Showing posts with label hp probook 4520s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hp probook 4520s. Show all posts

Friday, October 31, 2014

Review of Samsung Series 9 NP900X1B-A01 11.6-Inch Laptop

Samsung Series 9 NP900X1B-A01 11.6-Inch Laptop
Customer Ratings: 3.5 stars
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I've had this for about 5 days now. I traded in the Series 3 11.6 (Princeton) for this one.

Build:

I can attest to the machine's toughness. While I have yet to drop it...I haven't exactly been delicate with it either. I was able to pry off the bottom to have a look inside. No problem. The screen doesn't seem to flex as others have mentioned in their review (seems pretty solid) and I do keep leaving the sliding doors to the ports open when I threw the laptop in by pack going to work (it's just a regular pack...no padded laptop pocket and I didn't have a case or anything to put the laptop into. Doors seem to be working fine (not that I enjoy testing my luck...I just keep forgetting)

Hardware:

I love the keyboard and display (especially the keyboard backlighting) Wifi seems low-end for a high-end model (same chip as in the 13.3 inch Series 9 (bcm4357). I did a skype test of the in low light...it seemed ok but not great (basically I had to be right up to the camera to be seen). Speakers are pretty good (I did prefer the Samsung Series 3 which had their speakers above the keyboard instead of underneath the unit). Speakers seem to be loud enough and stereo sound (even when placing the laptop on a chair or bed). YMMV (I"m not expecting the speakers to compete with bigger laptops or external speakers). The battery life seems to be sub-par (2 1/2 to 3 hours using continuously not even streaming video or audio and, yes, Ubuntu has power management settings which I've configured)

Popping the bottom off to look at the hardware, there is no 204 pin memory modules so it looks like replacing/upgrading the memory is difficult/impossible (I'm not brave enough to try extracting the motherboard to see if the modules are on the other side below the keyboard). I do love the fact that the SSD is PCI-E (and can be replaced..as opposed to soldered on the motherboard like macbook air.) I'm going to replace the wifi card with a Centrino 6230 (as soon as it gets here)

Software:

I reformatted to Ubuntu Natty 64 bit and loaded VMware player for Windows 7. I haven't had any issues with the touchpad. All the complaints about multi-touch gestures not working or limited seem to be a Windows only issue. Specifically two-finger scrolling and two-finger tap (for right-click) work flawlessly. Since the touchpad works on my Win7 install via vmware tools this functionality is still present when I'm in Windows. (win7 Pro 32 bit)...althugh I haven't played around very much on the Windows side since I use the Unity mode and just launch Outlook and IE mostly. The Broadcom chip seemed to work for me (I'm using it until my Centrino 6230 gets here) I'm on kernel 2.6.38.11 if that helps out anyone.

I can't give it 5 stars because of the wifi and battery. All in all, I like the laptop very much. Other than the wifi card and the battery life...this was worth the $400 over the Samsung Series 3

...while Apple offers configuration options for the Macbook Air 11 inch...the price tag is $1649 (core i7, 256 gb ssd option) + $249 or so for the applecare 2 year warranty. While I like OS X...I want to use Ubuntu as my OS (and not through vmware)

If you're a windows user and want a thin and light laptop the Series 9 is the way to go.

1/5/12 update Ok, I've had my Series 9 for 4 months now. Still love it. Since the last review I've reformatted from Ubuntu to Win7 (Ultimate 64-bit). I installed the Intel Centrino 6230 card and it works flawlessly. I ended up taking the sliding port doors off.

Hardware Under Windows 7 I Installed all hardware drivers that were available from Windows update and the rest from the Samsung support site. I do think the battery has a little better performance under win7 . I use sleep mode (left it asleep at 50% battery life all night and most of the day). When I woke it up...the battery was at 49%. I used it for a bit and put it back asleep. When I got home I got back on it. Battery life now at 31% (using it for about 1/2 hour). Compared to Ubuntu I'd say I'm eeking out an extra 1/2 hour or so on windows.

Software Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit (SP1) all updates from windows installed (except the 35 language packs...don't need those). Use the drivers from Microsoft and only install the drivers you need from Samsung. Use the battery life extender (software section) from the Samsung site. And the firmware update 1.0.0.2 (firmware section) on samsung site.

