ElectroSoldier wrote on 2024-09-03, 03:14:
I wonder if there are many who agree.
Is browsing the web among the most hardware-intensive tasks you can do on a modern computer?
Browsing the web and other web-adjacent things, e.g. electron apps, absolutely. Look at the memory usage of web browser tabs and electron apps. Biggest reason a business laptop can't have 8GB of RAM anymore is that there just isn't enough RAM for all the web stuff.
(Now, obviously, I mean in the context of mainstream things. If you're doing 4K video editing, huge number crunching, etc, then that will continue to guzzle all the hardware you can throw at it.)
ElectroSoldier wrote on 2024-09-03, 03:14:
I never had a "netbook" nor an Atom based system. Where they really that bad?
Yes!
I had a Dell Inspiron I-forget-the-model-number (found it... 1012) netbook, it was the second generation with the N450 instead of the N2xx and Win7 starter instead of WinXP. I foolishly kept throwing money at it to try and make it less dreadful:
- upgraded the near useless 1024x600 panel to 1366x768
- doubled the RAM from 1GB to 2GB
- upgraded the wifi to a dual band card
- put in a 64GB SSD. Now, keep in mind, I was doing this in... 2011 maybe, when SSDs cost serious money.
It remained utterly bad. Finally I came to my senses and sold it on eBay... in early 2014. Wow. Can't believe I tried that long to make that thing passable.
Think about it this way: these Atoms are around 1.6GHz. Maybe they do a bit more work per clock than a HotBurst like my late-2001 1.9GHz Willamette, maybe at best they could be equivalentish to a 1.6GHz P6 like a Banias or something but I'm pretty sure the Banias has better performance-per-clock than the Atom. I could probably look up some better benchmarks but this estimate is good enough. Either way, that puts you somewhere around early 2002 performance at best, maybe closer to 2001. But guess what, you're not running early 2002 software. You're running 2010-era software. At a time when my aunt was getting a Q8400 with 6 or 8 gigs of RAM, my mom was getting a Q8200S with 8 gigs of RAM, etc, this thing has a ~2002, at best, processor. And we are talking about a decade that took people from 1GHz PIIIs to 3+GHz quad-core C2Qs - average computer performance probably went up 15X in that decade.
Add the useless screen, the hopelessly slow hard drive, and everything else on top of that.
And it always comes down to RAM. 1 gig of RAM was great in 2002. Passable in 2006 on XP although you really started to want more. 2GB was great for XP in 2006, but... felt a bit tight for 32-bit Vista, so you go to 3GB in 2007. Then that starts to feel tight too, and so you bite the brave x64 bullet and go to 8GB by about late 2008, 2009. And then this thing comes along and ships with 1GB, i.e. an amount that was on the lower end for XP in 2006-7, and the max RAM you can put it in is 2 gigs.
I think with XP, they were... barely passable. But on 7? Hell no.
If you wanted a cute affordable laptop in 2010-2011, get one of the Acer 1830T or similar with 11.6 inch 1366x768 screens, real dual-core i3s, and the ability to have a civilized amount of RAM. Those machines were great for the money, too bad Acer gave up making them in the Sandy Bridge generation.