I was having a friendly discussion with someone this morning about PC and Laptops for work/education stuff, he suggested that I could use a chromebook for all this stuff and this would be a good idea and make things easier. I strongly disagreed with this, mainly because I hate laptops, the keyboard and touchpad make me angry and my PC does everything I need. Most things are synced to my phone for the rare times I may want to add something while out and about. So I thought I’d come here and seek other peoples opinions on laptops vs pc your needs? also if you are feeling bored and want to head on over to the survey ive linked and fill in a few questions I can more easily gather data to make into fun graphs, which if the data agrees with me, I can shove it in his face or should I be in the minority I can let him have this win.

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠
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    161 year ago

    Aren’t all laptops PCs?

    Oh, rereading, I see you’re talking about netbooks specifically, which, yeah, are kind of not really PCs.

    I prefer PCs for most things, no real preference for desktop or laptop as long as I can use a mouse; I usually do desktop because they’re cheaper to build and usually quieter.

    Netbooks are fine for classwork, browsing, and webdesign in most cases.

    • @jayknight@lemmy.ml
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      71 year ago

      PC is a funny word. You can ask Mac or PC (From the era when PC was short for IBM (compatible) PC (vs Apple’s PC offerings). But apparently laptop vs PC is also a distinction for some people.

      Nowadays I think of a PC as a computer that isn’t a dedicated headless server. Or maybe one that isn’t a work station for your professional work?

      Anyway, is really a term from a bygone age.

  • Cylusthevirus
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    91 year ago

    PC is short for personal computer, which includes both laptop and desktop form factors.

    But to answer the question, I generally prefer a desktop because you can upgrade them and work on them more easily.

  • @dingus@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Your choice of vocabulary is a bit odd.

    A laptop can be a full fledged computer. Chromebooks are specialty devices that lack the functionality of a standard desktop or laptop computer. I’m not sure if the term “netbook” is still used these days, but that’s how I would describe a Chromebook. It’s not a full laptop.

    I prefer a full laptop, not a Chromebook. I am not a power user, so it can run all of the games I play on it just fine (high end modern games will not work obviously). I can take it with me anywhere and it was a lifesaver for note taking in grad school. If I’m traveling, I can just stuff it in my backpack and go.

    At home, I keep my laptop connected to a keyboard, mouse, and an additional monitor, giving me dual monitor support. It’s easy to bring that desktop comfort you’re used to to it.

  • @Fizz@lemmy.nz
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    71 year ago

    I like the concept of laptops but I hate using them. When I’m away from my house I don’t need a computer. I’m barely able to find a use for my phone when I’m out and about.

  • Hello_there
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    71 year ago

    “the keyboard and touchpad make me angry”
    I think you need to try this out with an open mind. Plenty of people use laptops as their only computer, only with trackpad. Plenty others just toss a Bluetooth mouse in their bag and use that.
    I get using a PC, but a laptop does have its advantages.

  • @BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
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    71 year ago

    I can’t use a laptop for work (graphics intensive, need a powerhouse) but I would if I could. I love being able to use it literally anywhere I go—at my desk, in bed, on the toilet, on vacation, on the bus, at a cafe, etc—and…

    I installed a headless Debian OS, added a keyboard-focused window manager and I don’t have to futz with the trackpad nor find a place to put an attached mouse. It also is a much slower drain on the battery. Best of all worlds.

    I use it for web-browsing, word-processing/spreadsheets, checking email, making memes, coding, managing my home network, controlling my headless SBC, and modding. Also occasionally for cyber CTFs or remoting into my desktop at least to do so.

  • @someguy3@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Completely depends if you need to carry it around.

    For best of both worlds: Docked laptop with full monitor and maybe keyboard. You can find monitors everywhere for cheap.

  • @Ajen@sh.itjust.works
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    51 year ago

    Lightweight/low-power laptop (aka chromebook) + homeserver seems ideal, IMO. Especially if you have gigabit upstream at home, and know how to set up a VPN.

