Much depends on what you actually wind up doing on the laptop; I'd opine the following:
> 32 GB RAM -- Makes whatever applications you use run faster, although 16 GB is tolerable
> 1 TB SSD -- SSD is important given the amount of handling and accidents it's likely to get -- I personally wind up with 4 TB external drives, just because I'm a pack rat
> Fastest processor you can afford -- some of the AMD Ryzen processors might give you a better bang for the buck.
> While I like the "idea" of a 17" display, it adds a lot of weight to slog around, and whether you actually do a lot of work not at home can drive that. I do most of my work in fixed locations, so connecting up a docking station with 32" monitors with a 15" laptop works better for me.
> GPU -- not necessarily just for graphics, but if you plan on doing stuff with AI/neural nets, having a higher performance GPU might be worthwhile; this would be the one place where a gaming laptop might have a slight edge. Ostensible gaming laptops aren't necessarily THAT expensive; Costco's lowest priced gaming laptop is $1100.
Given that you haven't even started college yet, I wouldn't get too engrossed with application specifics; my best bud from high school changed majors 4 times in 5 years. Amusingly, we both started EE, and after a bunch of twists and turns, we both graduated EE, although he lost a year from the digressions in majors, veterinary, photography, etc.
TTFN (ta ta for now)
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