Ars Technica has an editorial on what they'd want in a laptop in 2017. Inspired by this, I figured to make my own list and ask SN for input. I'm not looking for a laptop, but it's fun to think about specs, right?
Anyway, I do think use case is important. My use case: working and travelling daily with laptop, sometimes to various institutes to give presentations. This already leads to some important requirements:
Thinking about it more, most of the things the Ars Editor loves are things I honestly don't use, or actively do not want (touch screen).
With that in mind, I'd arrive at:
Other than that I'd go for modern iterations of specs for things like ethernet, wifi, CPU, etc. So Kaby Lake processor, things like that. GPU is not a big issue, so probably the integrated Intel thing on a modern Intel CPU will be sufficient.
Anything I missed? Anything you'd do radically different? If so: why?
(Score: 1) by toddestan on Sunday December 04 2016, @06:49AM
The main improvements really are with idle power. When the processor is under load, you're still producing similar amounts of heat as the processors of several years ago, at least for any high-performance processor. So basically you either have to deal with the fans - though at least now when the laptop is at idle they barely have to spin. Or accept a laptop that can't run at 100% CPU for extended periods of time without throttling (the Apple solution, even on their "Pro" line). Well, I guess third solution is to get one of the low power, low performance chips like the Atom that barely use any power even under load.