What's the "p"?
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The Weissman
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- Joined: Sun Mar 13, 2005 11:55 pm
- Location: The Swamps of Jersey
What's the "p"?
What's the "p" mean in T42p or T43p? I always thought it meant Flexview display, but I see non-p's with Flexview as well.
Is there more to the "p" or did I have it wrong from the start?
Steve
Is there more to the "p" or did I have it wrong from the start?
Steve
P is an acronym for "powerful" or "professional" logically thinking.
They simply feature more powerful video-cards, usually it means simply double the RAM (memory) of the graphics-card and other drivers which are more towards GL, which CAD applications have more use.
Edit: Appearantly I was typing for too long, as stgreek beat me to it :)
As a point to remember, if you need more GPU-RAM, get the "p", as the GPU (graphics processing unit) is not upgradable, HDD, wifi etc are.
They simply feature more powerful video-cards, usually it means simply double the RAM (memory) of the graphics-card and other drivers which are more towards GL, which CAD applications have more use.
Edit: Appearantly I was typing for too long, as stgreek beat me to it :)
As a point to remember, if you need more GPU-RAM, get the "p", as the GPU (graphics processing unit) is not upgradable, HDD, wifi etc are.
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
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The Weissman
- Freshman Member
- Posts: 95
- Joined: Sun Mar 13, 2005 11:55 pm
- Location: The Swamps of Jersey
64MB (current non-p maximum) is also totally adequate for most of the applications I use, an occasional Photoshop, the CAD I do and rare gaming :)The Weissman wrote:Thanks, guys, that's a big help! I don't do CAD, so now I'm comfortable eliminating the "p" models from consideration.
Steve
The only advantage I consider of the "p" models would be the extra memory of the GPU, it helps if you work with large textures.
A great example would be if you wish to play games with a higher texture-quality, you need more GPU memory, everything else (atleast with <T43) is equal regarding the graphics-card.
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
Is it possible to get a T42p with a 6-cell instead of a 9-cell battery? Reason being a 9-cell is heavier and bulkier and I would want to carry it around quite a bit. Is it even possible to run a T42p on a 6-cell?
I use Photoshop, Illustrator and Flash regularly, although I don't do any movie editing (I'm a web designer who works with basically everything except 3d programs, which I might or might not get into). Should I just get a T42p or should I stick with a regular T42?
I use Photoshop, Illustrator and Flash regularly, although I don't do any movie editing (I'm a web designer who works with basically everything except 3d programs, which I might or might not get into). Should I just get a T42p or should I stick with a regular T42?
Depends on your budget, but I suppose a T42 should be adequate for 2D editing, you might want to try and get more RAM though, as Photoshop can be quite a hogger if you've got hundreds of layers.Xyrus wrote:Is it possible to get a T42p with a 6-cell instead of a 9-cell battery? Reason being a 9-cell is heavier and bulkier and I would want to carry it around quite a bit. Is it even possible to run a T42p on a 6-cell?
I use Photoshop, Illustrator and Flash regularly, although I don't do any movie editing (I'm a web designer who works with basically everything except 3d programs, which I might or might not get into). Should I just get a T42p or should I stick with a regular T42?
Do note that a T42p can be/is equal to the T42 in every aspect other than the GPU. I can put a 60GB 7200rpm HDD to my T42 and perhaps add more RAM if necessary, or you can put a 80GB to a T42p, identical. It's only a matter of default configuration, I've seen T42-s with 60GB HDD-s too. Batteries are also interchangeable.
You'll get a little less run-time though, ~4h vs ~6h.
Written behind a T42, 2373-9UG.
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
1.8GHz CPU, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD, ATI-MR9600 64MB GPU, SXGA+ LCD, a/b/g WiFi, CD-RW/DVD
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