I have always bought thinkpads, T-series in particular. I currently have a T430s for my mobile setup. It has the Optimus card so I can plug into the base-station and run multiple monitors. It can run quite warm sometimes though.
Thinkpad T440p is a 14" notebook with quad core cpu and good cooling mechanism. I am thinking of getting one for myself.
After doing some research I bought asus Zenbook 13.3 QHD touch screen intel ore I 7 4558uv2.8 ghz 8 ram 256 solid drive for 2400 cad from amazon, waiting for delivery June 5 , at home I am planning to connect it to dell 27 ultra sharp for 1000 cad that I will buy next week. Then I will borrow 20 grand from 2 of my newly opened credit lines and start trading futures , I want to be rich
That 27 ultra connected to your shiny new laptop is all you need to be rich. You're on your way. Congrats. But seriously, what made you go with Asus? Are they really that good nowadays? Or were you joking about that as well?
Reviews ,read them on amazon and then go to IBM/Lenovo site and read those , the choice is easy. It's fast , light, small, good battery life and runs cool plus top specs , it's a winner. Not all , but this is first step to be top trader
hilarious.... reviews from sites... I guess one would have to understand the reviews in order to form an opinion... I read the same thing and I basically saw people complaining about small things that have little to nothing to do with the laptop features but rather with the spoiled behavior of most people... but to each its own... computers are all about personal choices, hence the term PC...
If you are new to trading, borrowing money (20 or 40K) is probably going to be a dangerous tactic. I'm not one to push negativity upon someone, but I do believe in helping to correctly guide someone. Being new to trading means you will experience a learning curve, as with anything in the world. If you never went swimming, I would advice for you to not jump off a boat in the middle of the ocean, you want to limit your risk. If you are going to borrow the money, I personally would only use a small portion of it to provide for a gentle learning curve, you DO NOT want to go into debt due to your learning curve. Just my advice.