When should I consider upgrading my 4th-gen laptop?
When should I consider upgrading my 4th-gen laptop?
Hello everyone,
I'm a bit puzzled and unsure if this forum is the best place to address my issue. Right now, I own a ZBook 15 G2 with an i7-4910mq processor, Nvidia Quadro K2100M, 24 GB of DDR3 RAM, and a 240 GB SSD drive.
My worry is that in about two to three years, software might become too demanding, making the device unusable. I'm asking: should I upgrade to a new laptop, or is this one still okay?
My typical usage includes normal browsing, some coding, and light gaming on older games.
I browse the web, read PDFs, watch YouTube at 720p and reply to this thread on a 2006 ThinkPad with an Intel mobile T7400 @2Ghz, 3GB RAM and 120GB SSD. Unless you're using resource-heavy software or games, your laptop should stay fine for the next couple of years. The only upgrade needed eventually is the SSD—consider moving to a 480GB or 512GB model so it runs smoothly.
Welcome to the forums, newcomer! My activity is typical browsing, a bit of coding, and light gaming on older games. What kind of applications are putting stress on your current laptop? It might also help to mention the specific games you're talking about.
24 gb of DDR3 RAM
Could you provide more details about the memory configuration in your laptop?
Basic software such as chrome, VS Code, WAMP local server, and Photoshop are used. Clip Champ occasionally works, VMWare and Virtual Box are also in use. Games like GTA San Andreas, COD MW, and Dirt 3 are popular. Most of my games are older releases. My laptop has four RAM slots, giving a total capacity of 2*8 + 2*4, which means a daily load of about 11 GB out of 24. Running Photoshop or VMWare would add roughly 20 GB to the total.
I browse the web, read PDFs, watch YouTube at 720p and reply to this thread on a 2006 ThinkPad with an Intel mobile T7400 @2Ghz, 3GB RAM and 120GB SSD. Unless you're using resource-heavy software or games, your laptop should stay fine for the next couple of years. The only upgrade needed eventually is the SSD—consider moving to a 480GB or 512GB model so it runs smoothly.