LAPTOP- Off the Shelf for Trading- preferably 15 inch Max

ASUS electronics are notoriously poor. Everyone I know with an ASUS laptop or phone recently has had major issues.

That has not been my experience, nor the experience of the people I spoke to. I bought an ASUS laptop for travel (super light, ZenBook), and 2 portable screens (ZenScreen), and they all fit perfectly in a small Osprey backpack. I have had them for about a year, and ZERO issues. I was big into Dell, because that's all I used since 1998. I am pretty satisfied with the switch, and if it gets lost/stolen, easy to replace. Not a tragedy...

The point is that there are plenty of solid competitors out there. I got stuck with the brand Dell, because that's all I ever knew since the 1990s. Ironically, my previous laptop was a Dell Latitude, which was not cheap. Within 3 years, the touchpad started peeling off, and bending. To top it off, bubbles emerged on the left side of the touchpad. I pierced one of them with a knife, AND FIRE CAME OUT. I threw it away...
 
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That has not been my experience, nor the experience of the people I spoke to. I bought an ASUS laptop for travel (super light, ZenBook), and 2 portable screens (ZenScreen), and they all fit perfectly in a small Osprey backpack. I have had them for about a year, and ZERO issues. I was big into Dell, because that's all I used since 1998. I am pretty satisfied with the switch, and if it gets lost/stolen, easy to replace. Not a tragedy...

The point is that there are plenty of solid competitors out there. I got stuck with the brand Dell, because that's all I ever knew since the 1990s. Ironically, my previous laptop was a Dell Latitude, which was not cheap. Within 3 years, the touchpad started peeling off, and bending. To top it off, bubbles emerged on the left side of the touchpad. I pierced one of them with a knife, AND FIRE CAME OUT. I threw it away...

Dell seems to be popular in America, never understood why. They are mediocre at best. Had an Asus phone here, within 2 years started shutting itself down randomly. A laptop that would do the same that was less than a year old. Turned out to be a chipset issue, if the warranty was out, would have been a throwaway.
Higher end Thinkpads have issues too but almost all can be fixed relatively cheaply and components are usually high quality.
 
Looking for New Off the shelf Laptop with 32 GB Ram - 500SSD Max - 15 inch preferably all under $1,600.00 Any suggestions with what you are using ???
Currently working at Home with a Dell Desktop less than yr old, never gets over 30% Memory and 25 % CPU usage. ( Intel i7-10700 with 32GB Ram - 8 core / 16 threads ,WD_BLACK 500GB SN750 NVMe ), And I am running Tradestation 9.5 with 5 Desktops with Scanners and over 30+ Charts as well as Trade-Ideas scanning. Viewing this on a Dell 43 Inch and a Dell 29inch Monitor. In a couple of Months Im going to be on the road and will be working out of places like WEWORK CO-Work Spaces. Cant shlep the Desktop or Monitors around So Im looking for a LAPTOP that will handle not the complete array of charts and Scanners and Trade Ideas but something that wont be slow and drive me crazy. Plan is to go with TWO-
Dell 27 Monitors - P2719H which can be rotated vertical giving me a lots of real estate to view similar to home They have MST Display Port so they can be daisy chained together.
My Current setup at Home.
MView attachment 260289

Hey I'm familiar with your type of setup and workload. For laptop (15 inch under $1600) I recommend a Surface Book 2. It is the previous year model, and they often go on sale. The 16GB RAM version is more than enough to handle your complete array of charts, scanners, and trade ideas.

For trading on the go, a very popular recommendation is to trade over a server. Check out our 6x AMD Threadripper, 16GB RAM remote servers. They are only $119 per month, and can also smoothly run your entire workload. Especially since you are going to be on the road, trading from an always connected remote server is very attractive because you can take your entire workspace with you everywhere you go and connect to it using any old device, even a mobile phone. For example if the Wifi becomes spotty at the co-working space, you can connect to your server using mobile data through your phone to manage live trading positions. Your workspace on the server always has 1,000mb/s internet connection, regardless of your own personal connection.

For comparison, Intel i7-10700 has a CPU benchmark score of 17,328
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i7-10700+@+2.90GHz&id=3747

Our AMD 3900x has a CPU benchmark of 32,898
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=AMD+Ryzen+9+3900X&id=3493

Our subscriptions are month to month so you can test it to see if it works for you, before committing to a $1600 purchase.
A server dedicated to trading also runs much faster than a similarly spec'ed home PC because it doesn't have the bloatware of Windows 10.
 
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Dell seems to be popular in America, never understood why. They are mediocre at best. Had an Asus phone here, within 2 years started shutting itself down randomly. A laptop that would do the same that was less than a year old. Turned out to be a chipset issue, if the warranty was out, would have been a throwaway.
Higher end Thinkpads have issues too but almost all can be fixed relatively cheaply and components are usually high quality.

It could be marketing, at the school, university level, etc., in America (basically indoctrination!). It was ALL Dell, and you got used to them at an early age.

Now, there are so many competitors offering good value, and Dell just got lazy.

Prices have also gone down dramatically, across the board. So the OP's budget is actually very doable in this day, and age. Not so much, let's say 5+ years ago...
 
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Dells are pretty horrible. I bought a top tier business model from them. Keys started coming off after 6 months to a year. Had to keep them taped to the surrounding keys ever since. So, I got mad and went Fujitsu instead. Fujitsu had an American branch that sold laptops made in Japan. This was before Lenovo bought out their PC department.
 
Dells are pretty horrible. I bought a top tier business model from them. Keys started coming off after 6 months to a year. Had to keep them taped to the surrounding keys ever since. So, I got mad and went Fujitsu instead. Fujitsu had an American branch that sold laptops made in Japan. This was before Lenovo bought out their PC department.
My Old Dell laptop's are just fine. Trooping on and on and on.
What did tech support say about replacement for keyboard?
 
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