So I might be able to get ahold of a dell e5430 laptop pretty cheap. I was thinking it might make a decent candidate for a desktop replacement if not for the crappy integrated video card. So external graphics adapters seem a little sketchy to me and a quick search on ebay shows the average price for the adapter is 40 bucks. Considering I'm not going to put a high end video card in there anyway would it even be worth it? Am I going to have a hard time setting it up, ect.....
Any advice would be welcomed.
Its like everything in life, each tool does a particular job. When it comes to laptops its a mixed bag, as a gaming machine, office workhorse, or coding/light gaming/office. Each machine marketed tries to be the everyday tool. Dell tends to be corporate centric so think stock environment. Lenovo and lately HP have been adding AMD processors which come with a decent integrated graphiçs. Dell (unless stated) is using HD discrete graphics.
Now we look at alternative graphic solutions. External adapters. Usb2VGA are the same as Usb monitors. They do office well but suck at dvd playback and games. If your laptop has a thunderbolt port or usb C, you might be able to connect an external graphics card. These have good reviews.
To be honest, I find that laptops for gaming do not give a good return of investment, so a desktop solution would be better. I bought a lenovo 585 with an A10 quad core processor that had an APU, and an Ati 7660g crossfire enabled, 8gb and 1td hdd for about $500. It doesnt play the AAA titles very well, except fallout4.
As a development laptop or office, it just flies. Your quoted laptop does not have a usb c port, so you are stuck with HD4000, and any exotic external graphic cards or adapters will bottleneck at usb 2.0 speeds. Even usb3 will not cut it. The usb2vga adapters are plug and play but get one that is new. I have a star tech and it is 3 years old and doesn't work on anything after vista. Be careful not to go too cheap, and get the usb monitors from acer. People are dumping obsolete tech on ebay.
Is the laptop cheap for a reason? Maybe. Can you put that money on a A12 processor with a R7 APU that will play games at low res?
Its not like buying a car, but you have to make sure the battery charges and there is no thermal damage or cracks at the hinges.
So to answer your question. The laptop is decent in the spec department, but graphically challenged without any expansion. You will get two displays max native. You can add as many usb displays. I had 7 at one point, thus the warning of old adapters.
There are these adapters but unless it is cheap and you have the spare port: