Christmas got me a few work shirts and pants that were nessisary in easing tension in the household... but...
I've caved in.
The cheapest, yet modern NVidia laptop would be $1500. A Whitebook (no-OS, custom) would be $850 if I skimped on the processor and GPU.
Yet an ATI Radeon X1300 sporting Dell Inspiron E1505, with a Core Duo processor, only costs $870. Under $900. For a Core Duo!
So, I caved. The laptop's being built now.
I've caved in.
The cheapest, yet modern NVidia laptop would be $1500. A Whitebook (no-OS, custom) would be $850 if I skimped on the processor and GPU.
Yet an ATI Radeon X1300 sporting Dell Inspiron E1505, with a Core Duo processor, only costs $870. Under $900. For a Core Duo!
So, I caved. The laptop's being built now.
no subject
Date: 2006-12-27 09:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-12-27 09:55 pm (UTC)Unfortunately, there's little way of telling quality in laptops - IBM was EXTREMELY solid, no matter what, but it had a price to match. Panasonic Toughbooks are next to indestructible - but see above.
My Averatec's been working fine. I had to send it off for a hard drive replacement once, but that's because I paid for the extra warranty in case something nasty happened - the cost of the warranty was less than the replacement drive cost would have been. Paid for itself.
no subject
Date: 2006-12-27 10:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-12-28 01:18 am (UTC)--Salen
no subject
Date: 2006-12-28 03:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-12-28 03:41 pm (UTC)Doesn't matter to me now.