Inspiron or Ti Book for college?

13

Comments

  • Reply 41 of 61
    blizaineblizaine Posts: 239member
    I would get the Ti-Book... but I do see your dilemma:



    $2,500 gets you:



    Mac:

    -15.2 - 1280x854 LCD

    -667Mhz G4

    -256MB Ram

    -30GB Hard Drive

    -32MB ATI 7500

    -CDR-DVD combo drive

    -5hr battery life

    -OSX 10.2



    Dell:

    -15in 1600x1200 UXGA LCD

    -2Ghz P4m

    -512MB Ram

    -40GB Hard Drive

    -64MB GeForce4 440

    -24x CDR/DVD Combo

    -1.5 hr battery life (guess)

    -WinXPoo



    While the specs are nice on the Dell (3 times the Mhz, sweet 3d chip, high rez LCD)... I would still take the Mac... But that's just me
  • Reply 42 of 61
    Thanks guys.



    So I picked up this:



    VPC is stable and works well, but I wont be able to run any newer, more consuming 3D games.



    I CAN run AVI's and DIvX's, but it'll take a bit of work on my part.



    Limewire sucks even on OSX, and it might be hard to DL music? (doesnt believe this, how do you guys DL music??)



    Also- I dont have 2500 to spend . Im thinking 1600+ TOPS. Right now, if I gopt an iBook, I may be thinking



    600 Mhrtz

    40G HD

    384 RAM

    12.1 screen.



    $1,549.
  • Reply 43 of 61
    For those who said buy a desktop and laptop, I like digitalandres reply with a $$$ = .



    I'm not willing to shell out about 1.8k (good price for a win machine with monitor) when I can just spend 1k more and upgrade from an iBook to a PowerBook. Lets not forget, this thing should last me 4 years. Id rather spend a good amount now then little bits upgrading and selling later on.



    One of the main reasons I can buy the PowerBook is that I have Office X FOR FREE from the uni and so save half a grand on that not including the many other OSX apps they have. If Had to buy Office X too, I would not even consider the PowerBook.



    [ 08-10-2002: Message edited by: Shanksta ]</p>
  • Reply 44 of 61
    spartspart Posts: 2,060member
    For MP3 downloads, <a href="http://www.xlife.org/aquisition.php"; target="_blank">Acquisition</a> ownz your soul.



    Now with file sharing.



    <img src="graemlins/smokin.gif" border="0" alt="[Chilling]" />
  • Reply 45 of 61
    telomartelomar Posts: 1,804member
    [quote]Originally posted by digitalandres:

    <strong>Limewire sucks even on OSX, and it might be hard to DL music? (doesnt believe this, how do you guys DL music??)</strong><hr></blockquote>



    Limewire works it's just it isn't wonderful. What shows up one minute might be gone 5 minutes later then back if you search 5 minutes after that.
  • Reply 46 of 61
    Here is a quick chart to compare all of the laptops that were brought up so far save the IBM thinkpad. All of the windows desktops use PC2100 DDR Ram and the weight for every machine includes the battery:



    ALL PRICES ARE BEFORE EDUCATION DISCOUNT



    TOSHIBA: SATELLITE PRO 6100

    Mobile Intel® Pentium® 4 Processor - M4 @ 2000MHz (2.0GHz)

    512MB PC2100 DDR

    UXGA Active Matrix (1600 x 1200) 15"

    NVIDIA GeForce4 420 Go graphics controller w/32MB DDR external video memory

    60 Gigabyte HD

    DVD/CD-RW multifunction drive

    Slim SelectBay?

    Integrated V.90/56K modem

    Integrated 10/100 Ethernet

    Integrated Wi-Fi? (IEEE 802.11b)

    Optional Toshiba Advanced Port Replicator

    Windows XP Professional

    2 UBS Ports



    Battery: 3.5hrs

    Weight: 6.8lbs

    TOTAL: $2,699



    -



    SONY: VAIO GRX SERIES

    Mobile Intel® Pentium® 4 Processor 1.70 GHz1-M supports Intel® Enhanced SpeedStep? technology2

    512 MB DDR SDRAM (256MBx2; 0 open slots)

    Removable 40 GB3 Hard Drive

    16.1" UXGA (1600x1200) TFT LCD Screen

    32MB ATI MOBILITY? RADEON? 7500

    Internal removable CD-RW/DVD combo drive (R-write 16x; RW-write 10x; DVD-read 12x; CD-read 24x)

