Comparative Laptop Reviews? 369
clambert asks: "A few co-workers and I are in the market for a new laptop, but it's been incredibly difficult to try and explore what's out there. How do Sony's warranties rank up against Dell's? Can I get Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on the new Toshibas? What model IBMs feature DDR memory? There doesn't seem to be an AnandTech/Ars/Toms for the notebook market, and short of filtering through all the marketing hype on every {brand}.com, its tough to find out what systems offer what specs. Are there any comprehensive resources out there for those of us in the market for a new laptop?"
Easy as this really (Score:2, Informative)
This is a site to get started at (Score:5, Informative)
Re:This is a site to get started at (Score:2)
Dell (Score:2, Offtopic)
But have you noticed just how much advertisting dell do in print and online media? Often they have the inside front cover and two or three pages inside a magazine. This makes it almost impossible for the publication to say anything bad about their products.
As I say, they are generally nice machines, but perhaps this has something to do with the lack of comparative reviews.
Not always true (Score:2)
But have you noticed just how much advertisting dell do in print and online media? Often they have the inside front cover and two or three pages inside a magazine. This makes it almost impossible for the publication to say anything bad about their products.
I subscribe to several magazines, and yes, some do seem to be lenient on their advertisers, but there are some publications out there who stick to their guns and call a spade a spade -- one recent review blasted Dell for shipping a P4 system with DDR SDRAM rather than RDRAM due to the performance hit. So making a blanket statement such as this is not accurate.
Re:Not always true (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't meant as a slam at Dell - I suspect nearly all other OEMs do this as well, but this is an area in which Dell makes it a point to execute even better than usual. It's simply not possible to be important enough to get a "test machine" from Dell and not have some PM continually looking over your shoulder throughout the testing. Is that undue influence on the results? I guess that depends on your perspective...
As for the advertising stick, I've never seen it used, but then, it doesn't really have to be, now does it? When everyone *knows* you're carrying a big stick, you have the luxury of being able to speak softly. (TR was right about so many things...)
Re:Dell (Score:2, Interesting)
As my boss says : "Dude you got a dell...Dude you're going to Hell"
Re:Dell (Score:2)
Re:Dell (Score:2)
I love the portability. I've been working out of my house for about fifteen years, and my current laptop is the first machine I've owned that truly lets me work where I want to work. When in town, that typically means local coffee shops, where I've met several other people who do the same thing.
I owned the first portable Unix system out there, an old Sony News with a monochrome display, 240MB SCSI hard drive, 24 MB RAM, MIPS 3000 CPU, and built in ethernet. Not bad for the late 1980s. It weighed a ton (20 lbs? something like that) but fit under an airline seat.
That introduced me to the notion that portable computing was reaching the point where professional software engineers could consider cutting loose from traditional work environments.
Today's laptops are amazingly good. Oracle on a laptop? I would've laughed ten years ago.
I bought my Dell refurbished, saving about 30% while still getting the same 3 yr warranty they offer for new machines. If you can find a refurbished machine that fits your needs you can save a few bucks this way.
Mine will be three years old this summer, and it's starting to show slight signs of flakiness.
I'm not particularly hard on it but I do use it for several hours nearly every day, lug it around in my bookbag along with a bunch of other junk, sling it under the seat on airplanes, in the trunk of the car on road trips, etc.
I almost never use the big padded carrying case I bought with it. The plastic's fairly well marked up from traveling snuggled next to camera bodies and the like, so it is subjected to a certain amount of wear and tear.
But it continues to work, day in and day out. Can't ask for more!
Mine has a 14.1" screen. A friend has a more recent Inspiron with a 15" screen and it's noticably more bulky and heavier than my Latitude. Not sure I'd trade the screen space for the additional bulk, though obviously no screen can be too big.
Re:Dell (Score:3, Interesting)
Example, Pentium 4 Laptops are only available with Geforce4 video cards unless you get the one [dell.com] (/. is SOOO going to mess up that link, it is a link to the Inspirion 8200) model that they have that comes with a video card that is NOT insanly powerful AND has a Pentium 4 chip on it.
This model also happens to need a lot of 'other' upgrades to bring it up to the range of the next cheapest laptop and then you end up paying the same price (or greater) then the bottom most default configuration of the next laptop one level up but without a good video card.
it is insane.
Their Pentium 3 based laptops are decent enough, but for anybody who wants to do a lot of CPU intensive work and NO gaming AT ALL, well hell, heh.
That and they only sell Intel kit, Dell has a significant dedication towards caring more about what Intel says then what AMD says.
Getting a well built laptop is NOT easy, and often times to get a REALLY well built one you have to deal with yee as old technology.
See Here [dolch.com] for an example of this tendency. Yeesh. Who knew that waterproofing could cost so much? ^_^
Here is another example [ruggednotebooks.com]
Yeesh. That much money and it can just stand a water STREAM. Ugh. Nothing about full immersion.
Anybody know of an x86 laptop that has a 15" screen, 1ghz+ chip, assloads of ram, and is fully submersible? No? Until they make one I am not buying a laptop.
