First of all, let’s take a look at a fact that does exist. Don’t be fooled when buying a computer!
The heat dissipated by high-power configurations is generally proportional, and the inverse proportion has basically not been found on the market. What's the use? The design and structure of notebooks are relatively compact, and heat dissipation has always been a factor that restricts the development of notebooks. It can be said to be a very important technology at present! According to my two years of notebook work experience, after summarizing and studying, the best Reheat machine currently is the IBM machine. Others, such as DELL and SONY, are good. But the others are just too average. Usually two or three of them will cause problems!
In your case, you have to use it for 3-5 years. I hope there will be no problems and more important data will be saved. A wise saying in the maintenance industry: computers are valuable, but data is priceless. This shows that stability is quite important. So what I said above is nonsense. Of course not. First, long-term high temperature will make the machine accessories easy to age, and then the quantitative change will turn into qualitative change; second, the laptop motherboard is very different from the desktop motherboard, mainly through the BGA welding of the chip to the computer, if the high temperature for a long time, this It just makes some chips collapse, such as North Bridge and South Bridge. . . At this time, common faults will occur, such as crashes, no display when turning on, etc. (A small reminder: when buying a computer, it usually has air conditioning, and you generally cannot feel the heat emitted by the machine)
And For the models you are interested in, they all have relatively high configurations and generate relatively high amounts of heat, so heat dissipation is a problem!