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My (almost) Dream Laptop

Mr. Binks

Gungan Punk
My goal is to keep it under 2000$. What would you all suggest I get to fill in the gaps [any other suggestions also welcome - try to keep it realistic, I work for minimum wage :yucky:]?

Display: 14-15" +
Memory: 256 MB +
Media Bay: 24x DVD-ROM/CD-R/W (modular?)
Hard Drive: 30-40 GB +
Processor: 1 GHz +
Graphics: ?
Modem: Ethernet (802.11b/g Wireless Mini-PCI Card)
Battery: ?
OS: Windows XP Home Edition
Other: At least 2 USB ports
 

nephalim

Psychic Vampire
Go for Dell. Best balance of price and performance/quality (although the quality is sometimes lacking, including the extra stupid phone support.)

That's your "dream" laptop? Those could be specs of a laptop from 5 years ago that sold under $2k :p
 

karth95

Lord of the Cats
I happen to know the people that used to do dell support before it went elsewhere... Dell basically shows them the laptops, says here's how to fix the common issues, and then puts them in front of a computer to log the calls, and never shows them the hardware again. It rather sucks. All phone support is starting to go down hill. They want to hire straight off the streets people who have no tech experience so they can pay them dirt and have them tech via script, not via knowledge and intuition.
 
Me, I like IBM ThinkPad's, I still use an old 75MHz one.
I read that newer ThinkPad's are the most well buit laptops on the market today, and RedHat Linux runs grate on them.
 
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AlphaWolf

I prey, not pray.
Well, I have owned a dell laptop for two years, and have been entirely satisfied with their service. Granted, the people on the phone are often nimwits, the job has always been done to my complete satisfaction. I have had it serviced somewhere around 6 times, every single time it was the same thing: I call them up, then somebody shows up at my house 2 days later and fixes it in 30 minutes without any intervention on my part.
 
OP
Mr. Binks

Mr. Binks

Gungan Punk
nephalim said:
That's your "dream" laptop? Those could be specs of a laptop from 5 years ago that sold under $2k :p

I said almost dream laptop. :p This is my "attainable" dream laptop. What I'd really love to have is a Mac PowerBook (titanium *drools*).

What kind of graphics card would be the best for someone who plays games at a slightly above casual level (I'm more of a console gamer - but I'd like something capable of running new PC games smoothly)? I haven't really done all that much research...

Another question... does anyone have an experience with modular DVD-ROM/CD-R/W Drives? How is that working out for you?
 

ra5555

N64 Newbie
the ATI M10 is the best... or should be the best. Wait a couple of weeks and it will be widely avaliable.
 

nephalim

Psychic Vampire
You won't afford the M10 for under $2k, and there's no reason to get it, as he stated he was a casual gamer. Go for the M9 if it's available in a system under $2k, the 32MB version should be fine. (otherwise the G4G is your only option, and is both slower and less advanced than the M9.) The M9 supports pixel and vertex shaders, important features of newer graphics cards, however they are not the latest version 2.0 (and i'm not quite sure of the implications of that.) I do think an M9 is more than enough, however, for your price range.

Ways to save money:

Get a smaller screen (14")

Get a regular XGA+ screen, (not SXGA or UXGA) which supports a max resolution of 1024x768, which should be fine unless you feel you need to go higher (there are other reasons for a UXGA screen, scaling for one, but you are trying to save moeny.)

Get a P4 2.4 GHZ at most. That's more than enough. The processor will be the last thing to be outdated on the machine.

Get the cheapest thing they offer for memory and then buy your own from crucial, as they are overpricing it outrageously.

Don't get the Inspiron I8xxx line, get the "value performance" model, which alludes me at the moment. If you don't get a Dell, the same thing applies for nearly all manufacturers.

Get a 32MB graphics card, perferably an M9

Get a 30GB hard drive.

Don't get a CD-RW. This I don't recommend, however.

Not getting a floppy drive will save you about 30 bucks.

Get a 2 year warranty.


Whatever you do, DON'T get onboard/shared video.
 
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I prefer Kingston over Crucial, but Kingston does cost more, but what you buy is what you get.
 
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