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Tech Gaming Hardware discussion (& Hardware Sales) thread

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would bang
 
@My Spot @Madmick (edit: sorry to tag you guys in, but I really value your opinion if this is in your area of expertiese).

Sorry this probably isn't the right thread, but hoping your guys' expertise can help me.

I travel lots, and currently when I have to go light, I go with my Microsoft Laptop Surface Go 2. This thing isn't a beast by any stretch - it has an 8th gen M3 processor (i think a low energy i3 equivalent) and only 8 gigs of Ram. But it has treated me really well as it runs full Windows 11, is built solid, and does enough to get by.

Buuuut, I'm thinking of upgrading, and I see the Samsung Galaxy tab 10S plus, which is like a 12 inch tablet, where you can buy a detachable keyboard. It's slightly bigger, but seems still very light and mobile.

The primary attraction to me is a low reflective OLED screen - as I would use this for watching movies while in planes etc, it has a micro SD slot which is convenient for me because I generally have a lot of photos I like to back up when on the road, and streaming sports. The specs though are a bit weird:

1) it has a "mediatek" processor - 8 core
2) only 12 GB of RAM (I'd prefer 16GB minimum)
3) is Android OS

So wondering if you guys have any insight around:
- is android OS for a tablet much "lighter" than windows, such that a 12GB of RAM suffices more than say 12GB for a windows based system
- is the android OS very "limiting" - I assume stuff like Office works fine. But I also had an apple Ipad ages ago (like over 10 years ago now) and it didn't really jive with me. The file management kind of sucked. I don't know how tablet OS has evolved since then, or if the Android OS is similar to Apple OS
- is a mediatek processor "good". Samsung doesn't seem to be "advertising" it, perhaps because it's a cost saver as opposed to using intel or a snapdragon
- is going from Wifi5 to Wifi 6E any sort of a difference maker?
If your desire it to use it primarily as a laptop I would personally never accept Android or iOS as a substitute for Windows. I really thought we would be there, already, a decade ago. Much sooner than now. But we're still not.
 
Black Friday deals are rolling in.

I'm thinking about replacing one of my monitors. It's an MSI Optix 1440p curved monitor that's been acting wonky ever since I moved. It's doing that thing where on startup, it has weird lines all over, distorting display. As it warms up it straightens out, but it's gotten a little worse with time, ie taking longer to correct, and taking less time unpowered for the problem to occur.

Why did I get it? It was on sale when I was building my rig in 21. The guy at Best Buy told me it was "the future of gaming" since the curved aspect makes you FEEL THE GAME GUYS. Load of horseshit but it was on sale. It's been a side piece ever since I got a G-Sync compatible one. The curved aspect is really just annoying more than anything.

This ASUS OLED is $550.00 down from $750.00.
 
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Why did I get it? It was on sale when I was building my rig in 21. The guy at Best Buy told me it was "the future of gaming" since the curved aspect makes you FEEL THE GAME GUYS. Load of horseshit but it was on sale.

Last year i went to Microcenter to test out curved monitors. Noticed the sweet spot for curved monitors was 34" and above. Sadly they arent at the refresh rate required for my use.

Its really depends on the type of games you play. Im personally looking at these two:
 
Last year i went to Microcenter to test out curved monitors. Noticed the sweet spot for curved monitors was 34" and above. Sadly they arent at the refresh rate required for my use.

Its really depends on the type of games you play. Im personally looking at these two:
Very nice. I don't know if I'm going to make the jump to 4k yet since for my 27 inch setup I don't notice too much of a difference and I usually favor performance before resolution. Wish I was near a Microcenter myself, that's some good gear man
 
Very nice. I don't know if I'm going to make the jump to 4k yet since for my 27 inch setup I don't notice too much of a difference and I usually favor performance before resolution. Wish I was near a Microcenter myself, that's some good gear man

What would you say is your primary game and what input device do you use?
 
Black Friday deals are rolling in.

I'm thinking about replacing one of my monitors. It's an MSI Optix 1440p curved monitor that's been acting wonky ever since I moved. It's doing that thing where on startup, it has weird lines all over, distorting display. As it warms up it straightens out, but it's gotten a little worse with time, ie taking longer to correct, and taking less time unpowered for the problem to occur.

Why did I get it? It was on sale when I was building my rig in 21. The guy at Best Buy told me it was "the future of gaming" since the curved aspect makes you FEEL THE GAME GUYS. Load of horseshit but it was on sale. It's been a side piece ever since I got a G-Sync compatible one. The curved aspect is really just annoying more than anything.

This ASUS OLED is $550.00 down from $750.00.

There's a budget MSI 27" 1440p 170hz curved monitor for $140 on Amazon.
 
Very nice. I don't know if I'm going to make the jump to 4k yet since for my 27 inch setup I don't notice too much of a difference and I usually favor performance before resolution. Wish I was near a Microcenter myself, that's some good gear man
4k is alright. What you really need is an ultrawide OLED. That’s the real game changer
 
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