Looking for a $1500 laptop for college.

anndreww

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Mar 18, 2009
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1. What is your budget? Around $1500, it would be great if money can be saved.

2. What is the size of the notebook that you are considering? 13-14 inches

3. What screen resolution do you want? No preference.

4. Do you need a portable or desktop replacement laptop? Portable laptop, I will be bringing a desktop with me.

5. How much battery life do you need? 5 hours+

6. Do you want to play games with your laptop? If so then please list the games that you want to with the settings that you want for these games. (Low,Medium or High)? The laptop will not be used for gaming.

7. What other tasks do you want to do with your laptop? (Photo/Video editing, Etc.) I will be majoring in Economics, so I assume I'll be using office programs. It will mainly be used to surf the web, facebook, etc...

8. How much storage (Hard Drive capacity) do you need? I will be using online backup storage. Inside the laptop will only be documents and music.

9. If you are considering specific sites to buy from, please post their links. Preferably reputable sites.

10. How long do you want to keep your laptop? 2 years.

11. What kind of Optical drive do you need? DVD ROM/Writer,Bluray ROM/Writer,Etc ? A DVD burner should do.

12. Please tell us about the brands that you prefer to buy from them and the brands that you don't like and explain the reasons. I prefer the laptop be bought from Apple, Asus, HP or Lenovo. Reason for this is their design which is extremely important for me. I prefer a clean, thin and sleek look.

13. What country do you live in? United States

14. Please tell us any additional information if needed.
I would like a SSD if possible.
 

th3parasit3

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Mar 21, 2012
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I have done Tech Support for students at a major University for the past 4 years:

Does your budget include software?

I generally tell students that their laptops are built to last 2 years. In two years you'll do plenty of wear and tear damage (touchpad issues, keyboard is missing keys, HDD error, cracked screen, damaged USB/Ethernet/power port, etc.) to it and the battery will need to be replaced... esp if you want 3-5 hours of usage...might be once a year.

So if you are buying because you expect a $1k-1.5k laptop to last 4 years, then you may need to rethink your price point because you will buy two laptops during an active 4, if not 6, year college career. Think of it this way... around the end of Junior year your laptop will have just run out of its 3 year warranty. Senior year you have a beat up laptop with your final projects on it... do you trust your HDD? Do you trust that something won't go terribly wrong with the hardware?

I would recommend a lower end computer for your first two to three years that is priced $500-$800, toss in an Academic Version of Office 10' for $80.

I prefer the business class laptops and a 2 or 3 year warranty service ($150-250). Lenovo/IBM is a hot mess if you ever need to do a fresh reinstall without the factory image. Toshiba is just as bad on that front. HP is decent. I work with Dell computers, so I am biased towards them. Stay away from Apple laptops, it takes a Genius with suction cups to fix one of those laptops.

Purchase the OS media/recovery disk, these days an image is built loaded on a recovery partition, but a physical copy is always nice to have (of course that is if you don't lose it).
 
$1500 is complete overkill for a non-gaming laptop. you can get a really great laptop for $600 and spending more is generally pointless.

As a student, I recommend you get the coolest, quietest solution and that would be one of the higher-end APU configurations. I recommended one to a student and he loves how quiet it is in his dorm room versus other laptops.

Two examples of excellent quality:
http://us.ncix.com/products/?sku=68805&vpn=X53Z-RS61&manufacture=ASUS

http://www.bestbuy.com/site/HP+-+ProBook+LJ502UT+15.6%22+LED+Notebook+-+AMD+A6-3400M+1.40+GHz/3710984.p?id=1218428671139&skuId=3710984

Make sure to get:
- HDMI output
- quality brand (ASUS, HP, Toshiba, Lenova but NOT an ACER)
- Windows 7 64-bit Premium

Other:
- USB3 (not sure if it's even available)
- SSD (Much faster. I recommend you WAIT until you see how much SPACE you need then buy one when prices drop. CLONING is easy. Add the SSD as USB and use free cloning software like Acronis True Image free, or EASEUS partition manager free).
- get a USB drive (or upgrade to SSD and use current drive) to use for BACKUPS, then make periodic IMAGES of Windows using Acronis True Image or similar (free version of Acronis TI for Seagate and WD drives, even if USB).