In conclusion You will need to replace the wifi card (I recommend the Intel Centrino 6230). You will want to install a fresh copy of your flavor of windows (or linux) 64 bit edition and delete the existing partitions during the OS install. Under Windows 7, when you get updates just create a new restore point...you don't need a separate recovery partition. If you are going to create an image you will definately want to do this via network. If you're just worried about your data and settings...just use Windows Easy Transfer (enable and login as administrator). I've got 2 external monitors running...one is on a USB display (UGA USB video adapter) and the other is through the mini HDMI port. Run the USB video adapter on a USB hub works great.

11/17/12 1 year and 3 months...

Laptop still functioning like a pro. I would recommend using the Samsung AA-AH1NAMB/US Micro HDMI To VGA Adapter. I was using an VGA > HDMI > micro HDMI and connectivity was extremely sensitive.

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Prior to this, I used Macbook Air (11 inch screen) and it was not up to challenge for the relatively simple computing tasks and it lacked so many ports. This Samsung on the other hand is very powerful, lightweight,functional with a slick design(given, not as slick as Macbook Air), I would strongly recommend anyone who is looking for a lightweight, powerful laptop.

Best Deals for Samsung Series 9 NP900X1B-A01 11.6-Inch Laptop

The stats listed for this item are not false. This is one of the few 11.6 inch laptops that was manufactured with a 128 GB SSD drive, and 4GB of ram. I thought it was a typo, and was pleasantly surprised to see that it was exactly as was listed.

The only disappointment, is that this came with the faulty wifi card that's usually associated with the Series 9. I purchased an Intel Centrino combination bluetooth and wifi card for this and replaced it right away. The wifi now works perfectly. I had a tricky time opening the laptop up due to some stubborn screws. Be very careful not to strip the tiny things or it may be permanently sealed forever.

I should also mention that I'm typically someone who is very bothered when electronics are made of fingerprint prone materials. A good example would be the glass on touch screen phones. Many people say that this computer is a 'fingerprint magnet', but I actually found this to be false. While you WILL have some finger printing for every day use, it's only a 'magnet' if you're doing something like eating popcorn or a cheeseburger while using it. There is a glossy plastic frame around the screen that I would deem as a 'magnet', but you shouldn't be touching the screen with your fingers anyway.

Fantastic little computer once you replace the wifi card.

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I'm a heavy computer user. When I wanted to buy this laptop I saw the bad reviews about WiFi so when I ordered this laptop I ordered an external wifi adapter in case! When I received this laptop every thing was good. Its about 2 months and wifi was perfect so far.

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I think there are some serious quality issues with this version of the Samsung device. The packaging I received seemed to already have been opened at one point, so I think my device may have already been returned once, fixed, and resold. Anyway, after one week of use the SSD drive failed and everything on it was lost. Yeah, should have been backing up everyday I guess, but I usually back up every week and the machine didn't even last that long.

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Thursday, October 23, 2014

Toshiba 15.6" Satellite C655-S5225 Intel Laptop Review

Toshiba 15.6' Satellite C655-S5225 Intel Laptop
Customer Ratings: 3.5 stars
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Hate it. The trackpad is rough, like cat's tongue, and the cursor does not move smoothly in drag-and-drop. Other laptops, even Toshiba models, offer smoother function. Try the Solitaire (which MSFT has messed up w/ over-design). Like most laptops now, the ports and CD/DVD drive are all on the sides. Add this space-destroyer to the additional width necessary for the numbers pad at the right (duplicating the numbers at the top of the keyboard) and you have little room for papers, binders, etc., and it's easy to dislodge, bump a device. I'm told that motel safes do not accommodate the 15" and over laptops. In addition, the keypad (esp. the trackpad) is off-center so it's easy to hit number keys instead of the key you want. I bought this item at Best Buy b/c $349.99 was such a good price for 4GB memory (not expandable), 320GB HDD. Amazon, Fry's and NewEgg give you 30 days to discover the kinks. Best Buy, Staples, Office Depot give only 14 days -NOT enough. What I learned: buy from shops w/ 30-day return policies.