Same thing for whole PCs nowadays (Score:3, Insightful)
A resource... (Score:2, Informative)
If you trust their opinions... (Score:5, Informative)
If you are going to use an alternative OS (linux or BSD for examples obviously) then check out a quick google search first to see people's impressions of the compatibility. This is a good idea anyway since people often sprinkle general comments into these and give you an idea of the quality of the product.
Finally, unless you are going for a Dell please go to a computer store and browse. Laptops are very personal machines and pointing device preference and the feel of the keyboard beneath your fingers as well as general layout of special buttons and the brightness and clarity of the screens are something you need to get a feel for first-hand.
If you get a Dell or other mail-order product it also gives you a point of reference so you know what to look for. For example if you try a box out at a store and realize you can't live without at least 15" screen or something.
I have Dell Inspiron 4000 and have been very happy with the quality of the product. SuSE 7.3 installed with no issues and Sax2 did a better job than Dell in figuring out my video settings.
Castle Wolfenstein looks damn good.
_______________________________________________
Re:It's all about form factor (Score:2)
You caught me. I did buy the 2040 I was trying not to sound like an advertisement for any particular make/model. I probably should have been more discreet.
I would say that the machine feels a bit faster than a PIII 600, which was the processor in a Thinkpad provided for me at work. One shortcoming is that I notice distinct periods of slow performance every now and then -- for a few seconds every now and then XP just feels less "snappy". Part of this is probably XP paging stuff to virtual memory, or just XP doing something funky. I plan to throw in another 128 megs of ram so this should alleviate some of the problems.
The only processor-related negative performance I've noticed is when I'm programming JSPs and I hit my app for the first time (thus running the compiler). Since the initial hit compiles, initializes static objects and sets up database connections (dbms on my machine, no less), I definitely see some churning. But the delay is only about 5 to 10 seconds longer than on my p4-1.5 desktop, so maybe about a 1/3 slower. This is all estimation of course...I haven't really done any analysis.
There are some benchmarks out there that really test the 2040, and although I researched them when deciding on the fujitsu, I honestly stopped thinking of pure processor performance in lew of form factor and portability.
The biggest complaint I have with the 2040, however, isn't the processor. It's the the right shift key. Fujitsu crammed the directional arrow keys in the bottom right with shift key to the right of the up-arrow key and above the right-arrow key.
To illustrate:
[up][sh] [lt][dn][rt]
Since the shift and up keys are right next to each other and the EXACT same size I sometimes hit the wrong one. I've gotten used to it so I don't have problems, but it was annoying the first few days.
Re:It's all about form factor (Score:2)
Shit, the pre tags didn't seem to have an effect, or maybe I was just careless. Here is the point I was trying to make with the diagram:
[up][sh]
[lt][dn][rt]
I really wish they had knocked out one of the windows buttons (why do we need two anyway?) or maybe one of the alt or ctrl-buttons on the right side. Oh well.
opinion sites work... (Score:2, Interesting)
Personally speaking, if it were my money, I would go Toshiba. Great unit, low price, warranty extensions available through them for 3 years full accidental damage, the whole bit.
TiBook (Score:4, Insightful)
iBooks are nice, but they use G3 CPUs... Mac users are waaay better off with a G4.
the problem with apple hardware... (Score:2)
Re:the problem with apple hardware... (Score:2)
Re:TiBook (Score:2)
The build quality of the Rev. B has significant improvements over the Rev. A - it's not stellar, but it's not bad, either.
Thinkpad.. (Score:2, Informative)
/m
Re:Thinkpad.. (Score:2, Informative)
My personal notebook is a Vaio. Too new to say how well it will last, but so far, it blows everything I've ever seen away. Before that, I had a Toughbook. If you want a notebook that will last forever, go for this. I used it for 3 years, now my 8 year old cousin has been abusing it for almost a year with zero-ill effects. They are nearly indestructable.
A good place to start with (Score:2, Informative)
I love my powerbook (Score:5, Interesting)
But otherwise, my Powerbook is a great machine. I can put Yellow Dog Linux on it if I want just Linux. Or if I want a good BSD system, like the song says, "Boom...there it is." Runs the major apps I care about (MS Office (yes, I know...but it's a business thing), Adobe Acrobat), runs the apps I make (Perl), has a great display, DVD playback, and if you plug in a monitor in the back, you can make it work as a secondary monitor (instead of just a mirror, which is kind of cool). Instant sleep-off, sleep-on just by closing the lid. (Most Windows based laptops I've seen get *very* pissed off when you put them in sleep mode, what with the PCMCIA slots getting redected and all.)
Modem, 1 G/100/10 Ethernet built in, Airport built in (you can turn it off if you're worried, or get an Airport and bridge it to your local network at 128 bits encryption - sitting in the living room surfing the net was never so much fun
Other than the mouse thing - and you either get used to doing Control-Click for secondary mouse stuff, or when you have it at a desk you plug in a little USB mouse - it's been a rock solid machine.
Oh, and it plays Icewind Dale great too. (Baldur's Gate runs all right, as long as you boot into OS 9, because the bastards haven't Carbonized BG I yet.)
You must be a white guy (Score:3, Funny)
Uhh... that's "Whoop there it is"...
