Laptop System equirements for SW

Discussion in 'SolidWorks' started by Existential Angst, May 7, 2010.

  1. Awl --

    I'm looking for a laptop that will run SW, trying to avoid super-pricey.

    According to http://www.solidworks.com/sw/support/SystemRequirements.html,
    I'd be best off cost-wise/ram-wise with regular XP Pro, 32 bit.

    But then there is a note that support for this is ending.
    Also, Windows 7 is the Pro, Ultimate, or Enterprise versions, not the
    premium offered on most laptops.

    So what's the most economical way to go, for a new laptop purchase, that
    will run SW?
    I won't be doing fancy stuff, just run of the mill parts for a VMC or
    lathe. cam is not necessary.

    Thanks,
     
    Existential Angst, May 7, 2010
    #1
  2. Existential Angst

    tnik Guest

    First, figure out how much you want to spend.. then go from there..

    You would be better off with a newer arch processor (the i# family) or
    at least the core 2 duo/quads at the highest clock speed you can afford,
    A decent amount of ram (max the bitch out) and a decent video card..
     
    tnik, May 7, 2010
    #2
  3. Existential Angst

    stans4 Guest

    It's not going to be just the OS that's the gotcha, it's the graphics
    chipset. There is no laptop out there that will let you swap graphics
    chips, what you get is what you're going to use, or not. So shop to
    see what's in there for graphics and what the software wants. Then
    buy. Chances are you're going to be 3/4 of the way to the grand mark
    or more, nVidia and ATI chips in laptops are put into the higher-end
    ones. If it were a desktop, you could probably assemble one for a lot
    less than that. Upside is that the higher-end laptops are more likely
    to be running 64-bit OS versions. Low-end laptops have integrated
    graphics using system memory, usually Intel chipsets do that. Multi-
    core processors will definitely put you over a grand.

    Stan
     
    stans4, May 7, 2010
    #3
  4. Existential Angst

    Zymrgy Guest

    As others have said...your budget is the driving factor. I can see
    support for XP is not going to be around in a couple of years...I
    would of never guessed a few years ago how fast things are migrating
    to 64bit OS's. Go with the Pro version of windows 7....from what I
    gather its missing some of the eye candy that you would likely disable
    anyway. (for performance reasons)
     
    Zymrgy, May 7, 2010
    #4
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