Hi Pica,
If you'd like serious advice on the topic of laptop/monitor selection, you really need to start a new thread, suitably titled to draw answers. It will be lost in this one.
However, to answer your main point; personally I would only ever want to use a matte/anti-reflective screen for photo editing - I see enough of my face in the mirror, I don't need to see it leering at me while I'm trying to edit photos
That said, most/all touch screens seem to be the glossy variety (I guess they are easier to clean finger marks off), so if you wanted 'touch' to make most of Windows 8, 8.1 or 10, then that may be that's a problem.
Another important criteria for photo editing is that the screen should be 'IPS' technology (In-Plane Switching), not 'TN' (Twisted Nematic), that is because the latter (TN) is usually very sensitive to vertical angle of viewing, and gives significant variations of brightness if you're not looking 'square on' to it (e.g. as you would a mirror). If you're slightly above or below it, looking at an angle, a TN display may not give the same brightness (black level) as it should.