Figured I would ask the "brains trust", here, lol...
This is not my area of strength. Like, at all... Controversial perhaps, but, most of the time, I find computers (or rather, IT and "tech") to be... Immensely frustrating. I'm not stupid. I know the basics. I can do most things that most... "Normie" millennials can do. I just... I'm not a "build a computer from scratch" type person. Put it that way.
So when something goes wrong, like my current computer randomly losing a whole bunch of files, I... Attempt to solve it, but get increasingly frustrated when I can't. So here we are...
I'm not really a gamer, per se. I don't really watch movies on the computer, either (I know, weirdo, right?), aside from Youtube and the like (Vid Dailymotion, etc.).
I do, however, do an absolute fuck tonne of photography. Like, literally terabytes worth. Both mobile and D-SLR. In terms of "hobbies", or "interests", this, and music, are what I mainly use the computer for. Because my current computer is such an utter piece of shit (it's old, but has 1TB storage, which is a fair amount, for something a decade old), I spend... Literally days, just clearing data (photos, mainly) off it.
I also listen to a very large amount of music. Music is my passion. If I was better at it, I probably would have attempted to make a career out of it, by now. I do a little bit of mixing, but I would like to do more. If I had a better computer, I guess that's a thing I would do. Somehow the speakers on this old thing are really fucking good, though, so I would rather not lose that/have to make it external, lol... Though it's funny, because this computer is so fucked, that sometimes it crashes, when you try to load big playlists in Apple Music, lol...
Now for the more complicated stuff, which is sort of... Beyond, me. I'm not a graphics designer, but my degree, somewhat unfortunately, requires me to do a not significant amount of it. Which is shit, but so be it. Also, more broadly, a whole bunch of "digital drawing", and, hardest of all, for me personally, heaps of statistics-related programming. Heaps. Weeks worth. Which this computer simply cannot cope with (we mainly use R, if people have heard of that).
I also have to do a fuck-tonne of web-related shit, of course. Teams, fucking Blackboard, online interactive lectures, you name it. And then there's the video calling, and the more... "Academic" shit, like Endnote, and academic writing more broadly, which this computer simply cannot cope with, anymore...
Honestly, this computer is... So old, and deprecated, that I don't even think I can upgrade Office, on here, which leads to all sorts of fuckery.
Oh, and I nearly forgot: some degree of "ruggedness", would be good, because I do a surprisingly large amount of "field stuff", and I would rather the damn thing not be as fragile as this one, when I have to take it out there (obviously sparingly), lol...
So yeah. I'm a Mac "person". This is a Macbook. I mostly use an IPhone. I am not, however, "Windows illiterate". My last laptop was a Toshiba Satellite (when they were still making them), newer than this MacBook. But it was completely fucked, even from when I first got it, and ended up bricking itself, taking all my data with it, literally twice. And that, my friends, is why I spend so much time "backing up" (sadly). Having lost literally years of work, I just... Don't trust any device not to do the same, lol. So yeah. Would rather stick to the Mac "ecosystem", I think, but I can probably be swayed... Should I go for like "a custom build" (not by me, of course!!), do you think, for these sorts of needs, or do you think I can get by/away with "off the shelf"/ordered in..??
Just thought I would chuck this up, because, having lost... A not insignificant portion of data, this morning, for no apparent reason, I figure that, in desperate times, I... May as well ask some of "the brains trust" here, lol...
Thoughts, anyone??
Cheers in advance!
What do you consider "reasonably affordable"? Do you want a laptop, desktop, or don't care which?
If you want to stick to Mac, then just go to apple.com, or their physical store and check your options. There's not a lot of choice with Apple, aside from how much you're willing to spend. Their retina displays are great. Don't get a model released within 2 months, Apple is notorious for having serious defects on brand new models and trying to make the customer pay to fix what is Apple's fault.
Apple has closed it's ecosystem. If someone wants to release a program for OS X, they need to register with and regularly pay apple for the privilege of being on their operating system. They also no longer support OpenGL, which every other computer supports for communicating with graphics cards. This means for many developers, it's not worth developing for Apple. If you mainly use products from large companies like Apple, this might not be an issue for you.
Apple is non-upgradable. They solder everything to the motherboard, or include it in the M1 chip. Don't think that you can just increase the RAM later.
If you go for a non-apple laptop, you'll probably want an ultrabook. They don't come with powerful graphics cards, but they have 4K screens. The best for you would be a IPS HDR screen. IPS has the best color of screen panels, and HDR is 10-bit color. 8-bit is the old standard of 256 levels per color channel (R, G, or B), while 10-bit has 1024 levels.
If you want a touch screen, make sure it is listed. If you use a tablet pen, none will feel as nice as the Apple pencil, but they should still work.
AMD Ryzen processors are cheaper than intel.
There are a variety of weird or different tech offered by different brands. Some laptops can plug in external Graphics cards. Asus has a "duo" brand of laptops which come with an additional screen on the keyboard side. Gigabyte partnered with Microsoft for AI-enhanced ultrabooks that perform better if you absolutely don't care about privacy. On that note, if you get a windows computer, there are quick ways to disable much of the spyware Microsoft includes with their malware of an operating system. Mac's not as bad there, but it does report every app you open to Apple to get their permission to open it, which was found when Apple servers went offline sometime in the last two years.
Excellent comment! Thanks muchly!
Yeah, my main issue, if I did go for a non-Mac, is that because I do so much phone photography (and filming, which is my thing), it would make it very, very difficult to get my photos and vids off, unless I used Bluetooth (eugh), no..?
So that would mean switching the damn phone, as well, which means another... Sizeable amount of money down the drain, unfortunately (to get one with a decent camera, at least)...
That's... Unfortunately, where I am at, with that particular conundrum, tbh...
I fucking wish Windows phones were still a thing, so I would at least have a non-Apple, non-Android alternative to go for, even if they weren't... The best, lol.
Anyway, while we're at it - I've only ever had Androids that were... Not great (HTCs and ZTEs, mostly), so... I honestly don't know what a top end (new-ish) Android is like, or how it would compare, both to an IPhone, and to the cheap/mid-range Androids which we get here, lol...
Look up Google's Pixel phones. They're supposed to be very good, and the best privacy distros can be installed on them. I haven't used one, so I can't recommend them.
There is a limited iCloud tool for Windows you can download on Apple's website. You can also transfer by cable. If you want software like iPhoto, there's multiple third-party alternatives for Windows.
Ooh, I should look into some of that...
I generally don't like Google's... "Phone suite", unfortunately (except Google Maps, and I admittedly do use Gmail), for all the reasons you might expect. But if they're good, now (Pixels), perhaps I should look into them...
See, I didn't think you could do cable to cable transfers, from an IPhone to Windows...
Last time I tried would have been from an IPhone 3GS to the Satellite, and whatever desktop PCs Uni was running, circa 2015, approx... And it didn't fucking work, lol.
So I'm glad to hear things sound to have, uhh, improved, since then (or maybe I just didn't know how to do the workaround, lol)!
Some of the privacy systems you can install on Pixel phones replace google services.
I recommend doing your own research on what I said. You're the one spending the money. Look up other's reviews, and make sure anything is up to your standard before you buy. There's Newegg and Amazon user reviews. There should also be reviews by other photographers on YouTube or specialist websites. Videos showing how to do specific tasks are also useful to see how much of a pain it might be.