Airport built in (you can turn it off if you're worried, or get an Airport and bridge it to your local network at 128 bits encryption - sitting in the living room surfing the net was never so much fun
The Airport antenna is built into every new Mac (desktops and laptops), and they all have an internal slot for the Airport card, but the Airport card itself is an extra $100.
Re:You must be a white guy (Score:2, Interesting)
The new TiBooks come with AirPort. And they have a nifty $100 rebate on an AirPort BaseStation.
Lovin mine. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong, but I betcha it's the only laptop you can buy with Unix not only factory-installed, but as the primary OS. Ya just drop a little icon onto your taskbar for Terminal, and it's just like home.
If you want to work WITH your computer instead of ON your computer, it's a great choice.
Re:You must be a white guy (Score:2)
You're wrong. Tadpole Technology [tadpole.com] makes portable SPARC servers and laptop SPARC workstations. They have horrible battery life and they cost a fortune, but they're the only way to natively run Solaris/SPARC binary (proprietary) applications on a laptop computer. The new Tadpole laptops cost something like $20,000 or more, just for reference. You won't be buying one of them unless you really need it for something really specific.
They come preinstalled with some version of Solaris. The other OS's you could run on them would be either Linux or NetBSD. But you wouldn't buy one for that. You'd buy one to run binary only Solaris applications that only run on the SPARC version of Solaris and not Solaris x86.
Cryptnotic
Re:You must be a white guy (Score:3, Funny)
Actually, it's "Whoot! There it is!" (by 95 South) or "Whoomp! There it is!" by Tag Team, who followed up their smash hit with the underwhelming "Here it is, Bam!" and "Whoomp! There it went!" (Seriously, I'm not joking.)
Yes, I went to High School in the early 90s.
-Isaac
Re:You must be a white guy (Score:3, Funny)
I prefer the classis "w00t! There it is!" (by 31337 h4x0rZ)
Re:I love my powerbook (Score:2, Funny)
Airport built in
Handy for travel, I imagine, but must make the notebook a lot bigger?
Airport code: OSX (Score:2)
OSX: Kosciusko Airport, Attala County, MS, US
So Apple is Still in bed with MS... ooops! that is MS as in Mississipi, right?
I once owned a PowerBook G4... but it had to go. (Score:2)
The Ti case was kind of cool looking, but quite weak . Disite that fact that I treated it like a baby, it aquired a dent, scratches, a missing foot, and a slight curve to the monitor's backing. CD's also seemed to need a bit of help loading after a few month.
I also found the 5400 RPM harddisk and the 16meg Rage 128 to to be quite a let down as well.
No doubt, it was revision "a" machine, and this stuff happens with new toys. However, some of these case and hardware problems still exist in the current batch of PowerBooks. It was nice machine with a TON of features, however I can't seem my self looking at another PowerBook anytime soon. I think I'll stick with my DPG4 box.
Why (I think) laptops aren't as well-covered (Score:5, Insightful)
Laptops, for the most part, appeal to two groups of users - corporate shops and students (granted plenty of exceptions). Enthusiasts don't seem to buy as many laptops, probably because of the performance compromises virtually all laptops make. You can't readily upgrade anything on the typical laptop except for RAM, HD space, and Cardbus devices. There's no CPU swapping, no video card upgrades, and overclocking is kind of pointless on a laptop (though I had a PowerBook 3400c once that I overclocked from 240 to 270 MHz).
What coverage there is of laptops has usually been in the "mainstream" print publications like PC Magazine, but they don't even go there too often.
When it's a situation like yours, with multiple co-workers getting laptops, usually it's a pretty simple answer - your IT department will give you a Dell, Compaq, IBM, or Toshiba and tells you to love it. At least you guys get to pick!
As for our shop - Compaq Evo N600c laptops. They're pretty slick. As for me (IRL), I use a TiBook 667 as my main computer at home, and it's most wonderful indeed.
Re:Why (I think) laptops aren't as well-covered (Score:2)
No kidding. My wife asked for a laptop a few years back - to quote, "You won't hork around with it". Some folks just don't care to have a hard drive, video card, etc upgrade every few months.... sigh
The best place to compare... (Score:5, Informative)
Click here for example [cnet.com]
Research, My Boy... (Score:5, Insightful)
When my wife and I decided to buy a laptop, we sat down and discussed what we wanted to do with it. After that, the specs wrote themselves, and we could move on to finding compatible machines.
For example, she wanted to run Evercrack. I wanted screen real estate for work application. So a 3D accelerator, 512M RAM, and 1600x1200 display were part of the specs.
Did I eventually want to run Linux on it? If so, then maybe a laptop with no proprietary hardware (as it turns out, I don't want to run Linux on it, though, at least not for a while).
Finally, after determining what we wanted to do with the laptop, we spec shopped for the machine, using C-Net, USENET, vendor sites.
In the end, we narrowed it down to the high-end Vaio and high-end Toshiba. Both had comparable specs, the Vaio was slower, with larger screen size (same resolution, though) and a slightly better 3D card (mobile radeon 7500).
We went with the Toshiba, though: GeForce4Go (but the video card can be swapped out, apparently, which was a big plus), SD/Smart Media readers built in (for digital photography and swapping files to my Zaurus), Firewire. So we got a machine with great specs, but that does what we need it to do (plus more).
