 me1212
join:2008-11-20 Pleasant Hill, MO
·VOIPo
| reply to 2kmaro Re: [POLL] Student Laptop Choice
Make/Model:dell studio 15 Screen Size:15.6 inches(1366x768 Weight:about 6lbs CPU:2.4ghz ram: 4 gigs optical drive: blu-ray read with cd/dvd read/write card reader IDK what all it can read, I know it can do SD cards tho hard drive: 260G Essential Extras:blu-ray(I think it writes cd/dvds too I know it reads them),bluetooth, and upgrade to 2.4ghz cpu Good Points:16:9 screen, built in wifi, I get the upgrade to win7 when it comes out for free, good graphics card, sometimes its nice to have 4g of ram, it fits in my backpack perfectly, and its not too heavy. BAD Points:it gets a wee bit war on the bottom after a lot of use, I would like a stronger battery it only lasts about 4 hours 45 min. Why I picked it: It has what I want, it was in my budget, and when I got it they were having a sale(its still going on I think) where you get a 10 miniv for $149 when you get one. |
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  hotshotDJ Have You Kissed Your Dj Today? Premium join:2001-12-02 Weatogue, CT clubs:
| reply to 2kmaro NOTE: I'm a non-traditional graduate student (read: old), but I didn't vote. But here is my advise for student laptops --
Check with your University's/College's book store. They may have contracts with a specific manufacturer which may save you (or your parents) A LOT of money.
Go with the smallest screen size that you can stand. It will make your life much easier when you're carrying the thing around campus with all your books and taking notes in class. Remember, you can always connect it to a larger external monitor at home/dorm.
If available, order it with the highest capacity battery they offer. There is nothing worse than sitting in class, the library, or the student center doing work on your laptop and the battery starts to run out of juice... and on the day that you left your power cord in the dorm or home.
If possible, you MIGHT want to order it with the XP Downgrade option -- assuming you go the Windows route. (I'm not sure if this is still available). Many IT departments (including the one at my University) do not support Vista. Check with your University just to make sure.
Avoid purchasing Microsoft Office. For most things that you will be doing at college (or for that matter, anywhere else in your life), you do not need it. Get OpenOffice + Zotero. If, for any reason, you must have Microsoft Office, it is usually available either for free or at a huge discount through your University.
You do NOT need the fastest CPU on the market nor the most rad graphics card you can find. A basic Core 2 Duo and integrated video card will do just fine. Gaming is not why your parents are spending their life savings to send you to college. 
2 Gig RAM MINIMUM! Especially if you will be using Windows Vista. -- Statistics don't lie... Statisticians are another story. |
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  mooglebunny Super special awesome
join:2008-02-12 Weed, CA
·HughesNet Satellit..
1 edit | reply to 2kmaro Eh, why not. I bought a laptop and just received it today.
Make/Model: Sony Vaio SR 129 E/B (B stands for Black, it's a black colored laptop)
Screen Size: 12.4"(W) x 9.2"(D) x 0.99 - 1.3"(H) (It's a 13" laptop though)
Weight: 4.3 pounds with battery, 5.5ish with power adapter.
CPU: Intel Core 2 Duo "Montevina" P8400@ 2.26 Ghz.
Essential Extras: Webcamera, Sony X-Brite ECO with LED Backlighting (pretty good for an ECO), ATI Radeon Mobility 3470 @ 128 mb GDDR3 VRam (Scores around 2055ish in 3dMark06) Good Points: Decent dedicated Graphics card for the size, will play most gaming somewhat decently. Has a Magnesium-Alloy casing, as it's a business notebook kinda thing. Nice "chiclet" keyboard like Macbook Pro, nice and small. Somewhat thin. I can carry it in one arm open. Oh, accelerometer for the hard drive, to protect it from drops.
BAD Points: Because it's small, it doesn't have a great graphics card at the same price a 15" would. It's somewhat hot, and the left side of the laptop will get warmer than the right, but it's not really all that bad. Touchpad is interesting to use, so I bought a Logitech VX Nano, so it's not a problem for me. The side of the laptop with the screen could be a bit thicker with a tiny bit less flex, but it's not horrid either.
