Skylake introduces quad-core mobile i5s for the first time - note the Q in the processor model name. (6300HQ).The mobile i5 has only 2 cores
Assuming the glacial pace of Intel CPU development continues (as looks likely until 2017 at least on Intel's side), in 4 years time the quad-core i5 would still be half-decent. I would suggest that if you can afford it the i7 option will last just that bit longer (not least due to the extra speed and hyperthreading).Thanks for the replies. I won't be using any CPU intensive apps other than games. Would the i5 + 960m last about 3-4 years spec wise? In the immediate future, I'd like to play FO4 and Xcom 2 on high settings.
I'm on an Optimus II at the moment, i7 + 555m. Bought in 2011. Only lately is it really showing its age. I don't mind lowering graphic settings right down though. Same goes for future purchases further down the line.
Assuming the glacial pace of Intel CPU development continues (as looks likely until 2017 at least on Intel's side), in 4 years time the quad-core i5 would still be half-decent. I would suggest that if you can afford it the i7 option will last just that bit longer (not least due to the extra speed and hyperthreading).
The 960M is already somewhat outdated as it's just a rebrand of the 860M with the clocks bumped up a bit... first generation Maxwell rather than the second generation Maxwell as found in the 970M and 980M. It's not bad, but you'll probably be using low settings on new games in 2019!
As for how quickly the 960M fades away, that depends on how good Pascal is next year (along with AMD's equivalent) - and nobody outside of Nvidia knows the answer to that yet!
I think low settings in 2019 would be perfectly acceptable ^^
They've released the minimum and recommended specs for Fallout 4 (In "desktop" form). Do you happen to know how a 960m would handle it?
Using 3DMark (GPU score):
Min spec: 550Ti: 2500
Rec spec: 780: 13370
555M: 1350
960M: 5290
970M: 10220
980M: 12630
There's a massive gap between the 960M and the higher models. The 960M uses a much smaller chip than the 970M and 980M (which are cut-down desktop 980s). The 960M is a cut-down desktop 750 Ti.
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nvidia_graphics_processing_units
http://www.futuremark.com/hardware/gpu?_ga=1.118058505.1407188967.1444718630
Thanks for the scores.
The performance gap is pretty big, but so is the price tag. I think it'll be a little bit out of my price range. (The 970m). The absolute maximum I could probably go is £900. The Proteus seems to be cheapest 970m model, and once you add the smallest SSD and a 1TB HDD it's already pretty close to 1k.
On the flip side, it's almost 5 times better than what I have currently.
You can also save money with Windows - order it without (and reuse your license key from your old machine, then wipe Windows from it to be legal) or buy a cheap OEM copy of Windows 7 from elsewhere and use the free upgrade to Windows 10 promotion to get Windows 10 for less.Why don't you order it without the secondary HDD and add it yourself later on, very easy yourself and keeps the initial cost down.
You can also save money with Windows - order it without (and reuse your license key from your old machine, then wipe Windows from it to be legal) or buy a cheap OEM copy of Windows 7 from elsewhere and use the free upgrade to Windows 10 promotion to get Windows 10 for less.
You used to be able to pay nothing at all by installing the Windows Insider builds of Windows (I did just that and ended up with the RTM copy completely free - on 2 PCS laptops!), but I'm not sure whether that's still an option.
FWIW, my first PCS laptop was a Vortex II with an i7-2720QM and a 560M GPU. The i7 would still be pretty decent today, but the GPU is absolutely terrible by modern standards. That was ordered in July 2011. It was a lovely laptop, but for the last couple of years of its life I kept wishing I'd spent more on the GPU!
Some very good advice here.
I'll take a look at the Proteus, which is the cheapest 970m laptop atm. Do you think it's likely there'll be a new model of this soon? Currently it has 4th gen Intel processors, and reviews mention the pretty basic screen quality.
Other than that, it's around £850 with one HDD and no OS.
OEM versions are non transferable and if I were you I would go with the killer wireless card. I have never experienced a problem with it.