Small and cheap laptop recommendations

Member Posts: 3 Member
edited October 2024 in Tech Talks

Hello all.


I was wondering if anyone has any recommendations (or anti-recommendations) for a small and cheap Windows 10 laptop? I don't need anything substantial as this is just a system to keep on my electronics bench for various odds and ends; lots of use as a serial terminal as well as host for various Windows-only tools (configuration tools, timing analysis tools, etc.). I'd prefer something that is thin, decent screen sized between 10"~14" (~13" would be ideal), with modest storage (it need not be fast, but something that is easily upgraded would be nice). Decent WiFi is important, and a physical Ethernet jack would be a plus but not a requirement. I would like at least two USB ports (at least one should be USB 3+), with a USB-C port being a nice-to-have. Battery life doesn't have to be tremendous as I wouldn't be far from power, but four to six hours on a change would be nice. Charging over USB-C would be a big win. Finally, bonus points are awarded for durability as this thing is going to live in/around my workbench and while I'm not going to try and damage it, stuff happens.


Any thoughts?

Welcome!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.
LOGIN / REGISTER

Comments

  • Member Posts: 3,094 Expert

    No real thoughts on any modern laptops, I guess almost anything with the core/speed count you need that has the physical IO required would be fine.

    I have an ASUS N550J which is kinda old now but I bought it second hand for similar things as you, just OTG programming tasks as well as my main Serato DJ laptop, I don't use it for production tasks, nor would I expect good "real time" performance but I have always trusted ASUS as a laptop, it's pretty well built, has kind of a macbook style with aluminium keyboard which is backlit (something I specifically wanted for use in the dark.

    3 physical USB (tho none are USB3), half decent WIFI and hardwired gigabit ethernet. Battery is ok, prob about 2 hours at full power.

    I also have a 2019 macbook which gets more portable use now than my ASUS. It's a backup to my Serato laptop and for portable stuff I like it a bit more just because of the speed, however I dislike compatibility (or lack of) with things from one month to the next so I only use it for basic stuff, battery life is brilliant tho as is the power management and speed of everything. Pros and cons, would never replace my main machine with a mac tho.

    Not sure if I was helpful or not but in terms of laptops I always choose a decent brand name, tho don't invest in laptops all that often as they are always just dedicated to the task I need.

  • Member Posts: 1 Member
    edited June 2022

    I want to recommend a laptop ASUS Zenbook any new series. I have been working on these laptops for a long time. They are inexpensive and very functional. I am a programmer and their power is enough to write websites.

  • Member Posts: 1 Member
    edited September 2022

    The great budget laptops is dominated by Chrome devices, and the Lenovo Duet 3 (or Lenovo IdeaPad Duet 3, depending on where you buy it) is the best Chrome tablet that can be yours for as low as $359. This is effectively a bigger, more expensive follow-up to the Chromebook Duet Lenovo released in 2020, a surprisingly capable and inexpensive Chrome tablet that's still on this list. 

    CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon 7c Gen 2

    RAM: 4-8GB

    Storage: 64-128GB eMMC

    Display: 11 inches, 2,000 x 1,200 pixels

    Dimensions: 10.16 x 6.48 x 0.31 inches

    Weight: 1.2/2.1 lbs (tablet only/tablet + cover)

  • Member Posts: 3,126 Expert

    But that is not x86 CPU notebook...... And not sure if Windows runs on it....

  • Member Posts: 2 Newcomer

    A low-end PC is a computer with relatively weak hardware and performance. A typical low-end PC has a Ryzen 3 or i3 processor, 8 GB or less RAM, and sometimes a budget graphics card.

  • Member Posts: 2 Newcomer

    One unique aspect of FAU's computer science program is its focus on real-world applications.

This discussion has been closed.
Back To Top