Desktop monitor setup?
You may wish to buy a larger monitor, mouse and keyboard such as:
- Samsung, 22", 1920x1080.
- desktop speakers (or buy a monitor with speakers via HDMI input)
- Logitech mouse/keyboard combo (micro-USB so you don't have to remove it to fit a case)

Good luck!!
 

proskillr

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There is no reason for you to spend over $700 for a nongaming laptop and as for a laptop lasting 2 years that is completely untrue as my brother a college student who does light gaming kwpt his first laptop for four years and it passed with shining colors the whole time. He also did some light gaming on it as well.
 

proskillr

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This should be perfect and will do everything you want it to do and more. Plus its white and chrome.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B006MB8H24/ref=asc_df_B006MB8H241967066?smid=AZ8ZZL30AH7DI&tag=hyprod-20&linkCode=asn&creative=395105&creativeASIN=B006MB8H24&hvpos=1o2&hvexid=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=85657349885403442&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=
 

Kamab

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I definitely agree with proskillr and photonboy. The only reason your budget could even get close to the 1k$ + range would be to buy an ultrabook.

I'm normally pretty anti-vaio, but that laptop looks pretty reasonably priced.

Might be worth it to pay attention to newegg's daily deals and look for a 15" with a 2nd gen sandy bridge processor or one of AMDs APUs.

My one last recommendation would be to get a 120GB SSD. It doesn't seem like a lot of space but it is more than enough for anything you might be doing (I'm a programmer and I play a few games and 120GB has seemed like a pretty good capacity for me). A lot of SSDs come with adapters to turn your old 2.5" HDD into an external hard drive.

Last but not least, use dropbox (and soon google drive) as the folder for all your schoolwork, that way it will always be accessible even if your drive fails or you forget your laptop. And it feels like a normal directory. Plus the public folder is an incredibly useful feature, especially when I was in school. No more USB sticks.
 

th3parasit3

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In the case you have presented, your brother is a representative sample of all active college students. Therefore, in the hands of active college students, it is reasonable to expect all laptops to last 4 years and they will pass with shining colors.

Thank you for clearing this up.

--

One thing that you will need to consider is a 15"-17" that has a number pad. This will help you with your course work in Economics, especially when you are in class.

Dropbox is a fine idea for storage... I always liked email. Just send it to a second email account. One copy is stored in one account's sent items, one in another account's inbox.

Like I said before, $500-$800 should be your target price range. Be sure to include at least a 2 year warranty in that. This will protect you from possible manufacture's production defects and possibly accidental damage. Try looking up recalls for a laptop manufacture and you'll see what I mean.
 

anndreww

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Thanks for all the great advice guys! I agree a laptop every 2-3 years makes more sense as I will most likely be going on to graduate school anyways therefore going up to a potential 6 years of school. So far, I really like the U400.
 

proskillr

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That is completely unnessecary for your needs, while they look nice unless you are really used to a Mac os there isnt much reason as you arent doing movie editing. If you spend more than $700 you will be spending too much as you are not buying a gaming computer. Please dont get sucked into buying a mbp unless you have a good reason which you have not told us yet. My 2 cents.
 

anndreww

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Yeah, that makes sense. I think I'm going to look strictly into windows laptops now. I've looked at Asus laptops, the zenbook in particular, and I've read bad reviews about their keyboard & wireless issues. I am also a fan of Sony Vaio, but the one recommended earlier seemed a bit bulky and I'm not really digging the ripple effect on the cover. Another brand that I am impressed with is Lenovo. They seem to make really durable computers, but they all seem a bit heavy. Are there anything laptops that matches my criteria that I missed among these brands?
 