  • @blackstratA
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    51 year ago

    Desktop 1000%. They are just more ergonomic in every way. A laptop without a mouse is basically torture. For lots of typing a laptop without a full size external keyboard isn’t pleasant. For viewing anything laptops screens are too small and generally poor quality, so you need an external screen, or better, 2 or more. So now you have a docking station with all your peripherals plugged in to, being powered by a machine that if it were a desktop would be at least twice as powerful and have much longer life through upgradability.

    For the odd task that requires portability then laptops obviously have uses. But I’d rather have a cheap laptop just for that job rather than pretend an expensive laptop is a good desktop replacement.

      • @blackstratA
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        11 year ago

        I have a thinkpad for those times portability is useful. But I never use the nipple

  • Frater Mus
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    51 year ago

    I live offgrid in a campervan, which places limits the amount of power and interior space I can devote to computing. So a vanilla laptop for me.

    the keyboard and touchpad make me angry

    External kb/mice are allowed. :-) Using a mechanical kb with my laptop right now.

  • HatchetHaro
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    41 year ago

    If you only use your computer for the most basic of operations (browsing the Internet, watching Netflix, writing documents, etc.), Chromebooks are fine. However, I’m assuming this discussion is about laptops versus desktops.

    Basically, all you need to care about between laptops and desktops is the balance between portability, power, and affordability. If you travel a lot, get a laptop. If you need the processing power for video editing or gaming, get a desktop. If you need to edit videos while traveling, get a gaming laptop. If you don’t need any of those, get a second-hand Dell desktop.

    If you need to use a laptop but hate the keyboard and trackpad, nothing is stopping you from chucking a separate mechanical keyboard and a mouse into your backpack. A lot of people in tech actually just do that.

  • justanotherjo
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    41 year ago

    Laptop - it does everything a computer needs to do in one compact, easy to handle package. Even the cheapest of laptops is faster and more powerful than what the vast majority of people need these days, and since virtually everything is web based, I don’t even own a computer. I use my phone/tablet for everything. Work supplies the laptop.

  • @flashgnash@lemm.ee
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    41 year ago

    Both. Both is good

    Though depending on your situation a laptop will do both, think the thing you’re missing is that you can plug a laptop into a monitor mouse and keyboard the same way you do a PC and it will be functionally identical, except you have the option to unplug it and take it with you if you need to

    Personally I have a gaming PC at home and a laptop for work, and a USB c hub that lets me plug said laptop in and use it as a desktop if needed. Perfect setup imo

    • @ophelia@lemmy.ca
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      11 year ago

      This is exactly what I do too, plus a tablet for quick notes or reading when I’m studying or somewhere a laptop might feel a bit excessive (basically anywhere that I need to be waiting for something).

      • @flashgnash@lemm.ee
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        11 year ago

        I’ve got a pine64 tablet on the way that I’m quite excited for. Going to run gnome mobile and waydroid so I can switch between android and Linux at will and use it as a laptop if need be

  • @howrar@lemmy.ca
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    31 year ago

    If I had to choose only one, it would be a desktop. The experience of using a machine with a good keyboard/mouse and large monitors can’t be beat, plus it’s much cheaper for the same quality of hardware. The main downside is that it’s not portable. Whether I’m working or gaming, I’m confined to that one desk. I can’t work on the couch, in the park, in the waiting room at the doctor’s office, or anywhere else I might find myself that day.

    The ideal setup is to have both. A desktop for when I can be at my desk, and a cheap laptop that I can use to remote into said desktop. That way, you get the convenience of a laptop with the power of a desktop at a much more reasonable price.

    • @jayknight@lemmy.ml
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      21 year ago

      A monitor and keyboard/mouse that you can attach to your laptop gives you the best of both worlds.

      But a desktop/workstation that you can leave on and double as a server for some things is nice to have.

  • croobat
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    31 year ago

    I was desktop-only during my whole college studies and gotta say, I really enjoy the freedom that working from a laptop gives you (especially being a remote worker). I like the fact that I can now dedicate my desktop setup for gaming and entertainment, it keeps work and daily life separated :)