[AT] OT - Laptop recommendations
Larry D. Goss
rlgoss at evansville.net
Sun Jun 25 20:52:17 PDT 2006
Hey Henry -- What's your candid opinion of Linspire?
Larry
-----Original Message-----
From: at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com
[mailto:at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com] On Behalf Of Henry Miller
Sent: Sunday, June 25, 2006 5:27 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] OT - Laptop recommendations
On Sunday 25 June 2006 14:24, msm10301 at juno.com wrote:
> I've been thinking about sidelining our desktop and switching to a
laptop
> instead. Ideally, I would like to install a wireless router so that my
wife
> and I are not tied to the desk if we want to surf the web or read
email. My
> question is, what type should I be looking for, and what features are
> important? I know very little about the chip sets used in laptops, and
how
> they compare with the ones used in desktops. Here's what I would need
the
> laptop to do. Internet and email (wireless), Microsoft Office
applications,
> digital camera storage. Our desktop is a PIII 1GZ and it works just
fine
> for what we do. Any thoughts with regards to brands/features would be
> appreciated. Thanks,
Do remember this is personal opinion in many ways. Nobody will condemn
you
to hell for picking the wrong choice.
Good choice. I love a laptop with wireless networking, and I'm not
happy
about being back in the desktop land. (The screen on my laptop is dead,
it
works fine with an external monitor)
I don't think you can go wrong with one of the new macs. Great
quality,
great price (for the quality, they cost a lot more if you compare to
junk)
If you get a Intel based one you can you will probably be able to run
any
Microsoft Windows program you need. (keep an eye on www.winehq.com and
http://www.codeweavers.com/ - they have not released anything for the
mac
yet, but they have the plenty of experience in with Windows apps under
linux
and have plans for Mac, though who knows if anything will come of it)
I
wouldn't consider anything else if it could meet my needs.
If you buy a mac you don't need to read on.
Atheros wireless chipsets are the best IMHO, but only because they have
good
drivers for linux, which isn't a concern of yours (at least not today,
which
is why I bring it up as if you want to hand this off to someone else in
a few
years they may care). So I would ask you to prefer this chipset for
wireless
if you have a choice, but most often you don't, and it doesn't really
matter.
I know of no other factor in wireless chipsets worth thinking of.
AMD and Intel make most of the CPUs (there are a few other companies
that do
as well, but you are unlikely to see them). They are like Fords and
Chevy's,
some people like one, some the other, but there isn't much difference in
the
real world. The only thing to watch out for it make sure you get
something with mobile chips - desktop chips are cheaper, so you will
find
them in low end systems, then you get burns on your lap when you try to
use
the system. In Intel's case you should get the mobile processors even
in a
desktop because their mobile CPUs run circles around their desktop
systems.
AMDs desktop chips are about as good as their mobiles for laptop use.
I'm serious about the burn issue. Make sure you test anything you
get, on
your lap when you have shorts on, and try to do something that uses a
lot of
CPU power while you do. (some games are good for this. otherwise I
have
no idea how to test this, as most programs don't need much CPU) You
may end
up returning a model because it is too hot to use!
Dead pixels are an issue, make sure you look the screen over carefully
first.
This is sometimes an issue even though they know nobody wants dead
pixels.
As for the rest, it depends on what you want. You can get some cheap
laptops
that are very fast. Generally you get what you pay for, but the guts
are
essentially the same on every laptop. (in fact there are only about 6
companies in the world that make laptops, everything you see is made by
one
of them with only trivial differences). Batteries life and the quality
of
the case are about the only thing that differs between different models.
If you want a laptop that you can safely run over with your tractor, you
have
one choice: the Panasonic toughbook. (these are also very expensive and
cheap laptops run circles around them in just about every other way) It
won't survive everything, but I don't think you can do any accident that
will
hurt one. I've seen some that had 10 years of abuse and they look
brand
new. Panasonic doesn't sell them to retailers so tracking one down can
be
hard, but I always mention them because there are a tiny number of
people who
need a machine that can take abuse.
I like the build quality of thinkpads, and so far the Chinese have not
screwed
them up (at least from what I can tell, time will tell). They also have
the
best keyboards and pointing devices - but this is clearly my opinion and
a
lot of people hate the feel. However they are still expensive. I've
been
on the edge of buying one for a month now. (As a linux guy the mac
laptops
don't work for me.)
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