Quote from: Neil on February 09, 2021, 15:36:59I bet this is the author of the article himself posting anonymously to justify his logic, but it was a very poor attempt nevertheless. Your logic sounds like: you can compare a donkey d.ick to your own because they are used for the same purporse, just like a toaster and electric oven are both used for cooking,....
This looks about right I'm not sure what everybody's so upset about in the comments the article is merely stating facts about power consumption
Quote from: Ivoto on February 09, 2021, 05:58:53They are also deleting comments when you criticize their credibility. Indeed the editors have been taking lessons from their friends in the far east. And I have to click a ton of captcha to even post a comment.
Someone found the hot water with this. Of course desktop setup for one fifth the price is using more power. What do you expect. You need to change the the name of the thread because it sounds ridiculously stupid!
Quote from: Dudley Lionheart on February 08, 2021, 16:30:36Ah, yes. Why wouldn't we compare the power-consumption of EUR€2000-EUR€3000+ machines made specifically to be power efficient against a console starting at USD$399/EUR€399 that is made specifically to be cost effective? /s
Good article, just ignore the disgruntled comments.
Quote from: _MT_ on February 08, 2021, 16:36:58I agree, it appears that the editors are paid according to the number of articles they churn out, instead of quality and sense.Quote from: mochabean on February 08, 2021, 10:06:53While I struggle to see a point of the article (I guess he equates power consumption with performance and therefore argues that PS5 offers a lot of performance for the money), full performance in a typical gaming laptop is only available while plugged-in. And even with reduced performance on battery, battery life is almost non-existent while playing demanding games. I mean, it's trivial mathematics. Even a big 100 Wh battery would last just over half an hour with 180 W load on it (100/180). If not less because of the relatively high discharge rate. If you want to game for, say, three hours, you don't have a big power budget. You're more in an ultrabook territory than gaming laptop territory - about 30 W at most, for the whole laptop.
breaking news: gaming device plugged into wall uses more power than gaming device designed to run on batteries
Quote from: Dudley Lionheart on February 08, 2021, 16:30:36The display only uses a few watts of power. I wouldn't say that it qualifies for *astonishing*.
Good article, just ignore the disgruntled comments.
Both units compared can be unplugged in a couple of seconds and thrown into a back-pack, so a highly relevant article. What's more astonishing, is that the laptop is powering a coloured LCD screen as well.