Visage said:Not really - even in office environemnts with high speed networks it never caught on.
Even if you've got a top spec BB connection you've only got maybe a 16Mbit connection.
Compare streaming an application from your HD (sata runs at about 1.5Gbps) with one streamed over your braodband connection that runs 100 times slower.
Another example - the Office directory on my desktop machine is about 500MB in size. Streaming that over the network would take 4 minutes at least. Who wants to wait 4 minutes to open Word?
dirtydog said:Laptops have crap keyboards, small monitors and slow hard disks... so I certainly won't be replacing my main PC with one.
Zip said:Laptops give me a sore neck back fingers and eyes.
I hate laptops![]()
Spawn said:Think you will be surprised at how far tech has come in terms of laptops...you can now get laptops with 17" or 19" screens and some of them will out perform a desktop pc with similar specs quite easily.
sr4470 said:7200rpm 2.5' drives reduce battery life considerably (not that high-end laptops have much anyway).
Thin clients are all well and good until your network falls over or you reach capacity. Don't get me wrong, they are taking off a lot more than previously, however in a true thin client almost everything you do need to go off to the server to get a response on what to do. Its too slow and too unreliable. You don't want to be working on a document for half an hour only for your connection to drop, or more likely, you go off for lunch and your session time out.daz said:I think thin clients are going to make a comeback.
You obviously havent ever used a thin client machines then. We have an 80 / 20 ratio of thin client terminals to PC's. We have around 600 users locally, and that again for each county around the country. Most of our WAN links are 2mb connections. For your average user, thin client's are far faster than PC's.Visage said:Not really - even in office environemnts with high speed networks it never caught on.
Even if you've got a top spec BB connection you've only got maybe a 16Mbit connection.
Compare streaming an application from your HD (sata runs at about 1.5Gbps) with one streamed over your braodband connection that runs 100 times slower.
See, this is where you're going wrong. You are actually completely wrong. If you run a PC on a network, then when you open a 1 gb file, all that data needs to go across the network.Visage said:Another example - the Office directory on my desktop machine is about 500MB in size. Streaming that over the network would take 4 minutes at least. Who wants to wait 4 minutes to open Word?
Spawn said:Of course they do, never said they didnt...most people i know have their laptops permanently on ac power anyways...
Thats right. You'd be surprised at the distinct lack of 'lag'. There is a local text echo, so typing on a screen you can't tell you're using a thin terminal.SiD the Turtle said:Thin clients are all well and good until your network falls over or you reach capacity. Don't get me wrong, they are taking off a lot more than previously, however in a true thin client almost everything you do need to go off to the server to get a response on what to do. Its too slow and too unreliable. You don't want to be working on a document for half an hour only for your connection to drop, or more likely, you go off for lunch and your session time out.
sr4470 said:Which brings me on to my next point: does that not make the laptop's mobility completely redundant?
Spawn said:Depends really on how big the laptop, the one im using at the mo is a 15" Dell laptop and its quite heavy...i decided to buy the Dell XPS1210 laptop which is a 12" jobbie with the top end specs.
ConfusedTA said:I can definitely see that laptops are becoming more and more popular - many people no longer want to sit at a desk in the corner of a room to use the internet, especially with the rise in wireless networking - they would much prefer to sit on the sofa in front of the TV with a laptop!
There was an article in PC Shopper (or something) recently that gave all the info on how to do it, personally I find an Acer's a pretty good alternative.Zefan said:@ link in the first post - good luck finding a barebones laptop in the UK.
I've been searching for somewhere that has them in stock for a good 3 days and there simply is nothing.