I generally suggest most people to not look for the SCREAMING NEWEST model. Buy the best laptops from a year or two ago. After a year or two it's pretty apparent what was crap and what wasn't in forums and other sites, price went down by 100 or more euros, any fix for their shit is out, while the specs aren't going to be horribly different anyway. Please note, I'm not saying "used", I say new stuff. So you can still send it back at least to the seller if it malfunctions.phongn wrote:A Thinkpad T- or X2x0-series is reasonably well-built and not horribly expensive (though the T-series has had corners cut as Lenovo has to fight the same price war everyone else does). Even for a basic Office/Web machine I want it to be a nice experience. I am fortunate enough that I can afford so (I understand not everyone can).
For example, this Lenovo ThinkPad Edge E420 seems like a much better deal for a office-web machine even if it's not MADE YESTERDAY. here on Amazon
But you can go far lower if you pick in the consumer-laptop pool.
You have always used macs and professional stuff. Of course they look like crap to you. But they run decently it if you wait a few dozen seconds for Office and don't use Firefox.The experience is atrocious (with first-hand experience). (netbooks with dual-core atoms)
I've noticed that once you nuked that farce of Starter and loaded whatever other Win7 they run much much better.
Of course they are now obsolete due to tablets, as you said.
Rigid bags all the way (really rigid, not just "a bit harder than soft bags" things that disguise themselves as rigid bags), and there must be enough fluff inside to keep the machine completely immobile. The whole point of the bag is being trashed instead of the lappy.Even in a laptop bag (and most laptop bags or sleeves are not well designed for actually protecting laptops!) those laptops face all sorts of stress.
Afaik, it's a optional feature of their high-end models.As it happens, better ThinkPads are (or were) designed specifically so that spilt liquid into the keyboard could naturally drain and not fry the machine
When I'm talking of really worth the money spent in protection I'm thinking of Toughbooks from Panasonic. While the fully-rugged line is over-the-top in both price and actual need, their semi-rugged line is rugged enough and cheap enough to acutally be worth their price imho.
While I also think Retina is overkill, I second the sentiment. Hunting down a computer that does not have a crappy screen is a pain in the ass.Retina isn't bullshit (it should be the minimum standard)
You enjoy looking superior, isn't it? The same argument can be made about 99% of the stuff in this forum where a debate springs up (i.e. its ALWAYS a situation where whoever wins or loses the debate is totally irrelevant to the participants lives and world as a whole). And about the parent site as well (with all due respect, who goddamn cares about Star Wars Vs Star Trek comparisons, really?). What makes you think think this thread is different?Stark wrote:I'm curious about the more ignorant posters in this thread - does Apple's success both brand wise and market wise threaten you? Why do you care?
I personally hate everything that enshrouds itself of status-symbol flag without really being one. Apple, Converse, the Smart car, all SUVs, random mass-produced designer shit, and so on. They all rise their prices artificially and mimic (kinda) actual luxury without really being more than fancy mass-produced stuff (or crappy stuff with a symbol for most garments).It's the hostility towards ba Apple for being expensive and bad consumers for 'falling for it' I don't understand. I own a Samsung TV instead f a Palsonic one. OH NOES I FELL FOR IT?
It's making people act like "I'v got a jaaag" from Top Gear, but without a jaguar.
Alienware for example does not do that. They just sell cool quality stuff without attaching a "if you do this you will be inherently better than masses" with massive marketing.
Ferrari does not do that either. That's actual luxury, and has no real need for any carpet-bombing marketing campaigns to sell.
Yes. Maybe because I am smugly arrogant and feel that I need to be somehow better than others to justify it, and Apple does not allow me to do that since it's not an actual luxury. It's an automatic emotional thing, you know, not rational.General Zod wrote:So your counter to what you perceive as apple being smugly arrogant is to be . . . smugly arrogant?
Aww, come on. I still think trackballs are far far superior to any other mouse-like thing (does not need to move nor it does need a surface that a camera can pick up, I have naturally sticky fingers so I have a far more precise control of the ball than on even Apple) but I cannot really say any kind of trackpad from Apple sucks, they are well-designed and well-integrated in the machine (never seen a so big and comfortable touching surface and you can do some goofy multitouch shit you wonder how you lived without them, of course it takes some time to learn how to use them properly, and this is frustrating). If you were talking about anyone else's then you're pretty much right. They look like an afterthought.TheFeniX wrote:Trackpads. Suck. I've used 100s (including 6-7 Macbooks) over my years in IT. There's a reason I carried a USB mouse in my bag. We could go back and forth on this until the end of time.
Good marketing can allow you to keep selling crap for ages (like say Coca Cola). Not saying Apple is crap, just saying this isn't a good reason to say anything is actually worth the price as long as it sells.Furthermore, Apple selling its goods in a competitive, supply-demand market is an implicit stake in the ground saying "our goods are worth this much." This is a capitalist market!
I'm pretty sure most windows boxes will still sell a lot even if the price jumped at 2-3 times what it is now for no other reason than the builders making a big cartel. Does that mean they are worth it? No.