Desktop vs laptop vs ...
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Warning: this post  is an old text  (at least 2 years old,  I think). I
have got a proper desktop at  work after that (and the mentioned laptop
died after that - now I have  a Lenovo x260 instead) and I replaced the
Compute Stick with the  ODOID but the rest of the  text is still valid,
unfortunately.
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I use  a 17" laptop  at work. I  have got it  from a previous  user who
needed it for  a different use thus  it is not the best  machine for my
needs.  I use  it  mostly as  a  desktop with  an  external 24"  screen
(1920x1200), a keyboard (the Das  Keyboard), and the mouse (an ordinary
old  IBM/Lenovo infrared  mouse)  attached.  I use  it  sometimes as  a
laptop. But I recently computed that it was for about 1% of time.

At home  I use desktop(s). For  the most of work  I still use a  SGI O2
with 1600x1024 screen  and for modern stuff (complicated  or secure www
browsing,  interfacing modern  USB devices)  I have  the Intel  Compute
Stick. There are more desktop  machines around (a Power Macintosh 6100,
SGI  Indigo, SGI  Indy, iMac  G5)  but on  daily  basis I  use the  two
mentioned  above. I  never  tried to  analyse the  time  that I  divide
between them but now it can be around 5:1.

There are other devices at home but  an Android tablet is used just for
gaming and  for journal reading  and the PDAs  are used to  write posts
like  this text  (often in  the bed)  and for  a light  reading (I  use
Plucker to offline reading of some sites).

But I still use desktop more time than the all others combined.

The "most of  work" which I don on my  O2 includes: texts writing/LaTeX
typesetting,  most  of  WWW   browsing  (Links/Lynx),  programming  and
computing, photos viewing  and music playing. For obvious  reasons I do
not do online shopping here.

There is also the Ubuntu Tablet.  It was meant as a desktop replacement
but it is still less comfortable than my oldest desktop:

- UI is  far inferior to any  current desktop (the Unity  8 still lacks
basic features like virtual desktops,  keyboard control of window sizes
and positions or customisation of screen fonts,...)

- limited  possibilities to  use so-called "legacy  applications" (they
are normal  ones that are available  on the Linux desktops:  a Firefox,
the  LibreOffice)   and  there  are  compatibility   issues,  ergonomic
issues,...

-  limited range  of  compatible  monitors (none  of  my  home LCDs  is
compatible, for example)


-  limited range of available software (no Paraview, for example)

- limited  USB host  functionality (one  can connect  a keyboard  and a
mouse but nothing more)

- limited computing power (CPU speed  and RAM size): it is subjectively
much slower than  a Intel-Atom based Compute Stick  which is comparable
it terms of CPU MHz and RAM size (and for actual number crunching it is
slower, too).


Thus the Ubuntu tablet has currently  no potential to replace any of my
desktops. And  I was  just one  or two  occasions this  year to  use it
during  traveling. So  the time  that I  spend while  using it  is very
limited.