Laptop?

Tate the Great

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I am looking for a quality laptop for college and I am willing to spend in the $1000-1100 range. Any computer gurus on here that help me find a quality laptop or know of some of the best in that price range?
 

NDOM

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Hands down, Apple Macbook Pro, or even Mackbook. No question. Should be near or a titch above your price range.
 

Irish4Life09

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I completely agree with these guys.
I just bought my MacBook Pro a month and a half ago,my first.
And i LOVE it! It is so much better than any pc.
It does cost a pretty penny,but if since youre a student you get 10% off,and in the long run it costs u less than a pc.
 

Junkhead

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Do you want to play games, just play on the web, or what? Macs are overpriced. You can get a quad core PC laptop for less than $1000, but a dual core would be probably be enough.
 

FrankMA

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I am partial to HP having worked for them for 10 years. Seeing it is a college system I would not go above a 15.6 inch widescreen because you want it to be mobile. A 14.5 screen may be sufficient. I would check to see what suits you before buying. I would buy at least 3G of memory and a 250G hard drive minimum for speed and storage. Also, I would not put money into any special video card or anything unless you plan on doing a lot of gaming. I would invest in Microsoft Office Student version as that would be huge for getting those papers and reports done.
The processor does not matter because whatever you buy new today will have a fast processor weather it is an AMD or Intel. The Intel processors may give you a little more battery life. I would prefer the Intel i3 or i5 processor myself.
I think you can buy this system for well under $1000.
 

TerryTate

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If you buy a mac, you can't go wrong with a refurb. I've had my macbook for almost 3 years and it's still going fine. I'm sure a refurb would be good.
 

TDHeysus

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Good stuff FrankMA

Go to any vendor such as Dell, HP for example and build a custom laptop. start with a low base model, usually around $399. Then add components to fit your budget.

My suggestions:

Windows 7 Home Premium (32bit) Get 64bit if you can afford (its totally worth it)
Max out the RAM on the machine (4GB)
i3/i5 processor
at least a 250GB hard drive
As FrankMA said, dont worry about upgrading the video card

Most important: upgrade the warranty, get at least 3-year accidental damage plan (adp) warranty. it may add $250 to the cost, but it is a 'bumper to bumper, no questions asked' warranty. in a 3 year warranty (ADP), means in 35months you can throw your laptop into the gutter, watch it bust up in a million pieces, then put it in a bag, ship it back to the vendor and they will ship you the same unit back, or an equivalent - NO QUESTIONS ASKED! in a regular warranty, items such as the screen may not be covered, and they can sometimes cost $599 (just for the screen). Also batteries are considered consumable parts and are not covered under a regular warranty. a replacement battery can cost you $96-$120, or you can get a free replacement with an ADP warranty.

Microsoft Office Student Version is a good choice, you may also get away with a free alternate solution with Open Office. Check it out, it may be sufficient for your needs, and best of all, its free! it has word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, etc (sound familiar?, heh)

OpenOffice.org - The Free and Open Productivity Suite


Points to remember:
max out the RAM
intel i3/i5 processor
Max out (per your budget) the accidental damage plan warranty


A 3 year ADP means you will have a working laptop for 3 years and you wont have to put anoter dime into the maintenence for that 3 years. If you bump it to 4 years ADP, then 4 years with nothing to shell out for repairs.


note: for what its worth, I have worked in the IT industry since 1997. System administation, active directory, networking, etc.
 
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justinpham

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My roommate has a MacBook and I got a Dell XPS M1530. We're both very happy with each one.

If you like the format of Windows better, get a PC. If you like the format of the Mac OS, then go for that.

It really depends on what you plan on using it for. For me, I want quick processing, the ability to handle multiple operations, the ability to play high quality videos and the capability to play quality games. As a result, I chose more RAM (flash memory), got a great video card and made sure I got an Intel processor. The best thing you can do is educate yourself on what you want and what laptop has the components to satisfy that.

I will admit though that I've had two Dells and, though I have loved them, there have been a lot of times where I've had to call Dell service to come out and replace some major components (2 motherboards, a heatsink, a charger, a hard drive). So that's something to be weary with. My sister has had an HP and needed things replaced as well. I have found that with our PCs, we've had to replace certain components.
 
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I've had both pc and mac for personal use. They both have good points and bad. The worst thing about a mac is the price. If they were priced the same mac would be superior.
But regardless of which system you buy, you must get and external drive and back everything up. I've seen too many people in tears because the hard drive crashed. Backup on a regular basis and you'll thank yourself down the road.
 

irishmarine

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You can find mac for a deent price usually if youlook. I got a mac at best buy for 800$. It was an open box item which means it was either returned or the box was damaged in transit. Check your local best buy and ask if they have an open box mac if you r lookin at mac. Just a suggestion
 

dshans

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My advice: Go with a Mac. Look into the educational discounts they offer.
 

FrankMA

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Good stuff FrankMA

Go to any vendor such as Dell, HP for example and build a custom laptop. start with a low base model, usually around $399. Then add components to fit your budget.

My suggestions:

Windows 7 Home Premium (32bit) Get 64bit if you can afford (its totally worth it)
Max out the RAM on the machine (4GB)
i3/i5 processor
at least a 250GB hard drive
As FrankMA said, dont worry about upgrading the video card

Most important: upgrade the warranty, get at least 3-year accidental damage plan (adp) warranty. it may add $250 to the cost, but it is a 'bumper to bumper, no questions asked' warranty. in a 3 year warranty (ADP), means in 35months you can throw your laptop into the gutter, watch it bust up in a million pieces, then put it in a bag, ship it back to the vendor and they will ship you the same unit back, or an equivalent - NO QUESTIONS ASKED! in a regular warranty, items such as the screen may not be covered, and they can sometimes cost $599 (just for the screen). Also batteries are considered consumable parts and are not covered under a regular warranty. a replacement battery can cost you $96-$120, or you can get a free replacement with an ADP warranty.

Microsoft Office Student Version is a good choice, you may also get away with a free alternate solution with Open Office. Check it out, it may be sufficient for your needs, and best of all, its free! it has word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, etc (sound familiar?, heh)

OpenOffice.org - The Free and Open Productivity Suite


Points to remember:
max out the RAM
intel i3/i5 processor
Max out (per your budget) the accidental damage plan warranty


A 3 year ADP means you will have a working laptop for 3 years and you wont have to put anoter dime into the maintenence for that 3 years. If you bump it to 4 years ADP, then 4 years with nothing to shell out for repairs.


note: for what its worth, I have worked in the IT industry since 1997. System administation, active directory, networking, etc.

I agree with everything. I have worked in high tech on computers for over 30 years but not on laptops or PC's. Also remember that mobility is important keep it 15.6 inches and under, but not too small as you want to keep notes on it and do reports and stuff easily.
 

GO IRISH!!!

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Jeebus this freakin' thread is making me feel old. I had a laptop when I went to college, but it was the kind that took like 5 discs to load a basic word processing program. No graphics just the blinking cursor thing and typing. The thing weighed about 70 pounds and the battery lasted about long enough to turn the thing on and boot the system. I have spinal problems now from trying to lug that thing around campus.

I was hot shit though, because most of my friends were still using typewriters!

shakes cane furiously: "All you whipper snappers with your laptops! Why I outta..."
 
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