First of all, this is not criticising or taking a cheap shot or really political at all. I am fascinated that a lawyer uses/brings a gaming laptop to trial and I can’t help but think it was contrived as another distraction.

What do y’all think? BTW, how expensive are they generally?

You think she plays League?

  • @[email protected]
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    52 years ago

    I think it’s judging not using the right tool for a job. Legal work is usually communication and looking through tons of documents over long hours. A gaming laptop has bad battery life and has a bunch of goofy drivers required to run them which can be a security risk.

  • @[email protected]
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    232 years ago

    Some of my requirements for a laptop are matte screen, backlit keyboard, and a properly centered trackpad. My choices were either a Macbook or a ROG without a numpad.

  • rubikcuber
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    332 years ago

    I once worked for a company who had an accountant who used a gaming laptop. They didn’t play games, but it was the only decent one they could get with a number pad.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      72 years ago

      See, like that is a perfectly reasonable off-label use for something like this given the context.

    • people_are_cute
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      142 years ago

      The administrative offices in my little bro’s college also use HP Omen laptops for some reason. It was a treat watching boomers one-finger-type on RGB keyboards 😂

  • Brkdncr
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    142 years ago

    You’d want a Lenovo think pad or dell. They are enterprise-grade, with enterprise support and enterprise software.

    The legal industry is almost 100% Lenovo/dell/hp. All legal software runs on them, and the legal it industry collaborates on issues,testing.

    Lenovo and dell can spec an enterprise laptop that would be just as good if not better than what’s on that desk.

    This screams “buy me the most expensive laptop you can” but they were talking to their nephew who “knows computers”

    What a clown show.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Actually, dell and Lenovo charge a large enterprise tax.

      It’s typically cheaper to buy a gaming laptop vs a similarly specced “enterprise” laptop.

      There is little difference between them, other than “enterprise drivers” (which are just signed drivers) and some virtualization differences. Neither of which are required for a lawyer.

      But sure, I bet a law firm has some nephew picking laptops and doesn’t just allocate out laptops

      🙄

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      If dell is the bar for enterprise grade then that’s not saying much. Everything I’ve seen from them in the last decade has been total ass. I’m using a 10 year old port replicator at work because I can’t run 3 monitors off my laptop with any of their newer shit.

    • @[email protected]
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      42 years ago

      I doubt any legal software requires enterprise hardware to run. You tend to go through those companies because they have the support structure setup for enterprises, otherwise the majority of what people do on their computers is pretty hardware agnostic, especially with how much is web based these days.

      Also with the shortages over the past couple years just getting any laptop matters more in many cases than getting a specific laptop. At the same time, at least learn to turn off the RGB for a business environment.

      • Brkdncr
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        12 years ago

        You’re not wrong, legal software doesn’t require special hardware to run, but when your PDF editor with its document management system plugin no longer displays more than 2 pages when viewing them in outlook’s attachment preview and it’s seemingly related to dpi and the monitor, it’s helpful if you are using hardware that is used by many other law firms with a similar combination of hardware and software.

        Anyone in legal IT, or even other lawyers, would laugh at you for using a gaming laptop.

  • @[email protected]
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    122 years ago

    I’m so happy this distraction tactic is working and everyone is talking about a goddamn laptop instead of the actual court case.

  • 𝔹𝕚𝕫𝕫𝕝𝕖
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    332 years ago

    So, hot take here, who cares what laptop she uses? Criticize her for the direct harm to democracy that she’s doing, not the fucking rig she has. Some of y’all need to grow the fuck up.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      102 years ago

      Again, the tenor of this post might be getting away from us here. This is a novel/neat thing to see since I’ve never seen anything like it in a courtroom at trial.

      There’s zero moral or whatever judgement. I find it amusing and harmless and more of a conversation piece than having any implicit commentary.

  • darq
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    262 years ago

    Who cares? Like genuinely who cares? It’s a chunky laptop. Big whoop.

  • Greater Than Stupid
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    52 years ago

    so i think the deal here is that she is running external monitors so trump, at least, has his own view. maybe she got it to beef up the gpu for that?

  • @[email protected]
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    362 years ago

    Well, it’s a ROG laptop, and they can go for north of $1000 USD fairly easily.

    What I’m curious about is why does her law firm do byod? You’d want client files locked down with whole disk encryption - and probably domain joined. It’s much more likely that you get a Thinkpad or Dell something.

    • @[email protected]
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      352 years ago

      Almost zero chance she is with a serious firm right now. No large firm wants Trump as a client. She’s most likely operating a little boutique firm. This happens all the time when a lawyer wants the client and the firm doesn’t due to a conflict, negative attention, etc. A handful of people and maybe an office manager with no other admin staff. There’s no IT. She needed a laptop with HDMI out for presentations in court and wanted it to be fast too. She probably went to Best Buy asking for that and walked out with a gaming laptop.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 years ago

        Now I’m curious why a law person would need a fast computer for their job :-)

        I mean isn’t they mostly operating spreadsheets and presentations? Not like rendering 3D worlds or Spirting or something?

