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Headed to college. Laptop help?
After 4 amazing years of being an active member on team 2197 i am graduating. And the very essential computer search. I'm just lookin for advice on what everyone on here thinks is a good buy. i would like at least a 15 inch screen for sure. everything else i will leave for suggestions. also by chance is anyone on here going to Saint Joseph's in rensselaer indiana haha.
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Re: Headed to college. Laptop help?
I hate my Lenovo T500. The price was right, the specs are great, but the user experience is awful. The CD-drive pops out randomly, the control and function keys are swapped, the charger cable is always loose and makes a ear destroying noise when it is plugged/unplugged.
They really need a better team of industrial designers. |
Re: Headed to college. Laptop help?
I've been using a Lenovo W500 series for this year and it's fantastic for what you need in college. Handles CAD and games without a hitch, pretty durable, and generally just does a lot of things well. The trackpad sucks, but there's the IBM "nub" to make up for it.
http://shop.lenovo.com/SEUILibrary/c...8E1488F7083D90 Quote:
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Re: Headed to college. Laptop help?
I use a Toshiba Satellite for my work in high school and as a home computer. I find it to be a good computer. It runs Labview and Autodesk Inventor with no issue. The bad things about it are that the cd drive makes an ungodly mount of noise while reading a cd and the power supply has a tendency to heat up.
I use it regularly in school, much more than most high school students. I don't know how the experience would compare to college classes. I would advice you to stay away from the netbooks. They are not good as a main computer or something you would actually do work with. I wouldn't try Inventor or Labview on one. |
Re: Headed to college. Laptop help?
I'm partial to Lenovo's, I use them for work and I buy my own. Presently year three on a T60 that's worked out well. The prior Lenovo (actually a Thinkpad) worked well the prior 3 years.
Three things to look at: How heavy is it? - You are lugging it across campus, after awhile the weight does make a difference. I had a really nice 17" that returned after three days of lugging it around NYC. So your 15" size is going to be a good choice. Power connector / Power brick. Make sure that the power brick will do multiple voltages and you can get cables for the country of choice. You may not need it but being able too makes life easy. Buy the laptop with the biggest power connector going into the laptop. They are under huge stress, I've lost motherboards in the past due to small connectors snapping off. Make sure it comes out the back so you can use the laptop on your lap. Lastly, USB is your friend. Get a laptop that has 3 USB connections, hopefully on both sides. Make sure they are powered so you can plug in external drives. Like I said at the start I've been very happy with the Lenovo's we've had. |
Re: Headed to college. Laptop help?
STAY away from Toshiba, go for Dell. Period.
Ever since Toshiba has been out sourcing their components, the laptops and other products have gone down as well as their customer service. Dell also had this issue, but in the past couple years they have brought most of the production back into the states and their service and products are a lot better. I have dealt with both companies and products for a very long time. |
Re: Headed to college. Laptop help?
Haven't used this laptop but just gonna throw it out there as an idea for you...
http://www.tomsguide.com/us/Asus-N61...ew-1507-2.html |
Re: Headed to college. Laptop help?
I'ma fan of tablet computers for school. I had've a Gateway CX210X (discontinued), and an HP tx2z (replaced by tm2 series). I strongly recommend looking into them for college use.
When you're looking at consumer grade machines they are all equally pour quality (80+% of laptops are made by the same handful of companies which you've never heard of), and everybody's support is in India now. Find the cheapest one with the features you want, and get it. If you want to get a quality machine Lenovo Thinkpads and HP EliteBooks and ProBooks are good, but you will pay a 30-60% premium over consumer grade machines. The advantage of business class machines is you will usually get support either in this country, or at least from someone who's first language is english, they are usually easier to upgrade, and extended warenties are usually cheaper than the consumer equivalent (if you are inclined to purchase one, which I don't usually reccomend). As for places to buy TigerDirect and Newegg both get some good deals if you watch, otherwise buying direct from the manufacturer when they are running sales works good. You can also get an additional 10% off HP Direct and TigerDirect purchases by going to the store through Bing Shopping (http://www.bing.com/shopping/pages/stores.aspx). Eric |
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I too would highly recommend a Lenovo though, they're very robust machines and can handle pretty much whatever software you plan to throw at them. No experience with HPs though. |
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I have had very positive experiences with the Thinkpad line (the old IBM ones and my W500), and Lenovo has spectacular sales online pretty regularly. Prior to this I had a Powerbook 1.5Ghz, and I never had a problem with the laptop (though I went though a couple of chargers). Seeing as the MacBook and MacBook Pro have a different type of charger, I imagine those issues are fixed. If you like Macs. The problem is that they are so darn pretty you can't abuse them much. With the Thinkpad's rugged exterior, I don't worry about it getting dirty, I just wipe it down every once in a while. |
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What I've found to be the case with HPs is that they heat up...really fast. I've only had the computer on for fifteen minutes, and it's already a lot hotter than most people would consider normal. My laptop is also really hard to keep clean :/ And yet, the Dell something-or-other-laptop that my family has that is 5 years old often runs better after it's started up, and it has endless amounts of games and programs installed on it. Dell > HP |
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Re: Headed to college. Laptop help?
At the risk of starting a holy war, I'd also submit the 15" MacBook Pro for consideration. The aluminum unibody construction has proven amazingly durable over the past year I've owned my 13" MacBook; a freshman year spent with a Dell Inspiron taught me the value of build quality in a college environment. They're down a bit on video RAM compared to the Lenovos, which may prove a sticking point for certain applications, but it's hard to say without reference material from the original post. They start around $1,700 with the college student discount (which is good for $100-200 off, and later in the summer may combine with an iPod Touch offer if past summers have been any indication).
Worth at least investigating; whether it works better for you (which, remember, is what's important here) is a question only you can answer. |
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