Too slow for what and what were you using for a synthesizer? If you
were using computer intensive voices as opposed to something like Eloquence or
E-speak, the machine may have been unresponsive to the point of annoyance.
If you were using Eloquence or E-speak, it may not have been. I’m not
saying anything about the machine; I have no opinion of it. But I think
that if people make such comments, they should state what they used the machine
for and what synthesizer they were using with which screen-reader.
I
had this machine and threw it in the bin! just to slow.
On
16/05/2021 01:46, Monte Single wrote:
> If you could even move up to a low
end icore 3 or 5 processor, the
> difference would be
noticeable.
>
> In a machine like you describe, and if I had only
one choice, I would
> go for a better processor instead of more
ram.
>
> *From:*
nvda@nvda.groups.io <
nvda@nvda.groups.io> *On
Behalf Of *Jeff Samco
> *Sent:* May 15, 2021 6:20 PM
> *To:*
nvda@nvda.groups.io> *Subject:* [nvda] NVDA running on a budget
laptop
>
> I am looking to purchase a second, low cost and compact
laptop for some
> upcoming travelling. I only expect to be running NVDA,
basic web
> browsing, email using MS Outlook and simple word processing.
I don't
> know how much MVDA uses in terms of processing resources and
would like
> some advice. I am considering the following laptop:
>
> HP Stream Pro 11 G5, Celeron N4000 / 1.1 GHz, Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
> National Academic, 4 GB RAM, 128 GB EMMC, 11.6" Display 1366 X 768
(HD),
> UHD Graphics 600, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth - Kbd: US -
5VD62UT#ABA
>
> Does anyone know if this configuration will perform
well enough or
> should I move up to another level of processor?
>
Thanks for any input.
> Jeff
>
>