Chief Delphi

Chief Delphi (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/index.php)
-   Chit-Chat (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=14)
-   -   Laptops (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=38368)

Ashley Weed 28-05-2005 13:42

Re: Laptops
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MrToast
If there's any way you can get an extended warranty for it, GET IT!

There are two things in life you should absolutely without question buy extended warranties for: cars and laptops.

My iBook doesn't have an extended warranty, and I greatly regret not having one.

I can't stress enough how useful they are.

Dave


Actually, for the price of extended warranties, they just aren't worth it and the hassle and what they cover. I have mine covered under my homeowners insurance. So, if ANYTHING EVER happens to it, as long as I am paying insurance on it, I get the full purchase price back - no questions asked. This includes things like theft, spills, me getting angry and throwing it, or running over it with my Jeep. :p

Conor Ryan 28-05-2005 14:17

Re: Laptops
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by team222badbrad
How about a Dell?

I personally have a Inspiron 8600 series, which I got in January.

The 8600 is no longer being produced, but 6000 might be in your price range, depending on how you build it.

I have not had any major problems with it so far, besides some keyboard keys popping off, which I simply popped back on. It's no wonder that all of them are not off from all of this CD forum stuff!

I looked heavily into dell, since my dad gets an discount from work there. But the problems I found with them were, 1. more expensive processor upgrades and 2. hardly any Video power, very few models had dedicated memory for the video and even those that did got pretty expensive

If I had the money I'd look into Toshiba and Fujitsu, they have great notebooks that start around 1200. Also Acer usually has some hidden deals in its notebooks too. Gateway is also a worthy mention too.

Joe Ross 28-05-2005 18:31

Re: Laptops
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ashley Weed
Actually, for the price of extended warranties, they just aren't worth it and the hassle and what they cover. I have mine covered under my homeowners insurance. So, if ANYTHING EVER happens to it, as long as I am paying insurance on it, I get the full purchase price back - no questions asked. This includes things like theft, spills, me getting angry and throwing it, or running over it with my Jeep. :p

I'd be very interested in reading the terms of your homeowners policy and riders, as well as knowing how much it costs to insure against intentional damage. Does it cover manufacturers defects as well?

Cory 28-05-2005 18:46

Re: Laptops
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by cdr1122334455
plus you can probably find a 80 gig 7200 rpm HDD which will signifigantly increase your performance.

Those 80 gb 7200 drives are ultra expensive. They just started appearing in laptops, and even the 60 gb 7200's are a lot more expensive than their 5400 counterparts.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ashley Weed
As for the power connectors on HP, they have been known to be weak, but that all depends on the user

I know this happened to Bill Gold recently, as well.

Dell really rips you off on RAM upgrades. When I was looking at laptops, it was like $800 for 1 gig of ram, vs $200something on the laptop I eventually got.

Dells which are actually meant for multimedia/gaming use have plenty of graphics card options. They're going to have a lot more than any other mainstream brand.

gobeavs 28-05-2005 19:40

Re: Laptops
 
Yeah, the upgrade to 5400 RPM will be helpful, that is pretty much now the standard for laptop HDD's. Although it has already been decided...the A64 is the better processor. Even w/o a 64-bit advantage, the on-die memory controller makes it a winner (and it really comes through in games compared to the Pentium 4). The one concern is the vid card - if you are going to do gaming, but for that price I doubt you could get much more.

Mike 28-05-2005 20:09

Re: Laptops
 
Just came back from Best Buy and got a good deal on a Pavilion.
- Windows XP Home SP2
- DVD-ROM/CD-RW
- WXGA 15.4" w/ BrightView
- AMD Athlon 64 3200+ (2.0GHz, 1MB L2 Cache)
- 512MB DDR SDRAM (Single stick)
- 80GB 4200 RPM HDD
- NVIDIA GeForce 440 (64MB Dedicated)
Got it for $1,150...

I don't have that much to spend, so I ended up lowering down the RAM/HDD. When I do get the money, I'll probably end up upgrading those.

PS: Anybody know how to get it so when you tap the touchpad it's the same as clicking the mouse button? Thanks =)

Clark Gilbert 28-05-2005 21:09

Re: Laptops
 
Look under Control Panel -> Mouse Settings, then there should be a special tab for your touchpad settings (if you have them).

Mike 28-05-2005 22:12

Re: Laptops
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Clark Gilbert
Look under Control Panel -> Mouse Settings, then there should be a special tab for your touchpad settings (if you have them).

I checked there, I think I might have to download another driver to enable it.

Jay H 237 30-05-2005 19:52

Re: Laptops
 
Check to see if HP has it's own settings separate from the control panel built into Windows.

I know that with both my Toshiba Satellites if I want to change certain things I have to use Toshiba's power managment settings and not the control panel settings. The touch pad settings on one of my Satellites is found on a tab under power management. If I attempt to make changes in the Windows control panel I will get an error message.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:51.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi