Buying a laptop
Jan. 14th, 2006 09:35 am
A few months ago I poured coffee into my beloved Thinkpad, and the screen died. It turns out that no-one can get hold of replacement screens for a ThinkPad X30, which is a bit sad. I've been using Jess's laptop in the meantime, but she's getting a bit sick of it, and anyway I need one to take to Belgium. I don't like to buy big expensive things without gathering the wisdom of the lazyweb!
I have only one really strong requirement: it has to be light. Around 1.5kg is good, lighter is better, anything above 2kg is right out. In particular, please don't advocate any Apple laptop that weighs above 2kg, which I think is all of them.
The next most important thing is battery life. Everything else is just the usual tradeoff of features and suchlike. All light laptops have 1024x768 screens, except the Dell/Samsung WXGA ones that have 1280x768. All laptops you can buy new come with Bluetooth, WiFi, built-in Ethernet, and so on. 512Mb RAM will be plenty for most of the things I want to do. It doesn't seem to be possible to determine for sure which ones support WPA2, sadly; I'm just hoping that means they all do. Similarly, it seems to be very hard to find out how good they will be with Linux, but they're all usually OK. I'm assuming the warnings against Vaios from a couple of years ago stand (I've done this before).Any recommendations? A whole bunch of options are listed here. So far these seem to be the main contenders:
| Model | Price | Mass | Battery life | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dell Latitude X1 | £1042 | 1.15kg | 3h06 | 1280x768 screen. I am typing at one right now! |
| Toshiba Portege M300 | £1012 | 1.6kg | 6h10 | |
| Toshiba Portege R200 | £1262 | 1.3kg | 4h40 | updated to add this one - seriously seductive shiny and current favourite |
I welcome your thoughts! But please let me re-iterate: DON'T TELL ME TO BUY A MAC!. I know it's an inevitable consequence of pretty much any computer-related question, but I did specifically ask for a reason.
no subject
Date: 2006-01-14 10:36 am (UTC)Can't speak for the Portege M300, but the older P2000 I've got cluttering up my flat is a tiny wee thing (barely a centimetre thick), definitely fits your weight range, and the battery life is indeed up there around 5-6 hours in real use (with WiFi). I believe it's a predecessor to the M300 -- a little bit slower (P3-750 -- it's a couple of years old) but even thinner. You might want to keep an eye open for a second-hand one? (Ran Linux when I could be bothered.)