Upgrade Culture
Prior to her retirement in 2014, Mrs P bought a HP laptop (HP 15-g094sa). The model was chosen based upon her needs and budget. The fact that it was purple was also a contributory factor. This laptop came with Windows 8 installed and over the years has been upgraded to Windows 10. Being an older model it has a HDD rather than a SSD. However, given what it is used for, IE emails and online shopping and nothing else, it has always been able to cope with the task in hand. 8 years later the specifications should still be adequate to do these specific things (AMD Quad-Core A8-6410 APU). Sadly, the continued growth of Windows 10 has meant that the operating system has gotten bigger and more bloated with features. Hence this laptop struggles with updates, often spending 30 minutes or more each time it’s turned on, which is possibly only once a week. Overall, it is no longer the useful and convenient tool that it was when bought.
Prior to her retirement in 2014, Mrs P bought a HP laptop (HP 15-g094sa). The model was chosen based upon her needs and budget. The fact that it was purple was also a contributory factor. This laptop came with Windows 8 installed and over the years has been upgraded to Windows 10. Being an older model it has a HDD rather than a SSD. However, given what it is used for, IE emails and online shopping and nothing else, it has always been able to cope with the task in hand. 8 years later the specifications should still be adequate to do these specific things (AMD Quad-Core A8-6410 APU). Sadly, the continued growth of Windows 10 has meant that the operating system has gotten bigger and more bloated with features. Hence this laptop struggles with updates, often spending 30 minutes or more each time it’s turned on, which is possibly only once a week. Overall, it is no longer the useful and convenient tool that it was when bought.
Recently, Google sent an email regarding it ceasing support for older email clients that don’t conform to the latest security protocols. Mrs P’s laptop has an installation of Microsoft Office 2010 and Outlook will no longer be able to download directly from her gmail account in May. Combined with the performance issues caused by the ever increasing heft of Windows 10, I recommended that the laptop was replaced and Office 365 installed. To cut a long story short a new HP laptop has been purchased (HP 14s-dq2019na). This new model based on an Intel Core i3 processor is more than adequately specified to run Windows 10 and I will probably take the opportunity to upgrade to Windows 11. However, this costly undertaking, which also comes with a requirement to migrate data, has purely been driven by Microsoft and Google. Considering what the laptop is used for, the original specifications of the first model should still be adequate. This is all down to upgrade culture.
Upgrade culture seems to be driven by several factors. The ever growing software which reduces performance in return for superfluous functionality. The myth that anything new is by default superior, despite the fact that in the mobile phone and tablet market we’ve seen a slow down in significant performance increases between new hardware releases. And then there’s the “accessorisation” of technology. Tech is no longer just functional, it’s fashionable, aspirational and inspirational, as well as other bullshit marketing terms. Apparently, I’m due a mobile phone upgrade roundabout now. There’s nothing wrong with the Samsung Galaxy S10 5G that I currently own. I’ve had this since December 2019 and the phone is in good condition and performs just as well as it did back then. Anything new will simply have a fancier camera, although I dispute claims that I need better than I have already. Other sellings points will more than likely be gimmicks or that is how I perceive them. A screen that folds is not essential for me.
I am aware that I could install an alternative operating system on Mrs P’s laptop and it would potentially run as good as it did back in 2014 but that is not ideal for someone who is not especially confident with tech per se. Ultimately, we’re fortunate to be in the position to afford a replacement laptop although it is somewhat galling when one considers that the requirement to upgrade has been forced upon the user for “questionable” reasons. If Microsoft and other companies insist upon expanding the functionality of their software, it would be nice to be able to selectively remove the “stuff” you don’t want. Especially if it has an impact upon your systems performance. But I suppose that a free product such as Windows is not going to allow that sort of control and empowerment to be available to customers. It would impact hardware sales and upset an established business model. So we continue to upgrade continuously, while our obsolete tech piles up, awaiting recycling. The phrase “unsustainable” comes to mind for some reason.
