Tuesday, July 14, 2020

New ThinkPad E14 and New MacBook Pro...

I recently purchased a new ThinkPad E14 and a new MacBook Pro...

ThinkPad E14:

...with some nice specs...
  • 14" 1920x1080 Display
  • Intel Quad Core i7-10510U @ 1.8GHz (Passmark processor benchmark score of 7210)
  • 32GB RAM
  • 1TB Solid State Drive
  • Windows 10 Professional

...which means the CPU is slightly faster than my work-issued PC (processor benchmark score of 6900) and, with the Solid State Drive, it should be impressively quick.  I am also not likely to be running as much on it as I do on my work machine.

2019 13.3" MacBook Pro:


...with...
  • 13.3" 2560 x 1600-pixel Retina Displ
  • 8th-gen quad core Core i5-8257U processor @ 1.4GHz (Passmark benchmark of 8208)
  • 16GB of RAM (upgraded from 8GB default)
  • 512GB Solid State Drive (upgraded from 128GB default)
  •  Touch ID and Touch Bar
  • Two thunderbolt ports

As I work with these, I plan to blog about my experience.  Specifically, I'm wondering...
  1. Will I regret the smaller screen size than my 15.6" work laptop?  Early indications are yes, I will!  ...but a larger MacBook Pro would have cost well over $2000.  Maybe I'll use an external monitor with it.
  2. Do I like the MacBook Touch Bar?  Early indications are "no, not really."  In fact, the lack of a "hard" key for Escape is very annoying.  Apple fixed that by adding back a "hard" Escape key in their 2020 models.
  3. Do I need all of this CPU performance?  We'll see.  The slowest activity I did on previous machines was whenever I would program and build Swift program for iOS.
  4. Do I need all of this memory and storage?  Again, we'll see.  I seem to consume all such available resources (I'm a pack-rat) on other machines.  However, I'm beginning to see that cloud storage allows me to not worry so much about backups AND I can set most cloud storage systems to keep local copies of my most needed files.  iCloud seems very good at this; I haven't tried selectively syncing on others as much, even though I have files in six different clouds:
    - iCloud (best so far)
    - Google Drive (where I have most of my files)
    - ASUS Web Storage
    - Dropbox (which I am migrating off)
    - iDrive (which I used only as a backup tool)
    - One Drive (I have it; don't use it)
    I'll have to blog about what I like and don't like about each.
I also have a new Rapsberry Pi 4 to play with, but I'm not sure for what.