Of course, the Everquest thing should have tipped me off. I think I've used the laptop once since we've gotten it. Silly wife.
Research. Sigh (Score:2)
Which never worked. There was always some fancy -- and basically useless -- technology that my clients just had to have. One reason I'm no longer a consultant!
Re:Research, My Boy... (Score:2)
And if you dont mind, what did you pay?
Because laptop users are zealots (Score:5, Insightful)
The salespeople at my shop are absolutely married to their Sony Vaios, because they look sexy, they impress clients, and they're very lightweight. They don't care about things like driver support or warranty, because the tech crew handles that, and they always get a new one every year anyway.
The network admin crew loves Dells and Toshibas, because they're solid as rocks and the driver support is much better, with pretty regular driver updates.
You're already seeing lots of people slap up their opinion here, but notice that it's all opinions - not hardware comparisons. Us Slashdotters are subject to the same hardware fanatacism that my cohorts are subject to. Whether you want integrated 802.11b, big hard drives, big memory support, whatever, you can always find it in any brand. Everybody's doing basically the same thing, and the performance is within 10% of the next guy.
Re:Because laptop users are zealots (Score:2)
Everybody's doing basically the same thing, and the performance is within 10% of the next guy.
And in spades, too!
It cracks me up to see some of the "comparisons" in some of the print publications which show glossy colored bar graphs that end up within about 2% of each other.
So much of modern PCs are really the same in terms of performance. The PC mags are for computer buying like Car & Driver are for car buying - sexy performance tests and "the experience", but little in the way of real life "going to the grocery store" durability.
What they can't or won't show are statistics on driver fragility, what percentage have to get returned for warranty work, etc. I guess that doesn't sell computers (or advertisers).
Sonys (Score:2)
ummm...that's a 505GX (Score:2)
Heavy Laptops - Notes from the field. (Score:2)
I don't need speed - the only things I burn CPU on are Microsoft Office and (in the past) The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search. I need something I can carry on the train without breaking laptop-bag straps all the time, and without breaking my shoulder. The one good thing about overspec'd overweight devices is that since the folks back at headquarters are cheapskates and don't give us new toys every year, at least they don't get obsolete as fast
Over the years, we've used a variety of vendors - Toshiba, Dell, IBM, and back when we sold computers, OEM NEC machines with AT&T Death Star logos on the front. Unfortunately, we've always seemed to have been doing Toshibas when my machine was up for refresh - they've mostly been heavy unreliable pieces of junk that aren't made for the physical abuse that laptops get on the road, and they've got quirky power management that tends to have real trouble restoring from power-save mode without having to reboot half the time. Fortunately, my current-generation machine died, and the backup they've found me is one of the Portege7020s - the battery's ancient, so battery life is too short, but the machine's lighter and thinner than its faster predecessor :-)
Dell, Toshiba, Sony (Score:2)
I have used and supported Dells and Toshibas extensively at our University, however, and they both seem to be rock solid machines. Although the Dell might have a slightly better looking display, I think I favor the Toshibas a bit more. They are a little sleeker looking and they just seem to be incredibly stable. (We are running Toshiba Satellite 1805's (new), 2800's (old) and 2060's (moldy)). Kudos to them for redisigning their touchpads, which have incredible accuracy in their newer models.
Note: We are a Windows 2000 only shop.
Re:Dell, Toshiba, Sony (Score:2)
Make a long story short, I looked through magazines for the ads seeing what was there. Nothing tended to catch my attention. I figured before I would give up I'd go check at Best Buy and CompUSA.
While I was at Best Buy, a Toshiba rep happened to be there for his monthly "make sure everything looks good with the product visits" and we started talking. Basically after chatting for about an hour, we both decided that their cheapest model, an 1805 would do everything I needed and more. It had 256MB RAM, 20GB HD, 1.1Ghz Celeron, the screen was nice and bright, and everything I needed was built in. All, tax included, for under $1000.00.
It came with WindowsXP, so I took it home, booted and within about 45 minutes had Mandrake installed (I love the DVD copy of the ProSuite!).
I love my toshiba 1805 with linux.
3 tips (Score:3, Informative)
After 8 laptops (varios purchases, various sources), my two recommendations are:
1) Make sure it has a 3 months warrenty. Most problems happen immediately (manufacturer flaws that appear during the first days of use). Most accidents happen during the first month (while you learn the 'stresses' your laptop can handle).
2) Never get reconditioned (or used) laptops unless they include a new battery-- battery replacement is expensive.
avoid the M$ tax. (Score:4, Interesting)
notebook MANUFACTURERS. Dell, Sony etc. take these notebooks, slap their trademarks all over
kick up the price by 50%-150% and force you to pay the M$ tax.
Scan http://powernotebooks.com to build your own.The above link has a perfect score in http://www.resellerratings.com (makes me a _little_ nervous) but they have a nice range of books from minimal SIS chipset based to the lateses P-4 DDR units with 64Mb DDR radeon video. All in the $800-$1700 (US dollar) range.