    Microsoft® Windows® XP Home Edition

    Microsoft® Word 2002

    Standard Lithium-Ion Battery

    Limited Warranty: One year parts and labor (90 days without registration)

    i.LINK® (IEEE 1394) interface4, TV out, 3 USB, RJ-11 modem jack, RJ-45 Ethernet, Memory Stick® media slot, VGA output, parallel, headphone (stereo), mic-in, port replicator interface



    Battery: 2.5-3.5hrs

    Weight: 8.0lbs

    TOTAL: $2,599



    -



    ALIENWARE: AREA-51M

    High-Performance Laptop Chassis (Standard)

    Intel® Pentium® 4 Processor 2.4GHz 400MHz FSB w/ 512KB Cache

    Hi-Performance Heatsink/CPU Cooling Fan

    Intel® 845MP+ICH3M Chipset - FC-PGA 478PIN DDR

    15' UltraXGA 1600x1200 LCD Display

    512MB DDR PC-2100 - Two SO-DIMMs

    40GB IBM Travelstar 5400 RPM ATA100

    ATI Mobility RADEON 7500 64MB DDR

    Sound-Blaster Compatible 3D Audio

    3.5 3-Mode Floppy Disk Drive

    8X DVD / 8x4x24 CD-RW w/Software MPEG2 Decoder

    Integrated 10/100Mb Ethernet NIC

    56K Modem with V.92 Technology

    Targus Sport Standard Computer Backpack - Platinum/Black

    AlienAutopsy: Automated Technical Support Request System

    Aliencare Toll-Free 1-Year 24/7 DEPOT Warranty

    Microsoft® Windows® XP Professional

    Free Alienware® T-Shirt - Black

    Personalized Owner's Manual

    Optimized & Configured for High-Performance

    4 USB 1.1 Ports & 1 IEEE-1394 Port (4 PIN)



    Battery: 1hr

    Weight: 9.6lbs

    TOTAL: $2,866



    -



    DELL: INSPIRON 8200

    Mobile Pentium® 4 processor 2.0GHz-M

    15" Ultra Sharp? UXGA Display @ 1600 x 1200 pixels

    512MB, DDR, 2DIMM

    60GB Ultra ATA 5400 RPM Hard Drive

    24X CD-RW/DVD Combo Drive with Roxio's Easy CD Creator®

    64MB DDR 4XAGP NVIDIA GeForce4 440 Go? 3D Video

    Internal 56K Modem

    Integrated Network Card

    Floppy Drive

    Dell Picture Studio, Image Expert Standard

    Dell Jukebox powered by MusicMatch

    IEEE 1394 integrated port

    2-USB (Universal Serial Bus) compliant 4-pin connectors

    S-Video for TV-Out

    Audio jacks: headphones (same as line-out), external mic-in, 1 line-in/audio-in

    1 Year Limited Warranty plus 1 Year Mail-In Service



    Battery: 2 ? 3hrs

    Weight: 8.0lbs

    TOTAL: $2,982 (-$80 for Education)



    -



    APPLE: POWERBOOK

    800MHz PowerPC G4

    15.2-inch (diagonal) built-in TFT widescreen active-matrix display 1280-by-854

    512MB SDRAM - 2 SO DIMMs

    60GB Ultra ATA drive

    AirPort Card

    Keyboard/Mac OS - U.S. English

    Mac OS X and Mac OS 9

    DVD-ROM/CD-RW Combo (8x Write)

    DVI to VGA kit

    Built-in 10/100/1000BASE-T Ethernet

    Built-in 11-Mbps AirPort Card (IEEE 802.11 DSSS compliant)

    One 400-Mbps FireWire (IEEE 1394) port (10)\\

    Two 12-Mbps USB ports



    Battery: 5 hrs

    Weight: 5.4lbs

    TOTAL: $3,399 (-$100 for Education)





    There you have it. Honestly I think its now between the VAIO GRX with the 16" screen and the Powerbook now although as you can see, its quite discouraging to see Apple compared to the Windows machines.



    [ 08-10-2002: Message edited by: Shanksta ]</p>
  • Reply 47 of 61
    telomartelomar Posts: 1,804member
    The memory performance on the Powerbook really won't be a great deal worse than the DDR used in the PC notebooks. The only real complaint I'd have is the screen resolution but that isn't too major.



