I have been looking for a laptop in the price range of 500 euro for a long time.
The laptop is supposed to handle office tasks like PowerPoint etc. And everyday things like YouTube, streaming services and Skype.
I myself do not have much knowledge of processors and do not know what is suitable (i3, i5, i7- 7, 8 or 10 generation). I also want to ask here first, because my mom also has a laptop and it is quite slow, and I'm not in the mood for something like that.
In addition, there are laptops with these U processors, which should be slower than that of a desktop PC.
Acer aspire 5. Is mega fast due to the SSD disk
If you want to use a laptop for "office work" as you write above, I definitely don't recommend it. The focus is on graphics because this is a training laptop. You should rather focus on work mechanics.
I'll see what I find
.LG Tobi
Do you mean faster than an HDD (which is nothing special) or faster than an SSD (because it has new technology)?
An MX250 doesn't mean anything, does it? But I can also be deceived because there's probably more of a clue.
Here you have a look at this page (https://www.allesbeste.de/test/das-beste-guenstige-office-notebook-2/) different office laptops are presented and you can choose what suits you best from the design as well as from the price and the equipment.
I'm sorry I don't understand exactly what you mean. What do you mean by "means nothing"
Ah now I understand it may be that you commented under the wrong comment. You mean the Acer Aspire 5 which has a mx250, you're right. My comment related to the Lenovo laptop.
Sorry, I looked at the laptop again and noticed that I had mixed up something.
As far as I know, the SSD of the Acer Aspire 5 is a so-called flash memory which only differs in design from a conventional SSD so both are equally fast.
Because of the speed between SSD and HDD:
An SSD can achieve speeds of up to 550 MB / s
An HDD only manages up to 120 MB / s
But you're right, an mx250 is nothing special, but perfectly fine for an office laptop.
What do you think of that?
Hdd hard drives work like CD players or records. The disk rotates and an arm with a read / write unit moves back and forth. This takes time, especially if the wear is to be kept within limits. SSDs work like USB sticks without mechanical scanning units and are therefore very, very fast, which is particularly noticeable when booting and loading larger files. My Acer doesn't need 10s to boot. SSD is expensive, however. Therefore, laptops with 2 built-in plates are often offered. An ssd for the operating system and an hhd for your own files, which saves money. When using mobile devices such as laptops, tablets and cell phones, however, large data storage devices do not make sense, because the data is then completely chaotic and sometimes distributed several times over all devices and you lose track of them. However, if you use a NaS server as a central data archive, you can save a lot of hard disk space on your end devices and save money again.
I have it here: https://www.amazon.de/...07J6TRC9M/
The quarter TB is completely enough for me