For a narrower range of notebooks but with better prices, pop over to http://www.mwave.com and poke on notebooks in their catalog. mwave has very good ratings in http://www.resellerratings.com (more realistic IMHO) and will let you configure your notebook without the M$ tax.
Re:avoid the M$ tax. (Score:2)
Prices were lower than from Sager itself, I bought with *no* operating sysem installed, no problem, and when I suspected a hard drive problem near the end of the warranty period, I had an actual human person at powernotebooks.com who hooked me up with an actual (knowledgable) individual, named tech rep at Sager, and instead of forcing me to send the unit in for repair and having it out of action for a few days, they shipped me a new hard drive against an RMA for the old one.
As far as comparative reviews, I don't know about you, but once I get above the basic specs vs. price balance for what I need, the rest of my laptop buying decision is totally subjective. I am interested in screen appearance and keyboard feel more than anything else, and I strongly prefer a touchpad to the little mini-joysticks in the middle of the keyboard.
How can a reviewer possibly rate how *you* will like this keyboard or that keyboard?
The most useful vendor-to-vendor comparison would probably be durability, and the most authoritative place to get that information would be from the third-party warranty/service policy companies. I suspect that most/all of them are under NDA, but when I get a little time free I'll make some calls, see if I can't pry some information loose, possibly write a story about laptop durability for NewsForge.
- Robin
Custom Laptops (Score:2)
Multi boot on a TiBook. (Score:4, Insightful)
That's what I got in January when they finally started to deliver a CD-R & RW burner in 'em. (I HATE not being able to back-up.)
I can only recommend it. My G4/667MHz 512MB RAM 30GB disk is great.
Too heavy, but otherwise rocks (Score:2)
Re:Multi boot on a TiBook. (Score:2)
Simple for me (Score:3)
As simple as that.
PCWorld does monthly rankings (Score:2)
Yet more experience/opinions... (Score:3, Informative)
Reason: 1600x1200? You cannot really argue with that.
Also, these IBM's have video in too! (Tosh's don't by default (I've just checked))
The previous one was a 770z (March '99? I think I get a new one every 2 years. That had a 300 PII I think), which at the time had the highest resolution (1280x1024) and that's still going strong on someones desk (the battery's dead by now).
Previous to that, it was a Tosh' Tecra something-or-other 166 (Nov '98) which is still running as a router somewhere in the organisation. (how's about that for reuse then
Unfortunately, there isn't anything with a higher resolution of 1k6 x 1k2 yet (prove me wrong) but I'd get it as soon as it came out.
Other collegues typically have Vaios (crap video cards (CStrike-wise)) and Dells (the little Inspiron 2650's ok, but too small).
& the one I've got my eye on is the A31p but I'll wait for the 2 or 2.1 Ghz P4 (Q1 '03 roll-out, methinks) + it'll take the Ultraport camera I got for the last one too!
After saying all that bollocks, I think that if this is your first laptop, the main things to ask yourself is:
"How long's the warranty? (Y'know you'll drop it more often/earlier if it's shorter)"
"Trackpoint or scratch&sniff?"
"Will it scale up my display on the LCD if I drop the resolution (IOW: play CS) , or does it only show up the middle 30% of the screen?"
"Can I carry it easily? (e.g. I don't feel like a dickwad with a 3kg 'top in a rucksack, or am I a neo-PHB who looks cools with a teeny briefcase)?"
"Will it run Linux/BSD/OS-of-choice?"
I'll shut up now & get on with....
XOR EAX,EAX
PUSH EAX
RET
.
.
;lame I know...
Sony Vaio - Linux? (Score:2)
I've had several Sony Vaio notebooks, and have been very happy with them. They are not the cheapest, but the build quality is good and they look the part, and they work nicely with other Sony kit.
I've currently got a PCG-GR215SP. I want to put Linux on it but am afraid that it might have proprietry hardware that will screw up the install. Has anyone reading this got Linux running on one of the latest Sony Vaio machine? I know people have done it on earlier ones, but can't find anything on the web about installing on a machine like the PCG-GR215SP.
PIII-M 1.2 vs. P4-M 1.7 (Score:2, Informative)
I was leaning toward the Toshiba Satellite 5005-S504 [cnet.com] until I read this [mobilix.org]. Running linux is a must, so now I'm considering a Dell Inspiron 8100 [dell.com].
Both of the above have UXGA (1600x1200) displays. I originally tought I wanted a Powerbook G4 [apple.com], but am not convinced that I can be productive on a 1152x768 display. My development environment looks like this: Left 1/3 of the screen is an Eterm [eterm.org] running screen [gnu.org]. Right 2/3 is XEmacs [xemacs.org]. A higher resolution means more code visible at a time and/or a more readable font.
Linux and laptop (Score:5, Informative)
I found these 2 site quite useful:
Linux on a laptop [linux.org]
UniX with Mobile Computers [mobilix.org]
The specs don't matter. (Score:2)
That's why laptop owners are so religious about their machines - this is an area where idiosyncratic unexplainable personal preference really is the most important factor. It's also why comparative laptop reviews are generally useless. Go out and get your hands on a bunch of different machines - that'll tell you more than any magazine article.
