Home 2023 Forums Digital DJ Gear Choosing Laptop

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  • #1025313
    tom cryonicangel
    Participant

    15″ with Intel i5 is fine and will run without problems with the actual VDJ and other DJ software and it is powerful enough to run any DJ software in the next 3-5 years.  AMD should work, but most people are using Intel – more power for the same money.

    4GB RAM is enough, 8GB is nice to have.

    HDD is fine, SSD makes it faster and is better for transport. Some people change the DVD/BluRay for a caddy with a second HDD.

    GPU – if you dont want to play or do VJing, any onboard GPU will be fine.

    Everything else depends on the model, some laptops are just great, other have weak spots.

    4x USB is nice to have.

    I have a Lenovo N581 with 2,3GHz i5 Ivy Bridge CPU and Intel GPU, 8GB RAM and SSD+HDD. Works fine, is cheap enough (OK, SSD + RAM upgrade was not so cheap) and it works great.

    Ultrabooks & Netbooks are too slow and not worth the money – you lose some weight and you pay for it.

    Resolution – as high as you can get it. FullHD is nice. VDJ has skins and is looking fine on small resolution, other software like Traktor dont scale down and dont show anything on the display if the resolution is too low.

    #1025318
    Boki
    Participant

    Thanks a lot for answering my question!So mac with dual core intel 2,5ghz wouldnt work?thanks

    #1025321
    gullum
    Participant

    that mac will work fine with VDJ I’ve had a white Macbook 2009 <span style=”background-color: #fbfbfb; font-family: arial, Geneva, Tahoma, sans-serif; line-height: 22px;”>dual core intel 2,4ghz</span><span style=”line-height: 1.5em;”> 4 GB ram no problem with VDJ. I’ve also used it with SeratoDJ. Traktor Pro, Mixvibes Cross. I now have a i7 2 ghz  8GB ram MBP SSD+HDD only real </span>difference is preparation of songs. Analyzing songs is faster. Platinum Note can do 8 songs at a time vs. 2 on old mac. But for regular DJ’ing there is not much difference in speed.

    #1025322
    Boki
    Participant

    thanks a lot.Does it matter because it’s mac ffrom 2008?I just dont want it to be too much for cpu..so I dont want cpu meter in vVDJ go red.

    #1025344
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    You might run into upgrading Mac OSX problems. And that might eventually lead to problems with software. I wouldn’t start with a laptop that is too old when you buy it (4 yrs+). I had an older MacBook but traded it in for a 1 1/2 year old one within two months. Better to err on the newer side imho.

    Greetinx.

    #1025463
    Boki
    Participant

    Thanks everyone for answers.What do you think would this one work well?Thanks

     

    http://www.notebookcheck.net/Review-Lenovo-IdeaPad-Y560-Notebook.33963.0.html

    #1025482
    D. Dodge
    Participant

    Just an FYI, I bought a dell laptop for $500 and it works fantastic, no problems at all with VDJ.  It has:  i7, 8gb ram, 15″ mon, 1TB, USB 3.0, 3usb slots total, HDMI out, and dvd.  I was originally going to buy a mac or sony for over a $1000 but I’m glad I didn’t since this baby does just fine.  My only complaint is no light up keyboard, I fixed that with a $3 LED clip on light.

    #1025484
    Lamid45G
    Participant

    Go MAC or suffer the Wrath !!

    #1025505
    Terry_42
    Keymaster

    The 2008 Mac will run it fine. I still use my 2008 as backup (Core2Duo 2.4 GHz, 4GB RAM) and it runs all DJ programs without going into the red.

    #1025511
    Boki
    Participant

    thanks a lot!what do you think about the laptop I posted?would it run fine?And dj-duss which model you buyed?thanks

     

     

    #1025518
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    @Brutes: that laptop I would say is overkill. Especially the graphics are way out there (typical gaming machine). All these extr features tend to produce extra heat, which you don’t want. Will it work? No doubt? But imho you’ll be using less than half it’s potential. Really an i5 CPU,  4 to 8 GB of Ram and a decent size SSD should work just fine. Just be sure to streamline, optimize and strip the OS (especially Windows 8) to it’s bare bones. Also use it for DJ-ing and nothing else. If you need to use it for something else, try to make it dual-boot.

    @Everyone: there’s a beta about for a linux version of MiXvibes Cross. This could be a very good alternative for DJ’s. Linux tends to be much faster on the same hardware as windows. And as Linux is free, you could easily go dual boot on your windows laptop with linux as your second boot option for dj-ing. I am running it now on a small and couple of years old mini-PC (essentially a laptop in a small fixed desktop casing) and it runs Cross and my dmx lighting software Cuelux without a hitch so far.