Laptops Have Changed
I am spending more and more time at my Mother’s house due to my caring duties. Hence I recently determined that I need a laptop so I can continue to write during some of the slacker moments. For a while I’ve been using my sister’s but to put it succinctly it’s an obsolete piece of shit that runs slower than a rusty abacus. So I decided to buy a Chromebook as they offer a means to do what I need to do but on a fiscally prudent budget. However, due to a complicated administrative error that I can’t be bothered to go into here, I have ended up with a more traditional laptop running Windows 10. Mercifully this has not cost me anymore than I initially planned to spend, so ultimately I have come out ahead in this situation. Hence, I now own a Dell Inspiron 15 3000. It has a 15.6” Full HD display, an AMD Ryzen 5 3500U processor, Radeon Vega 8 graphics, 8 GB RAM and a 256 GB SSD. Not a bad spec, considering I was originally intending to get a Chromebook.
I am spending more and more time at my Mother’s house due to my caring duties. Hence I recently determined that I need a laptop so I can continue to write during some of the slacker moments. For a while I’ve been using my sister’s but to put it succinctly it’s an obsolete piece of shit that runs slower than a rusty abacus. So I decided to buy a Chromebook as they offer a means to do what I need to do but on a fiscally prudent budget. However, due to a complicated administrative error that I can’t be bothered to go into here, I have ended up with a more traditional laptop running Windows 10. Mercifully this has not cost me anymore than I initially planned to spend, so ultimately I have come out ahead in this situation. Hence, I now own a Dell Inspiron 15 3000. It has a 15.6” Full HD display, an AMD Ryzen 5 3500U processor, Radeon Vega 8 graphics, 8 GB RAM and a 256 GB SSD. Not a bad spec, considering I was originally intending to get a Chromebook.
I haven’t owned a laptop for about 15 years. Man, how things have changed. My new laptop is a fairly thin and surprisingly quiet device. It is also relatively light. I can remember a time when manufacturers would sometimes attempt to cram a full size, top-of-the-range processor into a huge and ungainly chassis in their pursuit of performance. It would seem that physical media drives are now consigned to the history books, as this laptop is conspicuously lacking any peripherals of this nature. The damn thing also spoke to me when I booted it up for the first time, with Cortana kicking in and making some soothing comment about taking care of configuring things. And then there’s the ubiquity of the internet. It is assumed that this shiny new laptop will be immediately connected to a high speed, wireless internet connection so that the operating system can update itself and I can then have swathes of meaningless bullshit pumped to my desktop.
Therefore, the streamlined modern laptop with its lack of peripherals (beyond an external mouse) is a lightweight affair. I found my Father’s old laptop bag and have started using it. The modest sized AC adapter doesn’t add too much to the overall weight and so carrying the laptop between houses is hardly a chore. In the past I have purchased outsized rucksacks and struggled under the excessive load of my laptop like a Bolivian pack mule. I suppose this improvement in portability is another marketing point, although I don’t feel disposed towards taking my laptop with me everywhere and “working on the fly”. For me a busy McDonalds is hardly a conducive environment for writing but each to their own. Certainly the 1080p display is convenient for watching either YouTube or my own collection of film and TV content. Apparently this laptop also has Bluetooth, so it is easy to connect earbuds. Again functionality such as this or a webcam used to be considered as additional, whereas now it is just standard.
I suppose the biggest change underpinning laptops is their perceived function and more to the point, how they go about providing that. In the past (and by this I mean in my experience between 2000 and 2010) the laptop was a means to provide all the functions of your desktop PC and office network but at home or on the move. Hence there were numerous peripherals that would go hand in hand with a top of the range laptop. Nowadays, the laptop is more of a conduit that assumes by default the presence of the internet, so that the device can connect to the cloud resources we all rely upon these days. Gone are the requirements of local installations of important software, as we now use web based apps. Such an approach certainly takes a load off the laptop per se but it also means that the user is dependent on the internet and any loss of service greatly impacts upon productivity. As the title of this post states, laptops have changed.