Why I picked it: Size, screen, Dedicated Graphics card, decent specs, and it's useful to me. Much better than the desktops I've been using (they are quite old). |
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  tubbynet reminds me of the danse russe Premium join:2008-01-16 Chandler, AZ
·Cox HSI
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| reply to 2kmaro Make/Model: HP Compaq 8510p Screen Size: 15.4" WSXGA+ (@ 1680 x 1050) Weight: Around 6.5lbs CPU: Intel Core2 Duo T7700 @ 2.40GHz Essential Extras: 2GB of PC2-6400 RAM, 120GB 5400RPM HDD, Dual-Layer DVD Burner, 256MB ATI Mobility Radeon 2600, Intel 4965ABG Wi-Fi Link, Gigabit Broadcom NIC Good Points: Great looking asthetically. I love the "grey box" look, but I'm too poor to afford ThinkPads at the moment. The stability and durability is great. The power-to-weight ratio is great. I use it in my electrical engineering studies, so I am always running SPICE, MATLAB, Maple, etc. and the machine doesn't stutter. The graphics are sharp and clear, and the display renders everything beautifully. I moonlight as a photographer with my Nikon D80, and I don't lose any quality when I put the images on my PC for Photoshopping. There is also enough power on this machine to game, though I don't do it too much. I love the HDMI out, as I often do presentations on HDTVs, and I get the same quality on the TV as I do on my PC. Additionally, great battery life, even when performing in depth tasks. I routinely get over 3 hrs with the standard size battery. BAD Points: A little hefty. Not to be considered an "ultra-portable", but not a backbreaker either. The machine is a little big, so you may want to purchase a backpack AFTER you have the machine in hand to make sure you get one that fits. The biometric software is a little cumbersome to set up and the fingerprint reader is a little finicky if your fingers are a oily or you live in an area with a lot of humidity. My biggest gripe comes from the "touch-sensitive" volume controls. Hard to just drop the volume a little or raise it a little. I often find myself doing this through software rather than on the machine itself. Just a little inconvenience. Why I picked it: Kind of a whim. I like the HP look and found one that fit my needs. Price was right and I had channels that I could get a discount. I am very happy with my overall pick. -- "Don't hate the media, BECOME the media..." ~Jello Biafra |
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  ZaRRaZa
join:2005-12-04 Norway
4 edits | reply to 2kmaro Make/Model: Toshiba Satellite® A105-S4334 Screen Size: 15.4 in. WXGA TFT Active Matrix Weight: 6 lb. CPU: C2D T5500 1.66 Ghz. Somehow it came with T5500 and not T5200 like all the reviews says. Essential Extras: 2GB RAM, 160 GB HDD; Dual Layer DVD±RW; Ethernet Fast Ethernet IEEE 802.11a IEEE 802.11b IEEE 802.11g Good Points: Vista Capable. Expandable to 4GB RAM. Light. BAD Points: Getting old? Planning to get Gateway P-6860FX, T9300 2.5 GHz, 4 GB 667MHz DDR2 RAM, 320 GB HDD, GeForce® 8800M GTS 512MB GDDR3. Anyone want to buy a105-s4334 for $700? It is in good shape. Why I picked it: It was x-mas present. Yeah, presents sometimes needs to be updated  |
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  Ctrl Alt Del Premium join:2002-02-18
| reply to 2kmaro Recently bought a new machine.
Make/Model: Apple MacBook Pro 15 inch baseline model Good Points: A better computer than my Dell. Bad Points: Not the unstoppable machine that Mac Apologists claim it to be. Why I picked it: Needed a more powerful machine than my Dell. Waiting 20 minutes for Xilinx hardware synthesis just wasn't doing it for me. And I dislike Vista. What I use my computer for: Everything that I used my Dell for. Recommendations: If you need the best monetary deal, get a cheaper Windows machine. If you want something more refined and polished, try a Mac. -- less talk, more music |
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  Phoenix Gold Hypocrite
join:2001-11-24 Faulkton, SD clubs:
| reply to 2kmaro This is my second post in this thread because my 17" is just too big, so i bought this to bring to class.
Make/Model: Dell XPS m1210 Screen Size: 12.1" Weight:a little over 4 pounds CPU: core 2 duo t7200 Essential Extras: 2 gigs ram, go 7400, 9 cell battery Good Points: Size. This thing is tiny. BAD Points: the 9 cell battery sticks out a little. Why I picked it: Size, power and price. $959. -- The insects are huge and the poison's all been used, and the drugs won't kill your day job |
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 lesbisean39
join:2007-03-06 Winnipeg, MB
| reply to 2kmaro Make/Model: LG P1-J004A9 Screen Size: 15.4" wxga Weight: 6 lbs CPU: core2 duo t5600 1.83ghz Graphics: Mobile radeon x1400.(plays CS:source med/high no probs) RAM: 1024 of 667 ddr2 Hard Drive: 100 gigs fo yo shit! Essential Extras: umm, im still lookin for a decent laptop case that doesnt look like im carrying a filecabinet around with me. Good Points: Wicked screen, the graphics are intense, and it comes with XPpro, not that vi$$ta garbage. O YA! it has a Numeric pad to the side. Lifesaver for typing IP's and calculating of all sorts. BAD Points: Support and updates for LG software is pretty $hitty. The intelligent update shit isnt really all that intelligent. in fact i might suggest the opposite is true. Why I picked it: I picked it because it had all of the features i wanted, for a pretty good price, in a damn sexy package. so basically it is to me, what i am to women. It is just a really well designed computer, all of the ports are in convenient places, making it a comfortable computer plugged in or out.