    Greetinx.

     

    #1025528
    Vesper
    Participant

    As a DJ, I’d say that you do not entirely NEED the best laptop in the world specs wise. But you need to make your choice quite well.

    For instance, Choose an operating system you are comfortable with using and that supports your software (preferably natively, however, for Linux applications such as WINE may help you run some awkward software). Now, Read up on the tech-specs of your software and choose your laptop based around this. You do NOT want to run software on an under-spec PC. I’d recommend making sure everything is specced well, but if RAM is a bit low, you may be able to upgrade it nice and easily. Although this varies depending on the laptop construction. So unless you are sure and you get a big benefit from using this laptop rather than a properly specced one, carry on looking.

    Now, There are a few other factors that are pretty important here. Those are Battery life, Rigidity, Screen size, Screen brightness, weight etc. Now. Screen size is very important and depending on where you intend to use the laptop, so is brightness. If you are going to be playing somewhere where glare is a risk (a club, outside, etc) then make sure you check the screen brightness before you buy! And as for screen size. It’s all about measuring portability against work area. With a 17″ laptop, you will get loads of work area, but it’ll be harder to lug around. I would personally advise against tiny 7″ netbooks too! (often software is too big for it’s tiny screen, not to mention most netbooks are brutally underspecced).

    Now the rest is down to personal preference. If possible, try things out on the laptop (if you want my advice, find a local store like PC World, try out the gear there, and then order it elsewhere. Despite what the nice sales representative tells you, It will be cheaper elsewhere). Make sure you check a few essential things as well as a few you may have overseen. Specs is obvious, but make sure to give the screen a little wobble and see if it looks sturdy. Is the keyboard nice to use? Is the trackpad responsive? Do the little rubber stands on the bottom hold the laptop up enough to stop it overheating? Some of these things may sound pretty negligable. But avoiding a BSOD is essential, and a well-cooled laptop is sure to do that.

    Now, For a few bits of advice

    -Picking up a laptop direct from the manufacturer is a great idea. You are ensured a decent warranty, and the gear inside is always fresh up to manufacturer standards

    -Don’t trust the sales guy. He is there to drain your pocket. Do you REALLY need a mac? It is nice to have one but it comes at a hefty price

    -Ignore the Operating System war. As long as your software runs stably on the OS, why should you be bothered about the multi-threading capability of bla-bla-bla…

    -Don’t get ripped off, but equally, don’t skimp. This one will probably be the one most people get wrong. A lot of people believe you need a top-of-the-range laptop and end up spending thousands… And then there are some who think they get the better deal by cutting down dramatically. Both of these can be avoided by being educated about what you buy. A penny saved is a penny earned!

    -Go for laptop brands you know you can trust. A well trusted brand is always a good sign. Dell i can certainly vouch for. And if you know any niche brands that are good, use em too! Novatech is local to me and they are really good for laptops. The only real downside is if you somehow lose your graphics driver, or sound controller. Drivers are harder to find (Still, If you know what you’re doing. A quick look in PCI database helps lol)

    #1025846
    Boki
    Participant

    Thank you guys a lot..I mean this answers are so helpfull!!!

    Just wanted you to post me some laptops you think are great and that you used?

    I saw so many laptops and really can’t choose..But if you suggest something you used and worked good,I might buy it.

    @Vesper which laptop are you using?thanks


    @DJ
    Vintage on what mini pc are you running?thanks a lot

    #1025860
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    Hey Brutes,

    Currently it’s a Dual Core 7xxx-series with 2GB and 60GB harddisk. Just for testing. First glance it looks pretty impressive for such a relatively lightweight platform.

    As far as laptop advice goes, I won’t burn my fingers on that one. I will give you one tip (purely my own opinion). I would choose a nice, relatively young, used Macbook over a new windows laptop if the primary use of the laptop is DJ-ing. Look for one of my older posts on the subject. There are some rather significant reasons to choose MacBook over windows platforms. Some are practical (aluminum casing, standard backlit keys and magnetic power cord connector – don’t underestimate this feature! broken power connectors account for an absurd high percentage of laptop failure and often the repair involves a rather pricey motherboard replacement), some have to do with OS features (the way Mac OSX handles sound is way more sophisticated and in essence driverless).

    So, once you set your budget, take a look at what that money buys you in used MacBooks too.

    Again, just my two cents.

    Greetinx.

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