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I bought this computer from Best Buy in late October for my mother who does very limited and basic processing and computing. She likes to find stuff online and look for ads for garage sales, so she was not utilizing everything the computer can do. For christmas she asked for a Kindle Fire so she gave me the laptop as a trade-off. So far, I absolutely love this laptop. I should start off by saying that I don't mind that it is slightly larger than a lot of other laptops that are trying to be slim and lightweight. It is still light for the size of it but having the 15.6" screen is great when watching videos and movies on it. The processor is plenty fast enough for my computing needs, such as basic word processing and multiple online searching and web browsing. It downloads everything I need very quickly and runs movies and windows media player without a hiccup. Viewing 1080p or 720p movies or youtube vidoes is very smooth and look great on the screen! The graphics card doesn't skip and runs flawlessly as well. Again, I am not a huge processor hog and don't play to many video games on it, but I do watch plenty of youtube video's while searching the web and also try to stream football or hockey games using ESPN 3 or other websites and it runs those extremely well. The only real complaint is that it only has 2 USB 2.0 ports and no HDMI output. It does have a webcam for Skype etc., and the number pad on the far right hand side. I actually thought I would hate this part, and I did when first using the computer but when I had to fill in information on websites or for any type of accounting information, the number pad actually came in very handy. I really enjoy this computer for a basic laptop with good features for a basic to medium user. My girlfriends mother also got a Toshiba Satellite but it was a different version and it came as a glossy silver finish. A couple of notes on this difference. First, the mouse pad is harder to find because the glossy finish blends in with the finish of the mouse track pad so it is hard to know when your actually touching the pad or the computer case. Secondly, she has had some issues with the battery and the WI-FI connection cutting in and out. It is only on that specific version of the Satellite series but it was a major annoyance when the battery would cut out and you have it plugged in! It would also not properly connect to the internet via wi-fi so it would cut in and out because of the same battery issue. I have no issues with any of that on the S5225 version and the matt black finish is nice because you don't see every little fingerprint on the case. It is a great value for what I need and would highly recommend it to anyone looking for a good quality, but cheaply priced laptop.

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I absoulutely love my Toshiba 15.6" Satellite C655-S5225 Intel Laptop! I have recommended it to friends & family that are looking to buy new laptops.

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do not buy this computer. My friend and I both have the same laptop and both of us had the hinge break. This laptop is poorly designed. It is big and bulky. Once the hinge breaks it is pretty useless and difficult to fix

I will not buy a toshiba again

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I bought one for mom and she loves it. It's fast and the screen is a good size. Overall, not a bad laptop for the price.

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Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Apple MacBook Pro MC975LL/A 15.4-Inch Laptop with Retina Display Reviews

Apple MacBook Pro MC975LL/A 15.4-Inch Laptop with Retina Display
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
List Price: $2,199.00
Sale Price: $1,929.00
Today's Bonus: 12% Off
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UPDATED 9-21-12...Systems in use for 3 months.

Pros: A total powerhouse, best laptop display ever made, perfect for professionals, AppleCare, portability, quad core Ivy Bridge processors in a laptop, USB 3.

Cons: You pay for quality, expensive for casual use.

Who it's for: Professionals, designers, media-heavy users, video and photo editors, travelers, students, performance-minded users, anyone needing both performance and portability.

Who it isn't for: Casual or light users, those who think they'll need to expand, people who hate Apple and just don't like their products regardless.

Why 5 stars: It's easy to criticize a device for its shortcomings, but in the end Apple has designed one of the best laptops ever sold. Its performance and value are off the charts, and it would be disingenuous to penalize it for the minor "wish list" we could draw up. It succeeds in the most important areas (like CPU power), sacrificing in relatively unimportant ones (no ethernet connection).

The new Macbook Pro Retina

This is a review from a real owner, not opinion...not discussion. I work in a design company (web, print, video, apps). What I look for in a system is reliable, efficient performance at the best value. The new MacBook scores off the charts in these areas let's look at why.

POWER: I had two designers who'd outgrown their iMac i7s, running 90% CPU capacity (three words: Adobe Master Suite). The new machine represents a massive performance boost with the new CPUs. It's nice to see Apple include the quad core Ivy Bridge on these...at times they've been slow to update the CPUs on the MacBooks. And although the display gets all the press, it's really the other hardware that makes the system. It SCREAMS, and can handle a massive amount of abuse (we tested editing video AND using Photoshop AND streaming Netflix AND running a dozen other programs in the background try that with most machines and watch them curl up and die). If you're animating the latest Pixar release you might want to look at alternatives, but for anything else this is a perfect business machine, and we really like the added "oomph" when editing video or running intense graphics.