That said, PC Magazine's Support and Satisfaction Survey [pcmag.com] will give you some useful hard data on laptop reliability, and reading lots of comments on epinions can give you a dim impression of common trends in owner experience.
My personal experience: I bought a ThinkPad T21 about a year ago, but I found the keyboard painful to use and had to sell it. (Which is a shame, considering how good previous IBM and ThinkPad keyboards have been.) Compaq has a good keyboard, but Compaq sucks for build quality, reliability, and service. I tried HP and Toshiba models at a local store and was unimpressed with their ergonomics and general quality. I recently used a Dell Inspiron 4100 for a month - it was cheap, and the three-year CompleteCare service plan is awesome, but I found the machine itself to be mediocre in every way. Mediocre build quality, mediocre ergonomics, mediocre screen, a little too heavy, and really ugly.
I'm now using a PowerBook G4 - it has a few quirks, the main one being that it's not i386/Linux
Re:The specs don't matter. (Score:3)
JOY
Dynamism.com (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dynamism.com (Score:2)
What I am looking for... (Score:2)
After that - price is my major litigating factor. I am just not in the money. The current laptop I am looking at can (humerously enoug) be found @ www.walmart.com. Since my girl works @ wal-mart I am hoping to get the 10% off it so its only a $900 laptop (p3 1ghz, dvd - not a bad little laptop for the price).
Built in 802.11b is important, bluetooth not so much - but I can live w/o tho since I can get the adapter
Anand Covering Laptops (Score:5, Informative)
They have covered the:
Asus T9 [anandtech.com]
Toshiba Satellite [anandtech.com]
and just today:
WinBook N4 [anandtech.com]
I am really glad to see someone as trusted at Anand filling this niche!
-OctaneZ
no question about it (Score:2)
Linuxcare Labs certification reports (Score:3, Interesting)
Linuxcare Lab's certification reports. As usual, GNU/Linux-related docs are useful descriptive than the manufacturers'. =-)
-Paul Komarek
Wait Two Weeks (Score:2)
Personally, I'd wait two weeks (until WWDC [apple.com]) and see what shows up here [apple.com].
~jeff
Get a noname laptop (Score:2)
Rabid Laptop Testimonials... (Score:4, Funny)
A Tadpole SparcBook 2, from 1993. A neat little thing I got from my company and it still works great, though I no longer have a working battery for it, it is neat to boot up for nostalgia's sake. Built in SCSI, AUI Ethernet, etc. Anyway, the funny thing is my home was robbed and the laptop stolen. I tried to call pawn shops to report it, and they all had the same question (so, is it a Mac, or a PC, I would say "saprc, running solaris, and they would ask "is that a DOS program? Does it say anything about intel on it? A latop *has* to be either PC or Mac, so you probably have an old 286 or 386 or something" Describing this thing to pawnshops was painful., eventually I just said if it is a laptop and you can't tell what the hell t is, it's probably mine). As it turns out, no one would buy it and they guy got caught two years later and couldn't even figure out how to turn it on, and I got it back intact. Still works great, though I'm looking for a cheap PC laptop replacement, since the SparcBook 2 is getting long in the tooth. Mac platform looks like they approach Sun quality on laptops, but is too expensive, oh well.
Re:Rabid Laptop Testimonials... (Score:2)
http://home.earthlink.net/~gaite/energy.h
http://www.personaltelco.net/index.cgi/SolarPo
http://www.kenkifer.com/bikepages/t
http://www.roadwaves.com/toys.html
Have fun.
Speaking as a tech... (Score:3, Informative)
BEST - IBM ThinkPad T-series - All other laptops are playing catchup to the IBM T-series line of portables. They have the best weight/performance/features ratio of any laptop on the market. IBM offers a fully 3-year warranty that covers your laptop internationally, no other mfg does this like IBM. Since this is /. I should mention that you can load your favorite *NIX distro onto one of these without a lot of trouble.
The biggest drawback to the T-series is the price - starting at $2400. If you can afford it, this laptop is king.
Sony Vaio - Beautiful laptops that run great until you have to get them repaired. The backlog on parts from Sony is a joke - 3-6 months easy.
Toshiba - They used to make great laptops, but have fallen in years past to mediocrity. A reasonable cheap solution.
HPaq - Forgetaboutit. Neither HP nor Compaq makes a laptop I would purchase, period.
Apple - The PowerBook G4 is beautiful, so long as you can stand running Mac OS. X is better... much better. The iBooks work well too. Apple repairs on laptops - mail it to them and get it back in a week fixed. At least you know it'll be done right.
Hope this helps. Best of luck.
IBM has the best keyboard, by far... (Score:2)
I chose my IBM because I tried a friend's and fell in love with the keyboard. I now prefer it to a desktop keyboard. I also really like the pointing device, especially in combination with the third "scroll" button.
The 14" screen is the perfect compromise- just big enough for all day viewing at 1024x768. Bigger isn't necessary, smaller is too squinty.
There's also an overall quality feel that's a notch or two above everything else, except Apple. Ti Powerbooks are beautiful.
As far as I'm concerned, IBM blows everything else away. In comparison, my bro-in-law's Dell feels like a piece of crap.
