New laptop for school and gaming?

Hyperman3218

Honorable
Jan 3, 2014
5
0
10,510
I am going to get a new laptop soon and I was looking at this one http://us.acer.com/ac/en/US/content/model/NX.MB5AA.013
http://www.microcenter.com/product/443935/Aspire_V7-482PG-5642_14_Ultrabook_-_Cool_Steel

Two links because 1. I don't know if Microcentre is legit or not since I have never bought anything from them 2. Micro centre had the laptop cheaper 3. I am not too sure if they are the same model since the official store stated that it was a Hybird-drive and Mcrocentre did not state that it was a hybird drive.

My last question is whether or not this computer would be good for school and a bit of gaming on low-medium settings. Thanks in advance
 
Solution
A good dual use laptop for your use, typically tuns about $850-900 when custom built to your specifications. Looking at the specs, not at what is listed as much as what's not (HD rpm, RAM speed, etc) , I'd be concerned.

This is waaaay above what you linked to performance wise ... my sons all bought their OS on campus ($10-$25)

$819 http://www.lpc-digital.com/sager-np2650-features.html

15.6" Full HD LED-Backlit Display with Super Gloss Type (1920 x 1080)
4th Generation Intel® 4600 GMA HD Dynamic Video Memory Technology
4th Generation Intel® Core™ i7-4710MQ Processor (6M Cache, up to 3.50 GHz)
8GB DDR3 SDRAM at 1600MHz
1 TB HGST Travelstar™ 7K1000 7200 RPM SATA 6Gb/s Hard Drive - Special!
8X DVD±R/RW/4X +DL Super-Multi Drive &...

Hyperman3218

Honorable
Jan 3, 2014
5
0
10,510


Skryim on medium or high if it can handle it, gta 4 if it can handle the lack of optimization (I have an Acer Aspire 722 notebook that needs replacing BADLY), ARMA 2 if I feel like it, and maybe some others if I feel like it such as Blacklight: Retribution. As long as it can run most games on medium-low settings since I don't mind playing on low then it's fine but I won't be playing games like GTA V or Advanced Warfare on ultra and record it with FRAPS then upload in mass to YouTube showcasing how beautiful Advanced Warfare looks on ultra in 60 fps NONE OF THAT.
 
A good dual use laptop for your use, typically tuns about $850-900 when custom built to your specifications. Looking at the specs, not at what is listed as much as what's not (HD rpm, RAM speed, etc) , I'd be concerned.

This is waaaay above what you linked to performance wise ... my sons all bought their OS on campus ($10-$25)

$819 http://www.lpc-digital.com/sager-np2650-features.html

15.6" Full HD LED-Backlit Display with Super Gloss Type (1920 x 1080)
4th Generation Intel® 4600 GMA HD Dynamic Video Memory Technology
4th Generation Intel® Core™ i7-4710MQ Processor (6M Cache, up to 3.50 GHz)
8GB DDR3 SDRAM at 1600MHz
1 TB HGST Travelstar™ 7K1000 7200 RPM SATA 6Gb/s Hard Drive - Special!
8X DVD±R/RW/4X +DL Super-Multi Drive & Software
Internal 802.11 B+G+N Wireless LAN + Bluetooth Combo Module


If ya want something, smaller, lighter faster w/ discreet GFX

$944 http://www.lpc-digital.com/sager-np7338.html
 
Solution

Hyperman3218

Honorable
Jan 3, 2014
5
0
10,510



Thank you very much I think that I will consider getting the first laptop that you mentioned although it is way more powerful than I would have expected for a price that low so thank you very much. But the price is still kind of high and as a student my budget is relatively small so I will do some more consideration before I get a new laptop.

 
Yes it is more and as a student you may be eligible for additional discounts ... see link on site home page. But remember with laptop, costs for trucking, assembly packaging, support, seller overhead are identical on a $500 laptop or a $2000 laptop. So when ya buy a $700 laptop, a good portion of that is eaten up and little left for componentry .... the "bang for the buck" increases as you increase the component quality / performance up until say $1700 when it starts to diminish again. $850 - $1700 is therefore the "sweet spot" for getting your money's worth.
 

Hyperman3218

Honorable
Jan 3, 2014
5
0
10,510


I'll keep that in mind but do you think the laptop with the gt 750m and i5 4200U will do for high school and college? I might consider getting the sager laptop that you linked to me but is it portable? Thanks in regard.
 
I'm using a 17" Clevo to type this and I take it on jobsites all the time. I need the big screen for CAD drawings. It's not as light as the ones you are looking at but certainly portable..... note that the more powerful a laptop is the shorter the battery life .... there's no such thing as a light, powerful laptop.
 

Hyperman3218

Honorable
Jan 3, 2014
5
0
10,510


Thanks I'll remember that I have to compromise. I don't need a big screen (17" is a bit too much) but a decent 15" i5 will definitely do. My current computer is the Acer Aspire 722 with 4gb of RAM, a C60 dual-core processor with 1.333 ghz that needs replacing badly, and the rest of the specs you can find here http://www.cnet.com/products/acer-aspire-one-722/specs/ in case you want to know why I want to upgrade since the computer isn't doing very well for me.