Kamab

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If anything, I'd be looking at the macbook air. They are sleek and boot/resume from sleep very fast. I do not own one personally but I have many friends and colleagues that swear by macs. Just be aware that you are paying a premium for the apple brand. There is something to say about the GUI of OSX though.

The 13" 128GB model would seem to fit your needs the best. The Macbook pro is overkill and bulkier. I wouldn't ignore the Air because of it's 13" screen unless you actually use one and feel like its too small.

Personally though, I would be looking at ultrabooks by some other manufacturers. You can pretty much get equal performance for half the price (though it might not look as cool). Also, there is a decent amount of software that only runs on Windows.
 

volks1470

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I'd definitely recommend AMDs APUs or a Sandy Bride CPU. Since your not gaming, the intel IGP will be fine.

My biggest recommendation. If you can, avoid a 5400rpm HDD! Dear god they are slow. Get a SSD or 7200rpm HDD for sure (if you can).

 

th3parasit3

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Please stay away from Apple computers.

For the past few years college courses have been using Windows specific software. Things are getting better with OSX compatibility (and cloud based computing)... but you will likely have to load Windows via BootCamp. Another $100 for Windows OEM, another $80 for Office 10'. The software adds up.

It is not only the software but the repair costs and accessories. They have a huge mark up.

If for some reason you are convinced to get an Apple laptop, then stay away from the Airbook... It does not come with a ROM drive of any kind... you have to buy it seperately.

You seem to have some cash (judging by your replies that seem to push the price back up over 1k)... so I would recommend purchasing or building a desktop to compliment your laptop.

$800 laptop
$700 desktop computer (which goes a long way if you build one yourself)
 

Kamab

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This just isn't true. If you were majoring in mathematics or engineering ( I did both), you might be on to something with software, but most stuff is web based now. Mainstream programs (matlab, etc) work on all platforms and if you don't like macs version of office you can download libreoffice.

While the quality has gone down a very small amount in the last year or so, apple does a better job putting together their laptops than most other manufacturers. While apple laptops are hard to repair, laptops in general are pretty hard to repair. Also, apple has some of the highest rated customer service if you ever did run in to technical problems.

As for no optical drive, they are becoming less and less useful (and relevant) every day. I replaced the optical drive on my ASUS laptop to make room for an SSD (handy for a work laptop to have storage and fast boot/application load times).

I'm not saying go buy an apple, but you sound pretty prejudiced. This is coming from a guy who owns no apple products except a mac mini which I won in an office contest and gave to my parents to serve as a media center. A lot of people I know own macs / pcs and a LOT of them love their macs.
 

anndreww

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Thanks for all the input! I won't be needing a desktop, I am going to use my current one. To be honest, I was only considering apple for its brand name, not the laptop itself. So, I think I'm going to stay away from apple. I plan on using online data storage, so I would prefer the laptop to have a SSD.

@Volks, Thanks for the advice, I will stay away from 5400 rpm drives.
@Kamab, The HP folio does look pretty nice. I'm going to have to look more into the laptop.
Any thoughts on the Sony S series?
 

proskillr

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You appear to want a thin and light laptop and unfortunately many of these dont have a disc drive but you can buy an external one cheap for when you need one. Take a look at these.
http://www.adorama.com/MSIX370206WT.html?utm_term=Other&utm_medium=Shopping%20Site&utm_campaign=Other&utm_source=gbase
And this one is more expensive since its an ultrabook but you really want sleek http://www.amazon.com/Dell-X14z-2308ELS-14-Inch-Laptop-Elemental/dp/B005KP70AI/ref=sr_1_sc_5?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1333823475&sr=1-5-spell

An external drive http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-SE-208AB-TSBS-External-DVD-Writer/dp/B005KQ0S8S/ref=sr_1_2?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1333823600&sr=1-2
 

proskillr

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S series seems a little over priced and they have retty bad touch pads from the reviews. Also I dont know how impprtant this is to you but they have bad viewing angles but a nice resolution of 1600x900
 

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