Im pumped on these LG computers, i think its going to be a really solid brand in the future. Right now u can only get em in canada. Where i live. convenient huh? |
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 Antoke
join:2004-05-12 Brooklyn, MD | reply to adam9280 Thats some funny s%@# dude. |
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 doslinux
join:2003-08-08 Hialeah, FL clubs:
2 edits | reply to 2kmaro Make/Model:Compaq V2570
Screen Size: 14" wide-screen high definition (Glossy type)
Weight: ~ 5 pounds with 6 cell battery
CPU: AMD turion 64 1.8GHZ
Essential Extras: 12 cell battery
Good Points: Wireless internet, excellent screen, super easy upgradability (hd, memory, mini pci, optical drive all have their own compartments that can be opened pretty easy.) Button to turn off touch pad, 6in1 media reader. It actually provided the restore media! one dvd had windows the other had the applications, DL dvd burner. Decent 512MB of RAM (128 goes to video). Wireless on and off button.
BAD Points: Touch pad gets hot, battery only lasts 2 hours, speakers are ok, LOTS and LOTS of preloaded crap (slow out of the box) mostly due to some norton security suite crap. Shared video memory. Ink on volume buttons wore off.
Why I picked it: It was cheap (--broke college kid), pretty light, power-full enough for what I use it for, have an 5-6 year old HP desktop thats still running strong.
For more detailed specs click... »h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/docu···00572251 |
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  Deep Dish
join:2006-08-17 Canada
·Rogers Portable In..
1 edit | reply to 2kmaro Make/Model: IBM Thinkpad R51 Screen Size: 15.4 inch (max: 1024x768) Weight: ~5 lbs? CPU: 1.6 GHz Intel Pentium M RAM: 512MB DDR (stock) + 1GB DDR = 1.5GB total Hard Drive: Seagate Momentus 120GB 5400.2 (initally 60GB Fujitsu) Video Card: ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 M9 32MB Optical Drive: 24x CDRW+DVD Essential Extras: I have upgraded the RAM (1GB PC2700 stick) and Hard-drive (Seagate 120GB). Both upgrades were personally bought and installed by myself. Good Points: After the upgrades, its my desktop replacement. I run Linux (Ubuntu 6.06) on this thing and it's rock solid. BAD Points: Had bad sectors on the Fujitsu drive, which was replaced under warrenty. They gave me a refurbished 60GB Hitachi drive, which then I thought to myself I'm not going to trust that hard-drive. I went to the store and bought myself the Seagate Momentus drive. I am using the Hitachi drive as an external drive (which is nice since it gets power from the USB connection). Other then the hard-drive, the only hardware issue I see with this laptop is the video card. More performance would be nice. Why I picked it: In my school, it is mandatory to have one and you have to go through them to get the laptop, so I had no other choice but to accept it. I initially had a crappy IBM Thinkpad with 256MB of RAM and it ran like garbage, next semester they gave us the R51 which weren't bad. After I upgraded the RAM and the hard-drive, it's a beast. I am impressed with this laptop a lot and I am in the process of purchasing it through the school. |
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 jstack
join:2001-12-09 South San Francisco, CA
·Verizon Online DSL
| reply to 2kmaro Make/Model: Dell XPS M140 (Now named Inpsiron E1405) Screen Size: 14" Weight: 5-6 CPU: Intel Pentium M 1.73 Ghz Memory: 1 GB DDR2 Hard Disk: 80 GB 5400 RPM Wireless: Intel 2200BG, Dell Bluetooth Essential Extras: Windows Media Center Remote
Good Points: 7 hours of battery life on a 9 cell 85 WHr battery, small and light weight, good value for money
BAD Points: It does get a little hot on the bottom after some use. Idle Temps (CPU 43C HD 37C) Load Temps (CPU 59C HD 46C)
Why I picked it: I got tired of using a very large 15" 9 pound budget laptop. I initially wanted a 12" but realized it would be difficult to type on for more than a few minutes. I got a great deal on the M140 when Dell had it's 10 days of deal in April. I saw a loaded laptop which was a perfect size and a price tag of $764. I couldn't pass it up and I'm glad I didn't. I love this laptop. With the additional media center remote I purchased, this laptop is a dream. |
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  insomx Premium join:2003-01-26 Canada 1 edit | reply to usa2k Woah, how did that happen? I'll edit one out.
