Thursday, February 6, 2014

Laptop for a college student?




Qwerty


Hey I am trying to decide what laptop to get for college this year. I am looking for something relatively small and light but something that is fast and reliable. Right now I have two that I am looking into alot. One being the HP tx25000z tablet notebook ( the one where you can actually wrote on the screen) and the Thinkpad T61 by Lenovo. I am looking for something under the price range of $1000 or a little over. Any suggestions or opinions on which is better for a college student.
Also, anyone who has had or used one of those tablet notebooks, what are your thoughts about them and how useful were they?

Thank You



Answer
I'm on the same boat as you are and can understand you completely. I want to wish you good luck!

Check out these computers and see what you think

http://shopping.yahoo.com/articles/yshoppingarticles/119/best-laptops-under-500/

What laptop is best fit for new college student that is under $800?




Ineedinfo


I am trying to figure out what computer to buy my daughter for college. I want to get it now for her birthday so she can get used to the new windows 7 (she currently has vista).

I would like recommendations on:
Screen size for a student (not too small or too big), processor brand/type, how much RAM, how big of a hard drive and any other information such as brands or places that have good deals.

She uses it mostly for internet research, writing papers and downloading photos from digital camera. I have researched walmart.com and have seen Dell and HP for $500 to $800 and look like they are similar with regards to whats under the cover so I can't tell what I should be looking into.

They have this one for $800

http://www.walmart.com/ip/Dell-17.3-Inspiron-1750-Laptop-with-Intel-Pentium-Dual-Core-T4300-Processor-Microsoft-Windows-7-Home-Premium-Microsoft-Office-Home-Student-Editio/12960906#Specifications

and a couple just like it for just over $500 without microsoft office. I think I know someone who can download that for me or can get it at my sons college for pretty cheap though unless this is just a great deal or something with it already installed?

Any suggestions would be great. And should I buy the extended warranty? They seem to be so darn expensive compared to the computer.

Thank you for looking
She does have music on her computer, but doesn't do gaming.



Answer
Thanks to netbooks, the prices of laptops have been forced down quite a bit--so that means your $800 will actually get you a lot more bang for your buck.

So lets gets started, why dont we?
1. Find it online - here are a couple of excellent places to find some good deals:
http://slickdeals.net/ http://www.newegg.com/ http://www.tigerdirect.com/
and currently my favorite -- http://dealnews.com/ because it separates the deals into categories.
As a matter of fact, their first category are laptops!
2. If you're more of a touchy-feely type of shopper, then BestBuy might be a good option for you.
They have a group of laptops they call the "Blue Label" laptops
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/Misc/Blue-Label/pcmcat161100050036.c?id=pcmcat161100050036
that fits right into your budget. Check it out online first, then go to the store to actually see the laptops in action.

Based on the type of use that you are expecting from the laptop, what I most recommend is juicing the memory to as high as you can muster without incurring too much extra cost. Any processor in that price range will work just fine; if deciding between two laptops, always pick the one that has more memory rather than a faster processor (the processor difference will be unnoticeable to your kid). So bottomline, dont settle for less than 4GB of RAM.

As for the necessary software basics like MS Office, etc, they get student discounts on that, so get it separately. Bundled software are annoying, and they tend to add other stuff they want to sell to you, hence, theyre called bloatware. Plus, there's a bunch of free alternative software on the internet anyway.. You really should check out www.download.com <-- owned by CNET, they have tons of free software available.

Lastly, should you get the warranty? My answer, YES and NO. It depends.
YES-- if first of all it covers screen replacement protection, and if it covers you for at least 3 years. Sadly, I consider only 3 years as a reasonable lifetime for a laptop. If it lasts longer than that, just be happy and continue using it till it decides to croak. Having a warranty gives you peace of mind, so that in case something goes wrong with your purchase at the mid-way point (1.5-2 years), you're not stuck with the problem of having to buy a brand new laptop all over again.

NO--if you're cheap like me =) and somewhat adventurous with your investment money. A lemon laptop, just like most devices i would think... would show its true colors (under regular use) well within a year, and therefore within a standard manufacturers company. I would say that if a laptop survives its first year, chances are it will survive for the next couple of years. Needless to say, your daughter has to take good care of it though--go buy a nice padded case, not much rough handling, etc. you get the idea.

Sorry for the lengthy answer, but I wanted to make sure that all the points were covered. Hope this helps.... Curious George.




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