, for those unfamiliar, is an Intel technology built into a system’s chips that helps IT professionals manage, diagnose, and update devices remotely; it also enables a bunch of security and virtualization features that tend to make IT departments happy.
For one, I only averaged three hours and 35 minutes of battery life, which would be a big problem even if everything else about this device was incredible. But even while on power, I could feel the thing chugging toward the higher end of my workload. For example, while I was operating a second screen over Thunderbolt, loading some files from external drives, running a few downloads, and trying to work over that in 20-ish Chrome tabs, the Latitude had visible slowdown.
Same old azz dated style since the early 2000's
Wasn’t that obvious before?
Speaking as a business user - all we want is good power to run complex spreadsheets and decks, good keyboard, screen and a camera. And the holy grail of it all - A GOOD ENOUGH BATTERY LIFE. MacBook Pro solves all of this. Why are we still stuck in these windows era ultrabooks
your new minimal website design convinced me that minimalistic design sucks.
Companies pay about half that for this configuration.