Well, NVM, it is too late to edit. |
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  usa2k Please PRAY for Rebekah Premium,MVM join:2003-01-26 Canton, MI clubs: | reply to insomx I think something changed in the Matrix
(Deja-Vue!) |
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  insomx Premium join:2003-01-26 Canada
·Aliant Communicati..
| reply to Straphanger I take back what I said about my HP laptop, it sucks, lol, 3 hdds replacements, numerous power adapters, motherboard in the end, then garbage the next. Now I have a Gateway MX6425 and it is FLIPPING AWSOME! Make/Model: Gateway MX6425 Screen Size: 15.4inch Ultra-Bright Widescreen Weight: 6 pounds? Perfect weight CPU: Amd Turion ML-34 1.8GHz 64-Bit Essential Extras: Ummm, nothing? Good Points: Battery life, 3 1/2 with screen full bright and wireless, 4 1/2 with screen 2 notches from the bottom and wireless off, Gaming kicks ass, Xpress 200M can play GTA on highest settings with the new Omega drivers
Oh, and can I say, AWSOME SPEAKERS! BAD Points: New types of glossy screens scratch easy, but I got a protector from nushield.com and it is great! Why I picked it: Nice price, perfect weight and size combo, not too light and crappy feeling and not a heavy POS. Its screen is nice and bright and it has a sturdy build to it. -- »monctonhigh.ca "What is wrong with all the people that say what is wrong with people?" -John Crawford |
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  Straphanger Express is Back Premium,Mod join:2001-12-08 Jackson Heights, NY clubs:
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| reply to 2kmaro Re: [POLL] Student Laptop Choice
Might as well toss in my 2 cents here.
Make/Model: Dell Inspiron 6000 Screen Size: 15.4" SXGA+ (1680x1050/widescreen) Weight: 7-8lbs CPU: 1.86GHz Intel Pentium M 750 (Sonama) RAM: Micron 1GB PC2 3200 DDR2 RAM Hard Drive: Hitachi 60GB HD (7200 RPM) Video Card: ATI Mobility Radeon X300 (128MB) Optical Drive: Sony 8X DVD+R/W Burner (DW-D56A)
Essential Extras: 9-cell battery (heavier but longer battery life)
Good Points • Was able to reformat drive using System Restore utility. Created a clean XP Pro backup disk and reinstalled computer sans the gunk Dell adds on. • Very good battery life of over 5 hours, even with Wi-Fi • Full sized keyboard • High-resolution screen looks beautiful • Very good speakers compared to other notebooks • Snappy performance • Friend says "it's like a tank"
Bad Points • I do wish it was more around 6 pounds or so • Screen could be a bit brighter • The lid should be a bit more scratch resistant • Fan is a bit loud and comes on sometimes when it isn't really needed
Why I picked it: Dell offered the greatest amount of custom features (such as a mobile graphics card) for the lowest price. It also offered the ability to do a full reformat without all the gunk...a big plus that saves time on weeding. -- Please use all available doors...you have 33 to choose from. |
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  usa2k Please PRAY for Rebekah Premium,MVM join:2003-01-26 Canton, MI clubs:
·VOIPo
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·Broadvox Direct
| reply to 2kmaro Re: [POLL] Student Laptop Choice?
Not a student - did not vote.
Seems the order listed is the exact order of preference. I would say DELL marketing is working, and DELL satisfaction backs it up. 
Dude you're getting a dell |
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 BlueScreen79
join:2004-04-13 54321
| reply to 2kmaro Re: [POLL] Student Laptop Choice
Make/Model: Dell Inspiron 700m Screen Size: Widescreen 12 in Weight: Light CPU: Pentium M 1 ghz Essential Extras: Case Logic Neoprene Sleeve Good Points: Extremely compact and light BAD Points: The DVD/CD-RW Drive broke right after the warranty expired Why I picked it: Very easy to carry around campus - just toss it in your backpack. You barely know it's there. Just be sure to pick up a laptop sleeve for protection. |
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  File Quit Mac Geek Premium join:2002-11-28
| reply to 2kmaro Make/Model: Apple PowerBook G4 Screen Size: 15in Weight: 5.6lbs CPU: 1.67GHz PowerPC G4 Essential Extras: came with SuperDrive, Airport Extreme (802.11g), Bluetooth, added another 512mb RAM to up for 1gb Good Points: light weight, fits great in Targus backpack, iLife '06 and awesome Mac interface BAD Points: only a G4 (was the fastest at the time), but the new Intel MacBooks seem to close the speed gap. screen could be a little brighter Why I picked it: I chose this laptop as my school/video production machine because with a Mac I can get the best of both worlds. I use MS Office 2004 to take notes, Keynote for class presentations, and it handles all of that nicely. Then after doing school work, I can edit movies in Final Cut Pro and output them to DVD with the SuperDrive. It's a very nice all in one package that does everything I want it to. -- How's my posting? Send me an email: filequit at gmail dot com |
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