    Also don't forget the education discount for the Powerbook.
  • Reply 48 of 61
    Gah- whats even the point of getting a laptop with a 2 hour battery? That's basically just an expensive desktop with a touchpad =\\.
  • Reply 49 of 61
    telomartelomar Posts: 1,804member
    You think 2 hours is bad? That Alienware has a battery life of 1 hour <img src="graemlins/lol.gif" border="0" alt="[Laughing]" />
  • Reply 50 of 61
    pyr3pyr3 Posts: 946member
    pluses of the PowerBook :



    -- 2-3 more hours of battery life

    -- DVI-out

    -- 60Gb hard drive (Inspiron and Toshiba have them though)

    -- Gigabit Ethernet

    -- 6 prong Firewire (as opposed to 4-prong ... extra two prongs are for power, so it will drain battery if your external device don't have it's own power)

    -- 1280x854 resolution (I'm sorry, but squeezing 1600x1200 into a 15-16" screen is too tiny for me, 1600x1200 needs 19"+monitor ... and not using the native res of an LCD doesn't look as good too, so having a native res that works is good ... although I would like 1280x1024 res .. this is what I currently run at on my 19")

    -- did I say more battery life yet ?

    -- weights less

    -- WiFi built-in (Toshiba has this too)



    The Toshiba is the only one that comes close to the PowerBook, but the PowerBook is a little lighter and has longer battery life, which is good. (Toshiba doesn't have firewire though) The only thing that the others have on the TiBook is MHz, and we all know that there is more to proc design than MHz. Pipelines, page faults, memory bandwidth, MHz, branches, branch prediction, etc.
  • Reply 51 of 61
    eskimoeskimo Posts: 474member
    Fujitsu's Lifebook series is pretty nice, some of the managers at work use them.
  • Reply 52 of 61
    skipjackskipjack Posts: 263member
    I haven't seen this mentioned:



    Consider joining the Apple Student Developer program ($99) and using the one-time hardware discount.



    Q. I am a college student, but I am not yet 18 years of age. Can I still join the ADC Student Program?



    A. You are required to be at least 18 years of age to join the ADC Student Program and to agree to the Terms and Conditions and Non-Disclosure Agreement attached to the ADC Student Program Membership. We have many community resources available for all student developers that do not require program membership.



    Q. What is the Hardware discount?



    A. ADC Student Members are eligible to receive a once-per-lifetime discount (approximately 20%) off the retail price on a single system of their choice. It will not show up as an asset in your ADC account. This offer is currently available in the U.S, Canada, Australia, and certain European countries (with online Apple Stores) only. For instructions on how to obtain your discount, please check out our Student Hardware Discount page. Make sure you follow the instructions exactly.
  • Reply 53 of 61
    WOW, Skipjavk thanks for the info. Id gladly pay 100 bucks for a 20% (still shocked) discount!



    Awesome
  • Reply 54 of 61
    brdocbrdoc Posts: 31member
    [quote]Originally posted by Shanksta:

    <strong>WOW, Skipjavk thanks for the info. Id gladly pay 100 bucks for a 20% (still shocked) discount!



    Awesome</strong><hr></blockquote>

    It is important to note that you must be in a class that has to do with hardware or software development. Apple requires proof of this, so if you are a business major, you can pretty much forget it (unless you are OMIS).



    Here are my .02 on the issue. I am a senior business major right now, and I have decided to get a laptop. I presently have a G3 400 tower, and it has been wonderful. It still blows away PC's that were bought at the same time. I have not had a problem with haveing a desktop, but it has been inconvienient at times, especially when we have to write group papers. I think that a laptop is good for college, but not to take to class. I think that conventional note taking is much more efficient, as well as less distracting. It comes in handy for group work, as well as writing papers. It is very nice to not have to deal with the crappy PC's in the labs. Use it to plug into the schools network at the library, and you are set. Buy the POWERBOOK!!!
  • Reply 55 of 61
    alcimedesalcimedes Posts: 5,486member
    [quote]There isn't a damned thing wrong with Windows if you learn how to use it. WindowsXP is solid as a rock and fast.<hr></blockquote>



    actually, the thing that's horribly wrong with Windows is that they now scan your HD and send all registration codes on your machine back to MS, for MS and non MS products. the fact that to use their updater you have to agree to let them install DRM tools on your machine without your consent or notification.



    i'm sorry, but that's just plain ****ed up. i use Macs and PC's all the time, and have defended both often for what they're good at, but there is nothing that Windows can do that makes it worth sending that kind of crap back to MS, or allowing some asshole company to decided what i can and cannot listen to. it's bullshit.



    now, back to the main topic.



    digitalandres, .avi's and .divx files are a snap to run. download the application VLC and then double click the files. that's it. it's just a player.



    as for using a Mac in a Business school, i graduated from the Madison School of Business not too long ago, and my using a Mac was never a problem. everything is basically Word and PowerPoint.



    i did find it funny that almost all group projects ended up being done on my laptop since the other laptops weren't exactly stable enough trust our work to.







