Mike BD :
Even so,I asked you about the both considering in replacing their CPU over the time.
I'd choose the one which is letting me to do it.
Won't you do the same?
No, I wouldn't. Upgrading a laptop CPU is a fool's errand at most levels. You have to purchase another processor (which when purchased by itself is very expensive if you can even find it), you have to upgrade within the limitations of the laptop's power and motherboard. The total cost when you buy an AMD a8 processor laptop, then upgrade to a top of the line a10 is more than if you had purchased a decent intel laptop with a processor more powerful than the a10 to start. (On very VERY expensive laptops, they have modified desktop motherboards, allowing you to swap in new CPUs and GPUs as they come out. Cheap all the way up to Performance laptops purchase bare bone components that are soldered directly to the motherboard to save money and space)
It's so much simpler, cheaper, and runs no risk of destroying your laptop out of warrante if you just buy the better laptop to start.
http
/www.emag.ro/laptop-asus-cu-procesor-intelr-coretm-i7-4710hq-2-50ghz-haswelltm-4gb-1tb-nvidia-gtx-850-2gb-freedos-dark-gray-x550jk-xx116d/pd/DH9GRBBBM/
This laptop here is a far better deal (Yes it's 50% more money, but it will last more than 2x as long before it becomes outdated).
The only parts you should touch on a laptop are the Hard drives and Memory sticks.
You can swap out HDD for SSD on any laptop, and pretty much any stock laptop has a single memory stick allowing you to double your RAM with a second stick.