Looking for the right laptop to use while you get your engineering or CS degree? Here's a guide to help.
Engineering professionals on the go often need some incredibly powerful PC hardware. Needless to say, if you need 0 compromises on power, affordability and mobility both fly out the window.
A TitanUS X95MW. Image courtesy of TitanUS.
While for someone like that, the perfect pick might be an MSI Mobile Workstation, students like me would be hard pressed to hand over cash we could use to purchase a car, books, or food for a laptop—especially with mounting college debts. Fortunately, there’s hope!
Engineering students like myself often run into a problem when they are heading to college. Many are not of the opinion that a Macbook is the right choice, or simply don’t have $999 to throw at a base model 13” Macbook Air. Where in most majors, you can get by with just about anything, certain engineering professions require the use of laptops that meet specific requirements.
- The requirements engineers have for their laptops are a bit different than for many other professions. We don't necessarily care about having the thinnest, lightest, sleekest computer in the room. However, for those less versed in all the PC jargon and less willing to spend weeks shopping for deals, it’s easy to spend over a thousand dollars trying to get a good machine when you could get by with just a few hundred.
I’ve arranged this guide into three categories: Computer Science, Electrical/Computer Engineering, and Mechanical Engineering. I put them in the order of increasingly powerful computing needs.
Those more expensive options on the list (like the $800 Inspiron) are perfect for any content creation needs from graphic design to video editing, plus CAD and 3D modelling work, and even light gaming. I also not only created links to the proper search filters on Amazon for said laptops, but picked out a few options I feel stand out. Usually, these are especially good deals for the included hardware and well-reviewed models. I also filled out the price range I feel is fair to meet or exceed the presented requirements.
Computer Science:
Specs for Computer Science laptops are based on what computers can run Eclipse, a commonly used editing platform. Eclipse's rather meager list of specs is proof that even 8-year-old laptops have no problems coding.- 13+” display (768p min, <= 1080p)
- Basically any Intel CPU
- If you will be compiling often, go for better CPUs
- 3GB RAM minimum
- 32GB SSD to 250+GB HDD
- Decent battery life
- Can run Linux (Chromebooks with Intel CPUs will work)
- Under $450
Based on these specifications, here's the list of laptops that might work for your CS needs:
- ThinkPad T400: Windows 10, Intel Core 2 Duo, 4GB RAM, 120GB HDD, 14.1in.
- Acer Aspire One Cloudbook 14-Inch HD, 64GB SSD, Windows 10, Intel Celeron N3050 1.6 GHz, 2GB RAM, Windows 10
- HP 14" HD Laptop PC: with Intel Celeron Dual Core 1.6 GHz, 2GB RAM, 32GB SSD, Windows 10 (Blue) [no specific model listed]
- Acer Chromebook 14: Aluminum, 14-inch Full HD, Intel Celeron Quad-Core N3160, 4GB LPDDR3, 32GB SSD
The Acer Chromebook 14. Image courtesy of Amazon.
- ASUS Vivobook: Quad core Pentium CPU, 14” 1080p display, 4GB RAM, 128GB SSD
The ASUS Vivobook. Image courtesy of PC World.
- HP Pavilion x360: 13.3-Inch 2 in 1 Touchscreen Convertible Laptop (Intel Core i3-6100U Processor, 4GB DDR3 RAM, 500GB HDD, Windows 10)
Side note: Many of my CS buddies look for backlit keyboards in their machines which are typically a premium feature. However, since you'd likely only need that in one room, consider buying an external backlit keyboard. Coders use those a lot, anyhow, and some are super cheap. I've personally used this one.
Filters:
Amazon - CS Laptops
Amazon - Keyboards
Electrical Engineering and/or Computer Engineering
These specs for EE/ECE laptops are based on which laptops can run AutoCAD Electrical. This is the most demanding PCB design software I could find and it's still not very demanding. Computer-focused people will have the same coding needs as CS folks, plus the need to use light graphical tools for designing boards.- 14+” display, 1080p preferred
- I3 or better with Intel HD Graphics or better
- 4GB RAM (8GB preferred)
- 500+GB HDD (128+GB SSD preferred)
- Decent battery life
- Windows for AutoCAD Electrical, can use Linux for EagleCAD, KiCAD
- Under $600
Based on the above list, here are the laptops that might work best for electrical and/or computer engineering:
- ASUS Vivobook: Quad core Pentium CPU, 14” 1080p display, 4GB RAM, 128GB SSD
- HP 15-ay013nr: 15.6" Full-HD Laptop (6th Generation Core i5, 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD) with Windows 10
The HP 15-ay013nr. Image courtesy of Amazon.
