Laptop vs. Desktop for uni, under £900/£1000

Jack Laskey

Estimable
Jun 24, 2014
7
0
4,510
Hi guys!
I'm (hopefully) going to uni next September, and have, obviously, been looking for some sort of computer to get.
Now, I will be getting a monitor around Christmas time, to improve on my current 1280x1080 one. I could use this regardless of whether I get a laptop or PC, just throwing it in for background.

My current thinking is either:

- £700ish desktop ( http://uk.pcpartpicker.com/p/CrCs3C I already have a case and psu) + a £200 chromebook/windows laptop

OR...

- a decent laptop (something like this: http://www.amazon.co.uk/GL551JW-DS71-HID4-4720HQ-2-6-3-6GHz-Windows-7200RPM/dp/B00V95EIT4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1443719673&sr=8-1&keywords=gigabyte+g551jw open to suggestions, but battery life of above 4hrs is key)

If anyone has any ideas that could aid me in this, i'd be grateful for any help!
Thanks in advance!
 
Solution
I guess it depends on what you intend on studying and if you want to play games. If games or your studies are something that need horsepower go with the desktop.

If not then I'd say just get a nice laptop.

why_wolf

Estimable
Aug 28, 2015
221
10
5,110
I guess it depends on what you intend on studying and if you want to play games. If games or your studies are something that need horsepower go with the desktop.

If not then I'd say just get a nice laptop.
 
Solution

Jack Laskey

Estimable
Jun 24, 2014
7
0
4,510


I'd be wanting to play GTA and civ mostly, and probably studying civil engineering (bridges n stuff), so not much needed for work, mostly just play
 

why_wolf

Estimable
Aug 28, 2015
221
10
5,110
Probably go with the desktop then. You might end up needing the horsepower for the bridge stuff if they give any sort of simulation software or what not.

I should point out most Uni's usually let you check out laptops from the library if you really need to have one in the classroom for whatever reason.
 

Jack Laskey

Estimable
Jun 24, 2014
7
0
4,510


ooh, i didnt know that, thanks man!