Lenovo markets Thinkpad X-series as "business grade" when these are shipped with an ultrabook tier undervolage CPU.
I'm OK with thick laptops as long as the increase in thickness provides an increase in computing power. As in 2017, it makes more sense to buy a dell xps rather than a small thinkpad.
I'd also consider a Chromebook but I don't feel comfortable with having to "hack my way" in order to install linux on it and I find the lack of support frightening since I don't have enough knowledge to troubleshoot without abundant documentation.
>>61932473
nice blog dude
>>61932473
Well done. You're hired!
>>61932473
Those are business grade.
What the fuck do you think businesspeople do?
>>61933180
By this standard you might also qualify a raspberry pi as "business grade" computer.
>>61933246
>I have to go on a work trip next week, and I need to be able to work on my project on my way there, and present it once I get there.
>My Raspberry Pi will do!
>>61933318
>be able to work on my project
It's all about convenience, which is why I discussed the thickness vs. CPU horsepower in the blogpost.