        I mean I totally get someone want a beefy laptop and to be fair, I don’t even know what the “controversy” is about.

        • @[email protected]
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          152 years ago

          Trial lawyers often work with fairly large datasets and some specialized applications. There’s a ton of discovery materials for a case like this one and it’s all indexed and searchable. They will have deposition transcripts that need to be searchable so they can check them while a witness is on the stand. They will also be running presentations and playing weird video formats. They usually need a good CPU and a nice chunk of RAM because the last thing they need is a laggy computer in court when everyone is watching.

          • @[email protected]
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            12 years ago

            Like the case with blue origins recently, I remember something like a trial being postpone because the PDFs they sent were so big that the court system would crash.

          • @[email protected]
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            62 years ago

            not to mention she might just have any sort of computer related hobby which requires some amount of power. not just gaming but any kind of demanding software or locally hosted AI or something of the sort. Saw someone elsewhere in the thread suggest she just asked the guy at best buy or listened to a gamer nephew’s advice as if a woman can’t decide to get a high-spec computer for her own reasons

              • @[email protected]
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                22 years ago

                If you’re in IT, you know most people don’t know anything about computers.

                But then again, if you’re not in IT, you “know” how “incelar” (haha get it?) most IT people can be.

    • @[email protected]
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      172 years ago

      It doesn’t have to be BYOD. The firm might willing to procure a specific machine for her. Or she might have enough clout to make them get her what she wants.

      • @[email protected]
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        82 years ago

        Maybe. It’s also weird because ROG has their led control app, Aura which will auto adjust your RGB based on apps/profiles. She either had a profile set up to do the flashy-lid or it was triggered by an application.

        Regardless, you would think a lawyer who requested such a device would know how to disable that profile and/or how to disable the light show without literally shutting the lid and covering it.

          • Otter
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            112 years ago

            Probably should care a little, since lawyers work hard to look “presentable” and “professional” in court. While it shouldn’t affect anything, it does have an effect on the outcome of a trial.

            So it comes back to if she didn’t know how, or if it was intentional

            • @[email protected]
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              122 years ago

              Since when does Trump have a history of hiring “presentable” and “professional” lawyers?

      • Hot Saucerman
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        2 years ago

        Considering how much full disk encryption can slow down a machine in daily use, she might have used that as a justification for asking for a “beefier” PC that would slowed down less by encryption.

        • @[email protected]
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          112 years ago

          The impact is negligible. It’s a few extra seconds during boot. You won’t even notice during use except maybe for specific IO-intensive workloads. FDE on a modern computer isn’t like the junk from 15 years ago with third party security apps. There’s no reason not to use it.

          • m-p{3}
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            42 years ago

            Indeed, it’s mostly hardware-accelerated nowadays.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 years ago

      All you need for DJ and Bitlocker is a pro version of Windows. It’s a 99$ upgrade if you have the home version. The laptop may have come with pro anyway because it supports more ram than the home version.

    • kirklennon
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      162 years ago

      What I’m curious about is why does her law firm do byod?

      Trump is no longer able to hire attorneys from large firms. He’s toxic to their other clients and also tends to not pay. You have to be an ideologue without any other big clients in order to work for him. From their website, she seems to be the head of a four-attorney firm.

      • @[email protected]
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        92 years ago

        Exactly. Attorneys leave their big firms and start their own for clients like him. No serious firm is going to take him. She doesn’t have any IT people. She went to Best Buy looking for a laptop with HDMI out and they sold her that thing.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      This. I have two laptops that I use daily; they’re both 15", but the main difference is that one is for work, while the other is for personal stuff (Columbian fart porn, obviously).

      The work laptop is not only of a much more practical weight for when I’m out and about for work-related purposes, but it’s also encrypted, on a domain where everything is SSO, and if it gets lost/stolen I can phone up a coworker to have him wipe it. It’s a dell latitude 4something.

      Of course, my other laptop could have the same setup, but the fact that it’s a gaming laptop makes it considerably heavier, more power hungry, and not even close to practical to haul around all the time.

  • @[email protected]
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    132 years ago

    We have a gaming laptop at work, but there’s a hand held 3d scanner attached to it and it builds the model as we scan. Only gaming laptops have a GPU good enough to do this.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        Solidworks is single threaded ancient software. It only cares about clock speed. Runs just as well on a gaming handheld as it does on a desktop computer.

  • @[email protected]
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    572 years ago

    Of all the things I can criticize about Trump, the type of laptop his lawyer for this week is using is far down on that list.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      62 years ago

      Normally, I don’t like to think you can “buy” being based, but I’m not gonna object to this being on the record 👨‍⚖️

      • PrivateNoob
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        52 years ago

        Yeah I can agree with your statement, I only meant that bringing an unusual laptop to a court is pretty cool.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          2 years ago

          Nah, I totally get it. If I was ever in that situation, I would be extremely tempted doomed to be sporting one of those British bleached powder white wigs.