My work provides me with a Dell Latitude E6410 laptop, which at work, I hook up

shochbrunn

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My work provides me with a Dell Latitude E6410 laptop, which at work, I hook up to a monitor using a docking station. In my home office, however, I've traditionally just used the computer as a laptop. However, I'm weary of crouching over it 10 hours a day, and wish to get a more ergonomic setup with a separate monitor and keyboard. Can I hook a monitor up to this laptop and a separate keyboard that I could place in a keyboard tray? I suppose I could invest in a docking station for my home setup, but I'm leery of doing that because I'll likely get a new laptop from work in a couple of years. Therefore, I'd like this new setup to be adaptable to a different laptop. Any ideas? I'd appreciate any help anyone can provide. Thank you!
 

unksol

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you could oh, idk... plug a keyboard, monitor and mouse into it... like you just said...

anyway don't post your email in a forum. unless you want spam of course
 

yoji

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even if you get a docking station - you still need monitor/mouse/keyboard.

I work from home - dont bother with a docking station - just plug the monitor in via the laptop output, USB keyboard and Mouse... and USB softphone... and im set.
Boot laptop with lid closed... and output goes to monitor and picks up its resolutions etc - so I get a nice 1600 x 1200 res to work with... better that the office :)

HTH
Cheers
 

shochbrunn

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thanks... guess I'd better get prepared for spam. How dumb of me!
 

shochbrunn

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That's good stuff.. thanks! Though I must admit that I have no idea of how to boot up a laptop with the lid closed.
 
The lid need not be closed.
Just move the laptop off to the side.
Gives you the opportunity to use the laptop's monitor as a 2nd screen which can be very handy and can also increase productivity in certain situations.
 
Screen+shot+2010-10-19+at+,+Oct19,+11.05.56+AM.jpg
 

shochbrunn

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Thanks! I didn't know you could do that. I'm sure I sound really stupid to you experts out there, and well, I guess I am when it comes to this stuff. But I really appreciate the help. Most kind of you!
 

yoji

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Some laptops have the boot button where you can press it with the lid closed... mine does not (HP6930) so you can open lid... press button to turn on and close lid quickly - so the laptop does not think it needs "go to sleep" or anything.

I did keep it simple... but as WR2 says - you can do much more... having both screens in use etc. I do that sometimes ... but the fact that you asking a very basic queston - I didnt want to overload you ;).. however, its good that you get an idea what can be done.. for when you feel ready.

Cheers

 

runswindows95

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I'm doing exactly what the photo WR2 posted. I have a 28" 1920X1200 monitor plus my laptop's 1366X768 screen running at the same time, and I use a wireless keyboard/mouse combo. It's great to run both screens when multi-tasking, and I prefer using a full-sized keyboard for I do heavy word processing (1,000+ words a day easily).
 

yoji

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TERRIBLE advice....you clearly dont practice your own advice in any meaningful way ... or you would not suggest it.

Cheers
 

danny2000

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This is actually excellent advice especially if you get the company to at least give you a computer to use at home.

Most of the computing can be done by the computer that is in the office building, and not the one that is at your home.
 

yoji

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Yes... GREAT plan... why not just get the company to pay for a pimped out gaming rig...and then do all the work on the other comp...
Wow... why didnt I think of that before... genius!!!!

FFS - be realistic.. and actually think about how you will be most productive!!

Cheers

 

danny2000

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I was in desktop support for a large corporation, and that IS what we would do. You don't need a gaming rig; You just need a pc that is able to connect to the Internet and then VPN. The workhorse computer is needed in the office, not at the user's home. THINK!!!!!!
 

yoji

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Yes - I can believe you were in desktop support... you are showing about as much appreciation of the real issues as I would expect.... which is prob why you on desktop support. And the sarcasm on the gaming rig... obviously a bit over your head....

I really cant be bothered to explain... so I will give some dots... and lets see if you have the nouce to join them..

Why people in big corps have laptops?...
Ahh - portability....
So they tend to keep stuff locally on laptop... never know when can be connected....
so when home or work... or hotel...or visiting family... or customers site.... or ..... want access to stuff on local machine..
hang on... you just got them working on 2 different machines...

Sure... we could give them chromebooks... but real world not like that atm.

I dont think its me thats not THINKing....

Cheers