DISPLAY: The display is amazing, but more importantly it's useful. You can now edit video in full 1080p while leaving room on the desktop for any necessary toolbars, etc. And my designers tell me that this is the first MacBook they can design on in terms of display correctness previous models didn't really live up to their standards for that, and they'd have to double-check designs on their desktops. UPDATE NOTE: Over the summer, there were some reports of image retention on LG-produced screens. I researched this, and could find no major tech site reporting this issue as substantial. Our two units are LG and have been turned 'on' ten hours a day for the past three months. We have no image issues. The complaints I could find are generally posted in open forums, so I'm not sure how accurate the info is...but we're not worried due to the awesomeness of AppleCare and the guys at our local Genius Bar.

Some nerdy talk about the display: Mostly for pros, here are some features of the display as reported by independent sources. This unit diplays 99% of the sRGB color space, a significant spike from earlier MacBooks (71%). It also incorporates a new LCD surface, doing away with the cover glass and substantially decreasing glare while preserving contrast. Users will want to be extra-careful since damage to the display surface is now to the LCD directly, but the tradeoff is that this system is massively anti-reflective (something we noted right away). And Apple has left the viewing angle very wide most other brands use a narrow angle on their laptops to save battery. Imagine a 'cone of brightness'...the wider this is, the more power is consumed by the display. If you make this narrower the battery lasts longer, but the display is less reliable for design since the image distorts as you move to the side, even by a couple of inches. The designers here at my company confirm that you can rely on the display they report that you have to move pretty far to the side before it changes. Overall...for a designer...the new display is a bar above anything else, even the high-end monitors we have here (including Apple and other brands).

DESKTOP/LAPTOP HYBRID: We were also sold on the portability. We liked that these have the power of a desktop (and we needed that power), but we also love the portability. My designers like the ability to easily move workstations, and I like being able to send their work home with them (don't tell them I said that, ha.)

UPGRADABILITY: Some will gripe that you can't easily open this machine. They'll moan that you'll want to expand and upgrade. I don't presume I can build a better system than Apple's design team, and the iPad has been wildly successful without upgrades. The future of computers seems to be systems that won't allow much in the way of hardware upgrades, which really raises the ire of some. But when I do the math, it feels like we've reached a price point in computers where it almost never makes financial sense to upgrade. We press our computers into service for about two years, and almost universally I've found selling an older machine and buying a new one to be about 40% less costly than upgrading...and this option gives us the latest CPU, display, new AppleCare, etc...not just a RAM boost.

VALUE: With an entry-level price tag of $2199, the new MacBook is a bit spendy. This price point seems to be based on the usual Apple value, adjusting upward for the cool new features (display, CPU power, portable with a very slim form factor). In order to warrant the expenditure, a buyer really should have a use for all three of these. The bottom line is that this system isn't cost effective for casual users, who would be better suited with the other MacBooks in the lineup, but its a steal if you can use the power. While we upgraded the designers here, I stuck with my iMac, looking forward to the late 2012 new models for my next system...I don't need retina or portability on my personal system, so I'm sticking with the iMac line for now.

And price is the biggest caveat with this system. I see several reviews criticizing the cost of this machine. This isn't logical, and their complaints are largely the result of buying (or offering opinion on) a system they don't really need. They should be buying and reviewing the entry-level laptops or the iPads, which will meet 99.9% of what they need a computer for. For the design work we do, we need the power, display and portability, and for us these systems are a superb value.

Summary

Overall, this is a fantastic computer, but it's not for everyone. This system fills a gap in the Mac lineup for users who work above the current iMac capabilities, or those who need portability with desktop power. Those who don't require this performance might want to look at other Macs, but if you run graphic-intense programs, do video editing, watch a lot of media via your computer, Apple has really delivered.

3 Month Update: Having put these into service for three months, I looked through my review and updated it accordingly. We pretty much feel the same way about this system...it's been awesome to use and has exceeded expectations on every level. It runs Adobe Master Suite better than any computer we've ever used, which is what we most wanted the power for. My two designers say they'd buy this system again if they needed a new computer, where I'm still holding out for a super new 21.5 (or...fingers crossed...24"....my desk won't hold a 27", ha) iMac.

