anything under 8 gb. With a single browser, and a
few standard background apps running, I only have around 2 gb of
ram free, which is a really small margin for error. If she can
aford it, I would also recommend a minimum of an i5 of the newer
generation, or even better an AMD ryzen 3000 series processor,
which deliver superior performance without being too expensive.
The generations the older they are with Intel are worse affected
by the meltdown and spectre fixes, which continuously degrade
performance. An i3 or lower also lacks many standard features on
a processor, such as turbo boost, and hyperthreading, which will
be clear to see in daily performance. Remember it is essential
that you buy a system anticipating the needs of the future. In
my experience, browsers appear to be the programs that are most
resource intensive.
On 5/22/2020 8:34 PM, Gene wrote:
To clarify, I'm not saying
performance would be roughly equivalent if she were a
demanding user. There may be no way to get this person to
change her mind if, for some reason, she Is determined to
get what she wants. If she wants to spend hundreds of
dollars for performance she will never use, get a sports car
when a compact would do fine, that Is her decision.
Performance will be fine for what she is going to use the
computer for, I would expect it to be about the same.
Extended warranties are
generally a waste of money for computers. If nothing goes
wrong within the first few months and the computer is used a
good deal during that time, the odds are that nothing will
or nothing serious for years. To document what I'm saying,
if you do a search for somethin like is extended warranty
worth getting for computer, you will see result after result
saying generally not. I saw one or two saying that it might
be worth it if you anticipate placing a lptop in situations
where damage is likely but in general, I didn't see one of
the first six or seven results advising people to get one.
The person may, of course,
spend money in any way she wants. I am trying to save her
perhaps hundreds of dollars. She definitely doesn't need
more than 8gb of RAM and her uses are, by today's standards,
very undemanding of computer power.
I more or less discussed my
thoughts before but I'm expanding them to discuss other
things such as the warranty. I don't recall if you
discussed memory before, but the majority of users will
never use 16GB of RAM and she won't ever come anywhere nere
exceeding 8 if she uses the computer as described.
My concern isn't particularly
whether she gets a Del, since I don't know how their prices
compare with other brands. My concern is that, whatever she
gets, she for some reason has ideas of what she wants that
bear no relation to what she needs and may well cost her
hundreds of extra dollars.
Of course, if she is determined
to get what she wants, that's up to her.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, May 22,
2020 1:27 PM
Subject: [TechTalk]
Question: Comparing Performance of Modern 8th, 9th or 10th
gen I5 vs I7 Intel Chips
I initially posted this series of questions on the NVDA chat
subgroup. I
received some helpful and interesting messages from Gene, which
gave me
a lot to think about. I'd like to repost my questions on this
group to
seek additional opinions, particularly from those of you who may
have
some direct experience in using and comparing these chips.
I'm assisting a friend in purchasing a new computer. At the
moment she
feels that she wants to stick with Dell. She wants a desktop
with an SSD
and, to best future proof this machine, I'd like it to have 16
GB of
RAM. Her needs are modest: email with Outlook, document editing
with
Word, Web browsing and basic Excel functions. In other words
we're
talking about Office and Web browsing.
No video editing, no gaming and likely not much even with audio
editing.
Considering that the machine would have 16 GB of RAM and an SSD
is an
8th gen or 9th gen I5 going to give her good performance,
particularly
compared with I7 processors? Gene had already told me about more
inexpensive machines which might give her similar performance,
such as a
review he provided for an Acer machine. I'm personally fine with
considering other brands but my friend may or may not feel that
she may
want to stick with Dell. She also wants a fairly extended
warranty along
with on-site service in case of an unforeseen hardware failure.
Obviously, a slightly older I5 will cost a bit less but I don't
just
want performance to be OK or barely adequate. If we go with AMD
are
there things I should look for or avoid? I just don't have
enough
hands-on experience using some of these more modern computers
and would
like feedback from those who have.
I should also mention that she'll be using JAWS.
Many thanks.
--
David Goldfield,
Blindness Assistive Technology Specialist
JAWS Certified, 2019
WWW.DavidGoldfield.org
|