- Acer Aspire E 15: Intel Core i5-6200U + Nvidia GTX 940M, 8GB DDR3L, 15.6” 1080p display, 1TB HDD, Windows 10 Home
- Acer Aspire E 15: Intel Core i5-6200U + Nvidia GTX 940MX, 8GB DDR3L, 15.6” 1080p display, 256GB SSD, Windows 10 Home
- Acer Aspire E 15: Intel Core i7-6500U + Nvidia GTX 940MX, 8GB DDR3L, 15.6” 1080p display, 256GB SSD, Windows 10 Home
The Acer Aspire E 15. Image courtesy of Amazon.
Filter:
Amazon - EE Laptops
Mechanical Engineering
These specs for ME laptops are based on what's needed to run Autodesk Inventor Pro, a program that's very easy-to-use and free for students. I have plenty of experience with this design tool. Solidworks is a more commonly used alternative with heavier system requirements but is unspecific about what graphics hardware it will work on (I assume at least 2GB Vid-RAM).Note: The “recommended” specs are for desktop workstations. 2GB VidRAM is typical.
- 15” (15.6”) display, 1080p
- I5 4th gen or better
- Discrete GPU (Nvidia GTX series, 940M or better)
- 8GB RAM (can always add more)
- SSD highly preferred (256+GB)
- Battery life > 5hrs
- MUST run Windows
- Under $1000
Based on these specs, here are the laptops that might best suit your ME needs:
- Acer Aspire E 15: Intel Core i7-6500U + Nvidia GTX 940MX, 8GB DDR3L, 15.6” 1080p display, 256GB SSD, Windows 10 Home
- Acer Aspire V 15: Intel Core i5-6300HQ Quad Core, NVIDIA GTX 950M, 8GB DDR4, 15.6 Full HD, 256GB SSD, Windows 10 Home
- Asus 15-inch Gaming Laptop: Intel Core i7-6500U GTX 950M, 15.6" Full HD 1920x1080, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, Backlit Keyboard, Windows 10
The Asus gaming laptop. Image courtesy of Amazon.
- Dell Inspiron 7559: i5-6300HQ Quad Core + Nvidia GTX 960M 4GB, 8GB DDR3L, 15.6” 1080p display, 256GB SSD
The Dell Inspiron 7559. Image courtesy of Digital Trends.
- HP Pavilion 15t: i5 or i7 quad core, GTX 950M 2GB or 960M 4GB, 1080p or 4K (optional touchscreen), 1TB HDD or 256GB SSD, 8GB DDR4 [only if on sale]
- Acer Aspire V15 Nitro Black Edition: Intel Core i7-6700HQ, 8GB DDR4 RAM, 1TB HDD, 15.6-inch Full HD Screen, GTX 960M with 4GB VRAM, Windows 10 Home.
The Acer Aspire V15 Nitro. Image courtesy of Acer.
Filter:
PortablePicker - ME Laptops
Amazon - Laptops for ME
Keep in mind that, while a Google search for ‘gaming laptop’ will net plenty of machines with the CPU/GPU/RAM ME students need, it’s very common for those to have very small batteries which won’t get through two classes. Visit manufacturer webpages and check out the pack capacity in Wh (watt-hours) for specific models. You’ll want over 60Wh for a beefy PC—dedicated graphics are power hungry.
You can typically run anything required of an engineering student on campus desktops. So if, for instance, you’re an ME student who can’t afford a $500 laptop, you could always fall back on campus resources and get a cheaper laptop. It also pays to upgrade rather than look fo a whole new model when it comes to wanting more RAM or an SSD. Online guides are all over the place: Simply look up your laptop model on iFixit or look for YouTube video tutorials. There's a chance you can be done in 20 minutes with no prior experience (well, longer if you count the cloning time for an SSD swap).
Remember: Try to spend less than $1000. Once you cross that line, you may as well get a $500-600 desktop and spend the money you saved on a good $400 laptop. The performance of a desktop i3-6100 handily beats even an i7-6500U mobile CPU, and a desktop GTX 750 ti edges out a mobile GTX 960M. Together, those desktop components are about $220, while a laptop with those specs would run you $700 easily.
Good luck!
Subject/Item | Meaning/Significance |
---|---|
Core i Series | ex) i5-6200U: i5 Series, 6th Generation; U is dual-, HQ is quad-core |
CPU | Central Processing Unit, a.k.a. processor. |
GPU | Graphics Processing Unit, a.k.a graphics card |
HDD/SSD | Hard Disk Drive / Solid State Drive. SSD is way faster, but expensive. |
RAM (Random Access Memory) Notation | DDR3/DDR3L are similar. DDR4 is a bit more efficient, newer. |
CPU Hierarchy | 6th gen is newest. All 6th gen U CPUs < 6th i5 HQ < 6th i7 HQ |
GPU Hierarchy | If 940M is 100%, 940MX is 120%, 950M is 195%, 960M is 220% |
Resolution | HD is 720p to 900p, FHD or Full HD is 1080p. 768p is common. |
Compare CPU | http://cpuboss.com/ |
Compare GPU | http://gpuboss.com/ |
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