I'd still take a three year old IBM T-series over a brand new anything else. Speed, schmeed.
comp.sys.laptops newsgroup (Score:2)
Compaq E500 (Score:2)
I have a compaq Armada E500 with the 1400X1024 LCD in a titanium shell,DVD,integrated 10/100, modem P-III 866 with 256 meg ram.
EVERYTHING works under linux, setting up Slackware was effortless, I have the modem working, everything else working and X 4.2.0+ had the DRI 3d acceleration for the ATI card working again..
No hardware on this INCLUDING the docking station works perfectly under linux.... it is an awesome machine for linux.
Re:Compaq E500 (Score:2)
I even have suspend working well (no effort involved) including suspending my 802.11 card (my compaq EVO sometimes didnt suspend the pcmcia cards.)
Linux on laptops... (Score:2)
Screen size and native resolution... (Score:2)
Most web pages these days are designed for 800x600, with some at 1024x768. So 1024x768 is probably best for most people. It happens to be the native resolution of most 14" laptop screens. Bigger screens are usually higher, and smaller screens lower. So 14" is probably the sweet spot.
Re:Screen size and native resolution... (Score:2)
Dell Story (Score:2)
I currently dual boot XP and Mandrake 8.1. At one point I was tripple booting 2KL,XP and Mandrake 8. No problems. The ATI M4 viedo card uses the generic ATI Rage 128 driver though in Linux. After a year Dell finally put out a decent video card driver with OpenGL support. Of course, newer models use GeForce cards.
If you work for a big company you get a beefed up 3yr warranty if your company has an account with Dell (most do).
Easy as this really... (Score:3, Informative)
Toshiba period (Score:2, Offtopic)
During the past 8 years I have owned two (that's all, 2) laptops, both are Toshiba. The first one was a T1100 and it kept working until I broke it tinkering inside the case.
The second one, a SatellitePro, is about 6 years old and has had almost daily use, only now starting to show some stress (cracks, etc) and has been to the shop once for a defective battery. Bought my son one when he was about 12 yrs old, he recently replaced it (Toshiba was still working fine) with a Dell. The Dell has been sent back for various repairs several times in the past year.
My SatellitePro is now my livingroom websurfing machine. Will be replacing it with another Toshiba this summer.
Also, at work I have used Panasonic (the CF series is great if you don't mind paying a premium for a ruggedized machine), also used Dell and NEC. Hated the Dell and NEC, both seemed slow for their processor and memory, but the biggest thing was they just did not feel "solid" like a Toshiba. Fo a long time I refused using stuff from the office and took my own machines everyplace.
The prices of Toshibas are reasonable, just make a casual comparison at Best Buy or a similar store.
Bottom line: Toshibas always work.
Re:Toshiba period (Score:2, Informative)
I'm really happy with my ibook right now - durable, great power usage and nice os - dualbooting ydl & osx
Re:Toshiba period (Score:2, Informative)
I've worked with Dells, and they have been okay too.
I also supported a few Gateway laptops, and the ones we had were constantly having problems. We started out with 4 working Gateways, all of which had problems. By combining parts from the four I was able to get two working. I had to swap out hard drives, screens, CD drives, keyboards, and more.
- Eric, My web site [invisiblerobot.com]
Re:Toshiba period (Score:2, Interesting)
I have to agree with the positive reviews of Toshiba laptops. I use my Satellite 1800 (PS181C) exclusively at home, work, school, and on job sites everywhere. Whenever it's powered by AC, dnetc is crunching away eating 100% of the CPU. Heat is barely a factor, nor is noise from the constantly running fan.
When I was preparing to purchase a laptop, I found that Toshiba's were the best bang for the buck. This machine is a fantastic balance of performance and economy. So it doesn't have a 15" display or a DVDROM - it stays powered longer than any others i work with.
My only real issue is the fact that the battery will not charge, or if it does, it does so at a rate of 1% every 48 hours when the CPU is pegged. However, with my power saving options I wind up with anywhere from 4-6 hours of run-time on battery, so I guess Toshiba's power handling is just fine with me. {smile}
As for Dells; I wouldn't give you a thank-you for one. I'd never reccomend one to a friend, family member, colleague, or client.
They run loud and hot, their display hinges are far too loose, they continue to have battery issues, the screens wind up with a keyboard imprint stamped on them (lid closes too tightly, perhaps), the power saving functionality is awful (far too simplistic for one thing), and they're overall quite tempermental.
Their phone techs, I might add, can be quite... shall we say demeaning and most un-helpful. A colleague of mine has an Inspiron (top of the line book as of about six months ago) whose battery has gone south. Battery thinks it's at 100% charge, but run-time is approx. 30 minutes. He phoned Dell, who told him to enable his power saving features which, of course, had been active the whole time. The battery continued to deteriorate to the point where it would only maintain a 74% charge, then a 67%, etc..
All this, mind you, with the extended on-site warranty package!
If ever I have a problem with my Satellite, I'll follow-up with an indication of Toshiba's technical support.
