baddecision
Active Member
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2011
- Messages
- 206
My favorite is TigerDirect. They've had laptops as low as $299 in the last month, but most are in the 450-650 range, often reflecting 60 percent savings (but yeah, they can be a model year behind the new-in-store ones). Don't hesitate to consider refurbished stuff -- almost every piece of electronics in my house is refurb.
Fifteen months ago I used Tiger to buy a refurb HP, 17-inch screen, 4GB, 500 HD, Intel chip, Wi-fi, Microsoft Office, for $550 shipped (marked down from nearly a grand). It still sails along like a champ, at home and on the road. I use it to edit photos, write, send, record TV off the air, stream Netflix and all that.
It's smartest to know your desired specs and brands, then shop for price within those guidelines and thoroughly check reviews on the exact model you are considering. It's an advantage to NOT be in a big hurry so you can wait for the NewEgg and Tiger deal mailings to come every day.
Don't settle for less than 4 GB of ram and insist on Windows 7 and an internal DVD/ROM burner. Don't worry so much about the hard drive; you can (and should) get an external one for work stuff. 2TB externals are less than 100 bucks on sale, $150 if USB-powered for the road.
First thing when you get it, download and run PC Decrapifier (free program gets rid of all the shirtware). Load it up with Spybot Search and Destroy and a good (paid) virus fighter (I like Norton but only because McAfee bothered me with too many messages). Get all the updates (Windows and other Microsoft stuff, Flash, Acrobat, Java, Firefox) before you install programs.
Re. physical toughness, road dogs tell me Toshibas and Lenovos seem to take more hard-core travel jostling than HPs, but I believe HPs have the best displays and will be safe with a good case. Sonys are great but a poor value and not all that travelworthy (they seem optimal for video work, in my opinion). Dell can go to somewhere it rhymes with. Acer and Gateway and the rest of those off brands are totally out of the question.
Re. software: You can get by with IrfanView and OpenOffice.org (both free), though you are getting what you pay for: Basics only.
These are all my opinions and may not be your optimal choices. They won't steer you wrong, though.
Fifteen months ago I used Tiger to buy a refurb HP, 17-inch screen, 4GB, 500 HD, Intel chip, Wi-fi, Microsoft Office, for $550 shipped (marked down from nearly a grand). It still sails along like a champ, at home and on the road. I use it to edit photos, write, send, record TV off the air, stream Netflix and all that.
It's smartest to know your desired specs and brands, then shop for price within those guidelines and thoroughly check reviews on the exact model you are considering. It's an advantage to NOT be in a big hurry so you can wait for the NewEgg and Tiger deal mailings to come every day.
Don't settle for less than 4 GB of ram and insist on Windows 7 and an internal DVD/ROM burner. Don't worry so much about the hard drive; you can (and should) get an external one for work stuff. 2TB externals are less than 100 bucks on sale, $150 if USB-powered for the road.
First thing when you get it, download and run PC Decrapifier (free program gets rid of all the shirtware). Load it up with Spybot Search and Destroy and a good (paid) virus fighter (I like Norton but only because McAfee bothered me with too many messages). Get all the updates (Windows and other Microsoft stuff, Flash, Acrobat, Java, Firefox) before you install programs.
Re. physical toughness, road dogs tell me Toshibas and Lenovos seem to take more hard-core travel jostling than HPs, but I believe HPs have the best displays and will be safe with a good case. Sonys are great but a poor value and not all that travelworthy (they seem optimal for video work, in my opinion). Dell can go to somewhere it rhymes with. Acer and Gateway and the rest of those off brands are totally out of the question.
Re. software: You can get by with IrfanView and OpenOffice.org (both free), though you are getting what you pay for: Basics only.
These are all my opinions and may not be your optimal choices. They won't steer you wrong, though.