buenas como me les va; queria mostrarles lo que me trajeron los reyes por haber sido bueno, y de paso que me dijeran si esta bn mal o que, y cuales juegos buenos me recomiendan para aprovecharlo al maximo
ASUS N53S Core i7-2630QM Sandy Bridge 15-in Notebook Review
Introduction and Specifications
Brushed aluminum has become synonymous with luxury
electronics, and the ASUS N53’s (N53SV-A1) exterior is clad in it like a
suit of armor. The lid and palmrest are both coated the velvet-smooth
metal, resulting in an instantly impressive finish. The usage of
aluminum on the N53 has a dark gunmetal tint – like the ASUS U33JC
Bamboo laptop we reviewed some time ago, the N53 goes for elegance
rather than flash.
Laptops are compromises. Despite continuing reductions in processor
power draw and the physical size of hardware, there are still
trade-offs that must be made. Batteries can be made larger to provide
better portability, but this increases weight and size. Laptops can be
made smaller, but this can make the user interface uncomfortable, and
limits the hardware inside. Powerful processors and GPUs can be stuffed
inside, but this increases weight and cost while it reduces battery
life. And the list goes on and on.
Not all compromises are equal, however. There is a reason why 15.6”
laptops are the most popular and, contrary to the belief of some
tech-heads, it isn’t because consumers are stupid. Rather, it’s because
many people don’t move their laptops very far very often. But even in
this large category we have a wide range of products; while the recently
reviewed Toshiba C655 and ASUS G53 have the same display size, they
couldn’t be more different otherwise.
And now we come to the ASUS N53, a laptop that seems from afar to the
ultimate compromise - a laptop that may not be the best at anything but
offer a lot of everything. Let’s take a closer look.
The Core i7 processor is quad-core, but the slowest model available. The
GPU is quick, but not as fast as what you’d find in a “true” gaming
laptop. The 15.6” display is as mainstream as you could ask for, and
while the 750GB hard drive isn’t the biggest you could stuff inside a
laptop, but its close. Even the price is a compromise; at $1099 it’s not
a bargain, but it’s not outrageously expensive.
But compromise isn’t bad. Laptops are often asked to do many things,
and a laptop that can do most things well may be a better choice than a
laptop that can do some things perfectly, but at the price of doing
other things poorly.
no entiendo ingles pero esa es la referencia, solo que la mia tiene 6 de ram y la de video tiene otra ref, pero igual es nvidia
ASUS N53S Core i7-2630QM Sandy Bridge 15-in Notebook Review
Introduction and Specifications
Brushed aluminum has become synonymous with luxury
electronics, and the ASUS N53’s (N53SV-A1) exterior is clad in it like a
suit of armor. The lid and palmrest are both coated the velvet-smooth
metal, resulting in an instantly impressive finish. The usage of
aluminum on the N53 has a dark gunmetal tint – like the ASUS U33JC
Bamboo laptop we reviewed some time ago, the N53 goes for elegance
rather than flash.
Laptops are compromises. Despite continuing reductions in processor
power draw and the physical size of hardware, there are still
trade-offs that must be made. Batteries can be made larger to provide
better portability, but this increases weight and size. Laptops can be
made smaller, but this can make the user interface uncomfortable, and
limits the hardware inside. Powerful processors and GPUs can be stuffed
inside, but this increases weight and cost while it reduces battery
life. And the list goes on and on.
Not all compromises are equal, however. There is a reason why 15.6”
laptops are the most popular and, contrary to the belief of some
tech-heads, it isn’t because consumers are stupid. Rather, it’s because
many people don’t move their laptops very far very often. But even in
this large category we have a wide range of products; while the recently
reviewed Toshiba C655 and ASUS G53 have the same display size, they
couldn’t be more different otherwise.
And now we come to the ASUS N53, a laptop that seems from afar to the
ultimate compromise - a laptop that may not be the best at anything but
offer a lot of everything. Let’s take a closer look.
The Core i7 processor is quad-core, but the slowest model available. The
GPU is quick, but not as fast as what you’d find in a “true” gaming
laptop. The 15.6” display is as mainstream as you could ask for, and
while the 750GB hard drive isn’t the biggest you could stuff inside a
laptop, but its close. Even the price is a compromise; at $1099 it’s not
a bargain, but it’s not outrageously expensive.
But compromise isn’t bad. Laptops are often asked to do many things,
and a laptop that can do most things well may be a better choice than a
laptop that can do some things perfectly, but at the price of doing
other things poorly.
no entiendo ingles pero esa es la referencia, solo que la mia tiene 6 de ram y la de video tiene otra ref, pero igual es nvidia