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For gaming its gotta be a desktop. Laptops are just MUCH more expensive and unnecessary for gaming. They offer way less customization for the parts you'd want, are much pricier, and they get way hotter during intense gaming.
If i could only have 1, id pick a laptop. Laptops are not ideal for gaming, but laptops are so convenient for everything else and that takes precedence over gaming to me.TykainAgreed...:P
desktop, simply because they don't make laptops to my standards(8 core CPU, Xfire 6950).FightingfanClevo x7200
[QUOTE="Fightingfan"]desktop, simply because they don't make laptops to my standards(8 core CPU, Xfire 6950).JigglyWiggly_Clevo x7200 What battery does that have like 20minutes?
[QUOTE="cd_rom"]You do coding? What languages do you know? Uh.... Whatever language I need to use at the time. Currently, it's Java and C++ for two projects I'm working on. It was C when I did embedded work and making UNIX tools. PHP and Javascript for the websites I was tasked to build (so glad I'm done with that crap). Those were what I've used outside school (quite a few more inside school but they aren't used much in the real world). If you actually know what you're doing, it takes like two weeks to learn a computer language.Desktop for gaming. Laptop for coding (hate coding at home). Both for whatever the hell I'm doing on the computer.
julian_jr
I rarely game on my PC, so laptop is fine by me. I bet a good laptop with Windows 7, a Core i7 processor, and a decently sized hard drive would last me for the next 10 years. :P
I like laptop... desktops are so much better, but it burns too much electric power just for posting on here which Im on right now.Dogswithgunslolwut? My CPU uses less than 10 watts while browsing, and the input voltage for the GPU is pulling just 0.88 volts. Compare that to 46 watts CPU usage for gaming.
Have you ever had the occasion to program in Assembly? I figure the Windows Core being in Assembly must be for speed.Desktop for gaming. Laptop for coding (hate coding at home). Both for whatever the hell I'm doing on the computer.
cd_rom
I would choose a desktop for the more powerful operations, like graphics-heavy software. At the moment, I have a laptop that serves as both a my workstation and my gaming pc. It isn't too powerful, but I can do all my work on it and have the room and ability to play some of this gen's games.
[QUOTE="Dogswithguns"]I like laptop... desktops are so much better, but it burns too much electric power just for posting on here which Im on right now.topsemag55lolwut? My CPU uses less than 10 watts while browsing, and the input voltage for the GPU is pulling just 0.88 volts. Compare that to 46 watts CPU usage for gaming. My desktop has 550watts power supply. my laptop has Im not sure the power supply is but it's very small.
Depends what it's being used for.
For every day use, laptops are great. Not really much more expensive than their desktop equivalents, with the added bonus of being lightweight and portable.
For specialist purposes (gaming, media production etc.) desktops rule all. Much cheaper, much more powerful, and upgradeable.
If I had to choose one, I'd go for a desktop. Because I play games and do music recording stuff. But I am currently looking at getting a basic lappy for other stuff.
I'm out of my laptop phase and would prefer desktop any time. However, a cheap little laptop or tablet for on the go or moving around the house isn't completely out of the question.
I only prefer laptop for convenience like casual web browsing. When gaming ang other multimedia comes to mind, nothing beats a desktop PC.
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