Ok! In your opinion, what is THE BEST laptop EVER for all round usage??? Power, weight, size, looks. Which is more important? :cool:
Printable View
Ok! In your opinion, what is THE BEST laptop EVER for all round usage??? Power, weight, size, looks. Which is more important? :cool:
Thinkpad T-series
There is no "best" laptop because everyone's needs differ significantly.
Some major differences in laptops are:
Trusted Platform Module (TPM) - the ability to use SmartCards and biometrics.
Maximum memory - some can only handle 2GB while others can handle 4GB.
LCD - there are wide variations in both the sizes, resolution and technology used.
Video card/graphics performance - there are wide variations in performance and amounts of video memory.
Weight - weights vary from 2+ pounds to 10 pounds.
Battery Life - battery run times vary from an hour on up.
Reliability/Warranty - warranties vary from 90 days to several years.
Other - price, cellular, Bluetooth, WiFi, PCcard, USB, Firewire, Blueray, HD DVD, ...
The best really depends upon your needs so you must first define and rank your needs followed by the "nice to have" then the "don't care" features.
Id agree with thinkpad (any series) .... I have an x21 (laptop 3 in my sig) which is quite old, that im typing from at the mo, dual booting between xubuntu and xp pro sp2 ... Still after all these years doesnt have a single fault, faded to a grey/black colour yes but works like a charm!Quote:
Originally Posted by Ashpool
As ua549 said though it depends what you demand from a laptop. For me its reliability and ruggedness at the top of the list which laptop 1 (hp pavillion dv series) in my sig fails at. Spent more time being repaired then using it! But it does have bluetooth, etc etc even if it never works properly!!
Battery life has never been a priority for me but its sure an annoyance when they dont last long at all. Thats what i like about dell latitudes (got one as well, laptop 2) because you can either have an optical drive and battery or two batteries inserted and slot in so easily as well. Really like that feature!
Would be interesting to know what everyone else sees as essential for a 'good' laptop?
In order of priority my notebook needs are:
LCD viewable in direct sunlight
Business grade
TPM
WiFi
100/1000 NIC
Bluetooth
SmartCard slot
PCcard slot
4GB memory capability
100+GB drive
DVD burner
3+ year warranty
Weigh < 5 pounds
4+ hours battery run time (actual, not advertised)
Nice to have the fastest, most energy efficient, multi-core mobile CPU.
The last 2 notebooks I purchased were Dell Latitude D620's.
HP did not have a competing product at the time
I currently have my perfect laptop, though toshiba just released something better.
For me, the current order of preferences is:
1. Able to run WinXP and Office Software
2. Size (12")
3. Weight (Less than 3 pounds)
4. Battery Life (3 Hours of real-world usage with Wifi and decent brightness)
5. Decent HDD (80GB+)
6. 2GB RAM
7. A good keyboard
8. A nice screen (WXGA with sufficient brightness. Any higher resolution at 12" isn't very nice to look at)
9. Builtin Optical Drive
10. Performance
My current Q30 satisfies everything until 8, the new Toshiba also squeezed in an Optical drive.
edit: but for most people, I would agree that the T Series is pretty much the perfect notebook. Although I'd also nominate the MacBook Pro if the keyboard wasn't so bad.
if price wasnt a consideration i would go for a new 15" Powerbook with the santa rosa chipset, led screen, and 8600M... and run parallels
since price is a concern to me, im liking my new vostro 1400 for price/performance/portability... it does have its "cheap-build" qualities though.. a latitude D630 might be a better bet for quality
I'm at a draw w/ the Mac books and the think pads, but Sony Vaio isn't bad either.
Macbook Pro, Toshiba's 13.3" or Dell m1330 with SSD.
"best" notebook? Panasonic Toughbook. But as the above people have stated, everyone's needs are different. I'd say the Toughbook is probably the most impressive overall though.
I like the new 15" HP business notebooks. Baller.
My perfect laptop is a gaming rig that's still portable. When I bought my Hypersonic it fit my needs perfectly - it plays all games at acceptable settings or better (Far Cry runs over a hundred frames per second, BF2142 runs at 40-50 at medium settings 2x AA). It's also not too heavy (6 pounds) and medium sized (15.4") which means I can still take it with me easily to class and on trips.
What I need
Ability to run Linux with little to no hackery (WiFi included)
Core 2 Duo
Santa Rosa
Moderate sized (13.3-15.4) LCD with good off angle visibility
Ability to accept two hard disks (one for SSD, the other 5.400rpm back-up)
In lieu of the above, 7,200 rpm hard disk
Large keyboard
TPM would be nice
Light weight (~5lbs or less)
4-5 hours of actual battery life
Decent looks, after all, a lot of people are going to see it
I'm currently looking at the Lenovo T61 series, Apple Macbook, Dell M1330. I'm going to take a look at HP's business class stuff here in a bit. I could deal with Linux difficulties on a Macbook as you already have a sweet Unix-based OS. I can't stand Windows anymore, it's relegated to the gaming machine for obvious reasons.
I'll chime in on the X series :)
I've got an X41 that I love. My only real wish is that it was widescreen.
It has a 12" screen and a 5-7hr battery life on it (7 if I turn down the brightness)
I'm looking to upgrade myself, and I narrowed it down to the Dell m1330 ($2200 gets you a lot), and the Sony Vaio TZ (Right around $2600)
Anyone got an opinion about HP Pavilion dv6568se?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16834147484
I'm in the market for a inexpensive all-around laptop.