Brace Yourself: Laptops Prices Are About to Skyrocket
Dell says it will take 'targeted pricing action, when necessary.'



The M2 MacBook Air is still a fantastic laptop, even though it's a few years old now. Best Buy has now slashed the price to $599, a $200 discount from the usual price, making it an absolute steal compared to most PC laptops in this price range.


You charged your laptop to 100% last night, closed the lid, and put it in your bag. However, when you take it out the next day to get started on your work (or browse the web) it won't turn onβthe battery is dead!


The MacBook lineup is one of the best-performing laptops, but at its price, itβs not the most appealing to the average consumer. Apple released a 12-inch laptop in 2015 that fit the mold of a budget-friendly MacBook, but it was poorly received because it lacked key features and cost too much.

The battery inside your laptop is slowly degrading, and there's no way to prevent it from happening. The catch is that some bad habits can expedite the process. If you're practicing one of the following habits, there's a good chance your laptop's battery is degrading faster than it should.

Some Dell and HP laptop owners have been befuddled by their machinesβ inability to play HEVC/H.265 content in web browsers, despite their machinesβ processors having integrated decoding support.
Laptops with sixth-generation Intel Core and later processors have built-in hardware support for HEVC decoding and encoding. AMD has made laptop chips supporting the codec since 2015. However, both Dell and HP have disabled this feature on some of their popular business notebooks.
HP discloses this in the data sheets for its affected laptops, which include the HP ProBook 460 G11 [PDF], ProBook 465 G11 [PDF], and EliteBook 665 G11 [PDF].


Β© Getty
Choosing the right laptop for work is not that easy. You need something fast, something reliable,...
The post The 5 Best Business Laptops Built for Work In 2025 appeared first on Fossbytes.
The market analysis companyβs president, Dean McCarron, discussed the somber news with our colleagues at PCMag this week. CPU sales declined year-over-year by 34% and quarter-over-quarter by 19%. Those are the biggest declines for both metrics Mercury has ever tabulated in its 30 years of existence.
The reasons for the decline include excess inventory and low demand for CPUs. Intangible factors may also be at play, such as global economic uncertainty. The numbers mirror those from IDC, which also posted a gloomy Q4 report recently for PC shipments. IDCβs numbers from 90 countries showed a 28.1% decline year-over-year. That drop-off was twice as high as in Q3, making Q4 a particularly bloody quarter for the PC industry.
(Image: Mercury Research)
In response to the turbulence, Intel and AMD are now under-shipping CPUs. Both companiesβ CEOs admitted to this in their recent earnings calls. AMDβs CEO said it would do less of it in Q1, though. Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger said his companyβs βQ4 under shipping [was] meaningfully higher than full year.β Despite this strategy, CPU shipments for both laptops and desktops suffered dramatic declines in what is normally a robust quarter. Intel also suffered from its decision to announce price increases in Q3. That caused some of its partners to buy stock before the price went up in Q4.
Despite the dour report, itβs not all bad for the PC market. In 2022 overall, CPU shipments and revenue were down 21 and 19%, respectively, from previous years. However, that was the pandemic era, a magical time of record profits for all semiconductor companies. Despite the decline, the numbers in 2022 were still better than the pre-pandemic years. Although the red ink is projected to continue to flow for another quarter or two, a turnaround is expected later this year.
One unexpected result from this volatility is itβs allowed AMD to claw market share away from Intel. According to IDCβs report via HotHardware, AMD now has over 30% of the x86 market. While Intel still has more than twice that market share, it lost 5.6% over the past year.
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I started from desktop machines, like everyone who was born in 1980βs. I was tired of desktop computers and Windows operating system, wanted to have small notebook with Linux. After many years my first laptop was, used Dell Vostro V131 with Intel Core i3,