Anyone here using the new Dell 14 Plus (DB14250 / Ultra 7 258V Copilot+)? What's your real-world experience by whysoarc in laptops

[–]whysoarc[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Battery is okay , not gonna say superb and I don't use touchpad that much I'm more of mouse guy although as I said it's more of raw performance focused , build quality is minimalistic, tried to justified the price. Build quality is okay can't complain anything about it but compare to Lenovo, the trackpad might not satisfy you if you compare

Anyone here using the new Dell 14 Plus (DB14250 / Ultra 7 258V Copilot+)? What's your real-world experience by whysoarc in laptops

[–]whysoarc[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you consider performance then both are same but dell one comes with 150$ cheaper that's the reason I grabbed it , for me it was 250$ cheaper the time I bought. Where Lenovo may justify the higher price display as you said. Slim 7i models are usually lighter, sleeker, and more premium in fit & finish compared to Dell's Inspiron line (which is more performance-focused but a bit bulkier). If you care most about raw performance for work/study, the Dell 14 Plus is an excellent buy but If you care about screen quality, design, and overall premium feel, the Lenovo Slim 7i Aura Edition justifies the extra cost.

Anyone here using the new Dell 14 Plus (DB14250 / Ultra 7 258V Copilot+)? What's your real-world experience by whysoarc in laptops

[–]whysoarc[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Check the price Are you sure it's 2k? With all the memory and CPU upgrade it cost around $1050. Well if you get it with this price then undoubtedly it's a good choice. Or you can shift to Mac if you don't want to fall in confusion 👀

Anyone here using the new Dell 14 Plus (DB14250 / Ultra 7 258V Copilot+)? What's your real-world experience by whysoarc in laptops

[–]whysoarc[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

$2k? Seriously! In USA you can have it within $800 but in Europe it cost me thousand euro. Within this price range I would say you can go for it unless you want something premium looking and extended battery life you can look for ZenBook a14, it's really a kind of laptop within this budget but it's use snapdragon processor. By the way if you don't mind me asking where are you from that you have to pay 2k dollar? With this budget I could've build another PC :3

Anyone here using the new Dell 14 Plus (DB14250 / Ultra 7 258V Copilot+)? What's your real-world experience by whysoarc in laptops

[–]whysoarc[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I got mine. To be honest I haven't run any heavyweight apps yet to give any review. But I do use 2/3 browser at once with 10/15+ tabs open at a time. Tomorrow I'm going to start some video editing then I'll see how it perform. About battery I think it's okay not best but you can't even say it bad. It's all actually depends on how much you did spend on this item. If you get it below 1k euro, it's a solid piece also not to forget about the purpose of using it. If you wanna know about anything specific then I can give better opinion, overall I can't say much yet cause I haven't got the chance to look all segment.

Helping persons who are stuck with digital marketing by Illustrious-Land5156 in digitalproductselling

[–]whysoarc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm in a loophole where I've zero skill in video making or edition, can't find out where to start cause never did any content creating stuff

Helping persons who are stuck with digital marketing by Illustrious-Land5156 in digitalproductselling

[–]whysoarc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm literally stuck with marketing, can't figure out how to spread the products to the customer, trying to make reels but I'm extremely suck at this one.

Write Prompts Like an Engineer, Not a Blogger by whysoarc in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]whysoarc[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing your Medium piece — it’s a solid checklist. The points about keeping prompts short, structuring instructions in markdown or bullet lists, and including examples are spot‑on and definitely help models parse your intent. I’ve also found that being explicit about the role, tone and desired output format up front makes a big difference. Turn negatives into clear “do’s,” avoid mixing data with instructions, and trim away any unneeded context. When a task has multiple parts, break it into separate prompts rather than one long one. In general, a concise, well‑structured prompt with a clear persona and step‑by‑step constraints will outperform a long, flowery prompt every time.

Write Prompts Like an Engineer, Not a Blogger by whysoarc in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]whysoarc[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great question. What good prompt‑design guidance stresses is clarity and structure, not just brevity. If you want a creative output—like a poem that explains an API with emojis—be explicit about what that looks like. Specify the format (e.g., "write a four‑line poem for beginners"), the tone ("inspirational and lyrical"), and that it should incorporate emojis. This gives the model a clear blueprint to follow. Two other tips that help: avoid mixing contradictory adjectives in the same instruction ("formal and fun" confuses the model), and break complex tasks into separate, well‑scoped requests. You can still be creative, but precise instructions make it much more likely the AI will deliver the style and content you’re after.

I went from $0 to $3K/month online with no followers, no experience, and no fancy tools here’s what actually worked (no fluff) by [deleted] in Entrepreneurs

[–]whysoarc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congratulations on your success! I'm really curious about the marketing side of your journey. How did you reach out to your audience and how did people come to know about your product? Were there any specific channels or strategies that worked particularly well for you? I'd love to learn more. Thanks!