You are using an outdated browser. For a faster, safer browsing experience, upgrade for free today.
Phones: 800
$ USD
  • Your shopping cart is empty!

Does Microsoft Laptop Studio Work With Autocad

Related products

Qsc E112 Yoke Mount

$509.97 $683.36

Raya Portable Studio Kit

$298.50 $417.90

Middle Atlantic Console Work Surface Right

$1,235.25 $1,531.71

Mount-it! Ergonomic Tilted Laptop Riser

$89.97 $111.56

Pakt Travel Duffel (forest, 25l)

$675.00 $857.25

Does Microsoft Laptop Studio Work With Autocad

2024-09-14 03:31:10

Quite useful for Solidworks and Autocad. Work as expected.

5
2024-08-29 02:34:18

I purchased a new Mac Studio with OS Monterey 14.2. My old, but still working, HP DesignJet 111 would not work with the new Mac OS. HP was not offering a software update so ended up purchasing the HP T210 as a replacement so I could keep my small architecture practice working. I have AutoCAD LT installed on my new Mac. The new printer works great with the Mac Studio and the AutoCAD LT on the Mac. The T210 is a big improvement in response time from the Mac. The only drawback is I have a drawer full of inkjet cartridges that are not compatible with the new printer. Other than having no use for expensive printer ink, the T210 is a great upgrade over the old DesignJet 111.

5
2024-04-14 01:39:52

I have used several types of laptop computers, but Microsoft Surface Pro 7 is more than I expected :)

5
2024-04-14 07:41:32

Does everything I need it to do, hooked to a laptop at work. Is super portable, and seems to be built to take a beating.

5
2024-09-25 09:11:22

Only the true Microsoft Adapter will work, and who had it in stock? B&H :-)

5
2024-07-14 08:48:20

Seems to work very well with Microsoft Flight Simulator, as two of the three screens.

5
2024-09-07 03:23:55

Loving this processor so far. Have had a new PC build with a focus on AutoCAD (work) and photo editing (personal), and this thing has handled it all spectacularly well, I doubt I'm even pushing it.

5
2024-06-15 01:24:14

Overall Impression: I have done about 7 builds in the past 20 years with enthusiast grade processors. I think the last time I was this happy about a CPU upgrade was when the old Intel Core 2 Duo series came out. PC: 5950X, Gigabyte Aorus Master X570, EVGA 3080 FTW3, TridentZ DDR4-3600 16GBx2, EK AIO 360 Use Case: Mostly gaming and engineering related productivity work, i.e. heavy use of Autocad, Bluebeam Revu, MS Office+Teams, and other engineering related programs for work. I've had 60+ drawings pulled in Autocad, a full set of markup drawings in Revu, a few spreadsheets, and this thing doesn't blink. Overclocking/Tuning: Right now, I have spent minimal time working on an V/F Curve undervolt currently sitting at -15 on all cores; PPT/EDC/TDC limits set at MB; Boost Override 0; Scalar Auto. This was the initial tuning I did after installing. Hopefully, I can get time to do a little more research and tweak the settings more aggressively. This was what I felt I could do conservatively with the knowledge of AMD Ryzen 9 tuning that I currently possess. Benchmark Scores/Temps/Clockspeeds: On Cinebench R23 I'm getting multicore scores of 30k and singlecore of ~1.6k. I have seen certain cores reach speeds of little over 4.9GHz. I don't recall all core full load speeds because the only time everything was fully loaded was when I did the initial setup/tuning. 88C Max Temp when all cores fully loaded.

5
2024-05-27 07:52:43

Shooting tethered is the only way to work for studio portraits. I can even use it for outdoors shooting, if I have some shade for the laptop.

5
2024-05-29 05:27:15

Did you know that you can't even get the computer to work without a Microsoft Login now? Super annoying.

5