    [ 08-14-2002: Message edited by: alcimedes ]</p>
  • Reply 56 of 61
    ringoringo Posts: 329member
    [quote]Originally posted by pyr3:

    <strong>

    If you wanted something like that AlienWare then why not get a desktop?</strong><hr></blockquote>



    Hey, I didn't tell her to buy it! Even thought it's big and hot, it's still a hell of a lot more portable than a desktop. I carry my iBook around wherever I go, just because it's convenient and very easy. She just wants to be able to take it with her when she goes home on weekends. She's an anti-mac bigot, so getting an iBook or PowerBook "isn't an option" for her.
  • Reply 57 of 61
    groveratgroverat Posts: 10,872member
    Eugene:



    I was being lighthearted about even mentioning the 51m, but since your vagina got all inflamed I guess we'll have to delve a little deeper.



    The 51m whips the Ti's ass in price/performance:



    Pros:



    TiBook:

    weight (5.4lbs &lt; 9.6lbs)

    battery life (4 hours &lt; 1 hour (2w2ndbattery))

    thickness (1" &lt; 1.7")



    51m:

    processor (2.4ghz P4 &gt; 800mhz G4)

    RAM (DDR &gt; SDR (on faster system bus, so it matters))

    video (64MB &gt; 32MB )



    Ties:

    HD

    screen

    OS

    price



    Since the laptop will spend the vast majority of its life on his desk I say the 51m wins for me.



    It's a desktop replacement, a "luggable". The TiBook isn't a desktop replacement, it's a "portable".



    As a college student, I have little use for a portable, I would much prefer a luggable. It could even be a Mac if Apple made one!
  • Reply 58 of 61
    torifiletorifile Posts: 4,024member
    Wow, I'm just the opposite, groverat. I think that having a laptop is essential in college/grad school. Getting out of your room once in a while, despite all the work you've got to do, is a Good Thing. You can't do that with a desktop and you can't do it so well with a huge laptop. Weight and battery life are two of the most important factors for a laptop. Other factors to consider are things like 802.11, speed and overall performance. I personally don't play many games on my computer, so that's really a moot point for me.



    So, if your primary concern is playing games, get a PC. That's just the way it is. Although a PC laptop sacrifices too much in my opinion when it comes to the REAL reasons to get a portable. So, get a PC desktop. It would serve your needs best. If your primary concern is doing other stuff with your computer (like listening to music, creating stuff and *ahem* working), the iBook or Powerbook both win out. Plus, there's nothing like filching a little music over the wireless network at a coffeeshop or in the quad on a sunny day. And, chicks dig Macs. (at least the cool ones) You'll look like a big geek if you're laptop is thicker than your organic chemistry book; not what you want when being checked out.



    [ 08-14-2002: Message edited by: torifile ]</p>
  • Reply 59 of 61
    groveratgroverat Posts: 10,872member
    I understand the desire for portability, but it's not like the 51m is a hulking beast.



    It's 1.7" thick and weighs 9.6 lbs., not 3" thick and 20 lbs.



    The Pismo was 1.7" thick and 6 lbs.

    The original PBG3 was 2 inches thick and 7.8lbs.

    Were those not real laptops?





    I don't think it crosses the line into unmanageable. Maybe for my 115lb. girlfriend it might be an annoyance, but I could carry that thing in a backpack and forget it was there.



    And I know that for a fact because I just got done helping the gf shopping for a laptop, the huge beast Gateway felt light to me. The original poster might want to check it out, btw, it's a groovy thing (<a href="http://www.gateway.com/work/prod/sb_600xlb_ProdDetail.shtml"; target="_blank">Gateway 600XL</a> - 15.7" screen, integrated 802.11b)





    If I were to get one I'd have 2 batteries in it (no need for a CD drive when out and about), 2 hours and I can't think of many situations where I'd be without an outlet nearby for two hours, especially on my campus.



    If a 4 lb. difference is a physical barrier then maybe time would be better spent at the campus gym.
  • Reply 60 of 61
    eugeneeugene Posts: 8,254member
    It doesn't look like it was a lighthearted suggestion. You were quite terse. "Buy this if you have $3000" or something like that.



    [quote]It's a desktop replacement, a "luggable". The TiBook isn't a desktop replacement, it's a "portable".<hr></blockquote>



    The TiBook is quite happily a desktop replacement for many. My sister is using hers as such. I have no use for a luggable, however. I'd need a extra-sized briefcase or messenger bag to carry it around with me when I did need it, and since no laptop can be a desktop replacement for me, I would plan on getting something sturdy, light, somewhat powerful and meaningful to me.



    The Area-51M has a very, very small audience -- The LAN Party Gamer.
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