Oh, and for the record, I much prefer Toshiba's keyboard layout (ref: Home/End/PgUp/PgDown) to the style used by Dell and IBM books. I can use them without having to lift my hands from their position, whereas on a Dell/IBM machine I have to pick up my right hand and look at the keyboard to hit the derned things, way in tarnation up in front of the hinge. Most inconvenient, IMHO, and my productivity always suffers when I have to use one of those machines.
Re:Toshiba propellers (Score:2)
Returned a new Toshiba VCR at the time too, just paranoid I guess, thought they might not be able to repair it during their suspension from doing business in the USA (did not know how those things worked then).
Anyway, they got in trouble, paid a price and make great stuff now, from what I can see.
Ooops, got too involved in other response (Score:2)
Anything with PCMCIA slots will take a wireless card of whatever flavour you like. Last I looked all the Toshibas had 2 PCMCIA slots.
if anybody finds a model with more let me know!
Re:Ooops, got too involved in other response (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure the SatPro 4600 has an option for "built-in" WiFi. What this means is that all models have an antenna built into the lid, but you have to pay extra to get the actual wireless network card installed (not PCMCIA - I think it goes somewhere else inside the case, kinda like the way the iBook works).
I know this because we have several here at work and several users got their hopes up because they thought they already had wireless access built in when it turns out it was just the antenna. Oh well.
I'd really like to see more laptops with built-in non-PCMCIA 10/100 ethernet, modem, and wireless, just to avoid all the extra dongles and pop-out Xjacks and bulging wireless PCMCIA cards. Keeps your laptop clean!
Two complaints - Re:I have a tecra 8200 (Score:2)
1) Bloody loud.
2) Really really bad keyboard layout. What idiot placed "home" to the next to and to the right of the backspace key? I can't say that I ever got used to the other page movement keys either in their column on the right. But that Home just causes permanent issues... I should really just bind it to BS and lose the functionality altogether. I would be much more productive that way.
Re:SONY HAS NO WARRANTY... (Score:2)
Warranty? (Score:2)
Oh, *right* - that thing I voided with a screwdriver that first day...
Actually, I've never needed to use the warranty on my vaios - I have 2 of them. Damn solid little machines. They've literally been all over the world, usually rattling around in a backpack without any special padding or protection. The older one is held together with tape in places, but it performs like a dream.
Cheers,
Jim in Tokyo
Re:SONY HAS NO WARRANTY... (Score:5, Informative)
My Sony experience: US Vaio in Germany (Score:2, Informative)
May 2000, back in Germany , the right display hinge broke.
I called support in Germany about this and learned that Sony has no world wide cooperation with all its Sony minions, unlike, say, Toshiba (thats what my friend told me about Toshs).
So I called the American support and they blabbed about shipping it to Florida and stuff, so it would have been an open ended thing regarding money that I would have to spend. There was no way that they could just ship the broken part.
Faced with this dilemma, I opened the case myself. Cudos for Sony here, because it was real easy, but display hinge is made of the *cheapest* metal. Think desktop PC slot covers.
It wasn't even cheap on purpose, the metal was still way stronger than the glass cover of the LCD backlight, so the breaking hinge wouldn't protect the LCD from breaking to save me some money.
I finally repaired it myself by using a piece of desktop slot cover metal to solder the 2 broken parts of the hinge together, like with a brace. And I dare say it's stronger than the original part
2001 I had to fix the right hinge the same way.
2002 I read that Sony Germany now asks for $20 just to qoute you the price of a spare part (they dropped that policy by now).
So I love Sony for their design and components, but I dread their support.
I could go on and on about this:
When I bought the notebook computer above, I asked them if the modem would be usable under Linux, they said "yes". Lucky for me I didn't expect this, but asked to amuse myself and in a faint hope that it would work. It was a Windows only soft modem of course.
Anyway, the design of that F180 is still sleeek and many other laptop vendors have worse looking machines. It did it's job for 3 years now and is still very functional even though I do not treat it daintily (it's a tool, dammit).
I will soon buy the successor to that laptop, it won't be a Sony.
I dream of a TiBook, but probably go for Tosh or HP (even though their displays are suppose to be crap on _some_ models. I hate inconsistency.)
Marcus
Re:System shootouts (Score:3, Informative)
System shootouts comparison page [aapltalk.com]
--geethree
Re:Toshiba (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Toshiba (Score:2, Informative)
Sony hardware good; support bad (Score:2)
My only objection is that now that the disk drive is failing, I can't get any support from Sony. Period. The online support docs, if you manage to get just the right search, indicate that the drive isn't replacable, the nearest service center is San Diego (I live in Raleigh), and there are no authorized dealers nearby (yeah, I know, CompUSA sells Sony laptops...but refuses to fix them).
You can make snide comments about neon lights and so on, but I think those comments apply to the PowerBook and similar fruity translucent systems than to a silver/purple Vaio.
Now for an appeal: If anyone here knows how I could replace my disk on my own and set up the OS with a new suspend memory to disk partition, please let me know. I only bought the laptop for $900, but I see no reason to trash a good piece of hardware if a way can be found to extend its life.
505GX, new hdd (Score:2)
Re:Consider getting a Mac (Score:2)
Re:No Dell for me (Score:2)
Now the eraser mice I find easy to control, but not easy to screw up.
Re:No Dell for me (Score:2)