this post was submitted on 21 Aug 2023
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The only good system on that list is the framework and it’s $2800 for my ideal version.
Last year’s Thinkpad P-series goes for around $400 on eBay.
You're comparing ideal to "will get the job done" which is a big gap
The Thinkpad probably doesn't have a high resolution high refresh screen, which is exactly why I'm shelling out $1400 for the Framework.
To many of us that doesn't matter. My secondary machine is a laptop from 2008 (not a Thinkpad, though), with a standard-for-the-time 1280x800 17" screen, and I'm fine with that, because I'd rather have a coarse 16:10 17" screen than a high-res 16:9 14-15" one. Occasional window shopping suggests that a new laptop with a screen of the same physical size as my old one would cost more than I really want to pay at the moment.
You obviously have different priorities. That's fine—plenty of machines of different sorts to go around—but please try not to project your priorities onto others.
If you're happy with it, no reason to switch. I'm just saying you can't compare different price range products
I think what hes trying to say (correct me if im wrong OP), is that not everyone needs that high end machine, so its not comparing apples to oranges as you seem to suggest. Its like comparing a Lamborghini to a regular albeit good sedan for the purpose of taking your kids to school, doing groceries, etc. If we ignore the obvious impracticalities of the Lambo for these jobs, sure its really cool, but if you can achieve the same task with the sedan (again ignoring that the Lambo might not allow you to conveniently achieve them and assuming practicality is equal so that the car analogy can fit in with the laptop question), why specifically go looking to get the Lambo?
Edit: meant to reply to nyan@lemmy.cafe
Thinkpad won't play AAA games, it just can't run them at a playable frame rate
You get more when you pay more