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I've had mine for just under two months, and had to have it replaced twice. If you do a quick google for Macbook Pro Retina Image Retention you'll see what I'm talking about. Apparently, Apple uses two manufacturers to supply their displays, Samsung and LG. The Samsung ones are fine, the LG ones show ghosting or image retention (IR) after a month or two of use. Both my first one and the replacement had LGs and the IR problem. They are no longer offering to repair or replace the LGs, stating instead that it's "expected behavior" and "within specs." I'm a huge fan of Apple, but this whole process has left a pretty bad taste in my mouth.

Other than the display being sub-par, the computer is fast, light, and all-in-all a nice machine. But the display is the headline feature, and you have a fifty percent chance of getting a good one. I can't stand knowing that someone else paid the same amount of money, but got a superior product.

Update: The truly awful Apple customer service I've had to deal with the past week has prompted me to drop my rating from 3 stars to 1. Until the issues are resolved, this product is not worth it.

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There is only one Macbook Pro to consider getting this season and it's the Retina Version. The question is if you need to. I've had enough time to exploit some real flaws of Apple's new water cooler hit but make no mistake that I do believe that this is the best Mac ever. Now, let's see if you need it.

The Macbook Pro Retina (MBPr) is a powerful machine loaded with the best combination of power and mobility. The base 2.3 ghz Ivy Bridge CPU is a beast capable of netting a Geekbench 64-bit score of 12,061 in my test and for some perspective there is not a desktop iMac on the list that scores higher. The Kepler nVidia GT 650m is clocked higher and has more memory than the new non-retina models that help it display that 5 megapixel or 2880 x 1900 screen. It's also capable of driving 4 external monitors via 2 thunderbolt, 1 hdmi (a first for Apple) and it's own. Newer games can run at the full resolution though expect frame rates to hover around 20fps at medium settings. I've loaded up Modern Warfare and Borderlands and this machine barely breaks a sweat at my old Macbook Pro's resolution of 1440 x 900. It uses ram that's twice as fast as previous models and the Samsung SSD (with probably to best/most stable controller for a Macbook) is also twice as fast as the Toshiba SSD Apple installed on my last Macbook Pro. The bottom line is this one of the most powerful computers period, consumer desktops included.

Do you need that power? To be honest, up until I started editing video in Final Cut, my last Macbook Pro was more computer than I needed. Any Macbook with a Core Series Intel chip and 4gb of ram will easily handle word processing, Photoshop, Aperture, and 1080p streaming. If the Macbook has a solid state drive like my old MBP then the system as a whole will feel lightening quick and iPad like with instant wake from sleep and a sub 18 second boot time. My move was going to be, and the one I would recommend if you have a similar workload, getting a Core Series Macbook Air.

Do you need to render HD videos longer that 5 minutes or pixel rich RAW images? When I began doing just that my 2010 Core i7 Macbook Pro would take nearly an hour to export a 10 minute video clip and the machine got hot as it was also pushing a 27 inch Cinema Display. It lagged even more if I wanted to stream Netflix while I waited for the video to finish. My machine was a first generation i7 with a dual core chip. All Macbook Airs at this point have dual core cpus, so expect similar export times and the eventual need for a Pro model. You can also eliminate the 13 inch version of the Macbook Pro as that's a dual core as well. Ultimately, if you edit videos you're looking at the 15 inch Macbook Pro that sport quad-core cpus.

Did you know that the Macbook Pro Retina is the cheapest 15 inch Macbook Pro you can buy new? Let's give this a walk through with the base models. SSD's are the future of all computer storage so now or later you'll have one. Besides that it's the single greatest upgrade you can do for your computer. Plus 4gb ram is pushing it and becomes a bottle neck if you edit videos and large file photos. So a conservative 256gb SSD and 8gb ram upgrade from Apple will cost you $450 added to the $1799 base price, which come standard on the base model Retina version. So for $2399 you get a machine that's slower (MBPr nVidia GPU is clocked 275 ghz higher with 512 mb more memory) and doesn't have the Retina Display. Suddenly, that $2199 price tag for the Macbook Pro Retina looks more than reasonable, it looks good. Now you do lose the superdrive, gigabit ethernet, firewire 800 and future expandability/repairability (iFixit rates it 7/10 MBP and 1/10 MBPr, higher the better) but you do gain a sleeker design that runs significantly cooler. You can also buy an external super drive for $79 and a thunderbolt-to-ethernet adapter for $29, still putting you below a similar specced non-Retina MBP.

Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, Haswell, Broadwell, and beyond. Sandy was a tick. a huge step forward for mobile computing basically doubling what was capable before as the first quad-core CPU to fit inside a Mac 15 inches or larger. Ivy is a tock, which takes Sandy and gives it a die shrink making it more power efficient. Intel has mapped out this tick tock sequence well into the future so we know a few things. We know the ticks are the major updates, the one that changes the game. We know Haswell is the next tick. We know Apple and Steve Jobs had been pushing Intel to get Intel into mobile GPUs, even threatening to run it's own ARM processor at the Macbook Level. The Ivy Bridge CPU and it's integrated GPU are still joined as two separate islands on one board. Haswell looks to have significantly increase internal graphics performance while residing on the same "island" as the CPU. This leaves extra space for a larger battery. Speaking of, battery life is the significant leap that makes Haswell the next "tick." We're talking 24 hour battery life, 10 days connected standby time, and general iPad-like charging is an after thought. Intel's recent demo showed the Haswell chip running of the illumination from a single light bulb. It dispenses more power than what's needed for it to run. If you have anything prior to Sandy Bridge, then upgrade away, this Ivy Bridge Macbook Pro Retina is going to be an unbelievably powerful machine to you. If you do have a Sandy Bridge then you might as well wait for the next release as they get more powerful, run for much longer without a charge and run without all the quirks of this year's model.

The Retina display is the much ballyhooed feature of the this "next generation" Macbook. Why does Apple give it this nick name? Why aren't they available across the board of Macbook Products? Well, Apple new it was going to be costly and they knew the IPS panels themselves are hard to make. It's also the major culprit of performance issues. There are numerous reports of consumers seeing image ghosting where the residual outline of say Safari will remain on the screen upwards of 5 minutes. My personal performance experience was more pleasant with my older Macbook for everything but Video encoding. The current hardware is supremely powerful by today's standards but those bars didn't factor in driving a 2880 x 1800 display. This results in laggy web browsing as it has to load and then redraw pages. You get barely playable frame rates at full resolution with games like Diablo 3 and you want to because 2880 x 1800 is just stunning. There just aren't enough things that take advantage of it as Developers are making a miserable turn scrambling to find scaling algorithms that make sense when factoring in a Retina Display. Apple's own iWork Suite lacks Retina support and looks fugly upon close inspection. Scrolling and zooming on a web page now becomes CPU intensive and results in a less than smooth experience. I've also seen the spinning beach ball more times in the past week than I did in the year and a half I owned my last Macbook. Final Cut Pro X crashed twice on me. The screen is also dim. I used to be able to work with brightness set to half and now I have no choice but to go full brightness during the day on my MBPr. So though the Ivy Bridge CPU is more power efficient than last years model, the fact that more of it, along with the the GPU, is being stressed to push a display that needs to be set at full brightness results in 5 hour battery life under a diet of youtube, word processing and light photo editing. You can get over 7 hours in a non-retina version and the Macbook Airs. Mountain Lion will address many of these issues on the software side utilizing more of the GPU and Haswell should clear up any hardware throttles, so it seems Apple had a purpose in designating it the "next generation" Macbook as it's not really ready to exist now.

So it's the best Mac ever made? It is. The design, while subtle, harbors enough changes that makes working with it for a full day a significantly better experience than the old model. It's thinner yes, but it feel more solid, with the old one's feeling like I had lots of empty space between my hands. The screen is gorgeous with apps that utilize it. It's a glimpse at resolution independence. If everything was displayed at the full 2880 x 1800 icons would look tiny and text would be illegible. So everything looks like the standard 1400 x 900 setup but all the extra pixels are used to give insanely crisp images. I almost don't want to use my Cinema Display because it's just not as good. The real key is when an app like Final Cut Pro X gives you a user interface that gives you the standard layout in super sharp fashion and then processes the video footage as separate entity. Let me explain, in a standard Final Cut Pro X UI the video window is down-scaled to fit the pixels in that window. In the MBPr, there's no need to down-scale, that little window can display a full 1080p resolution. The same goes for Aperture which is Retina ready. So instead of the entire app rescaling images to make them fit the available pixel space, a Retina Display can scale the UI elements to make them fit while other parts can be viewed without altering. In practice, it means I spend less time time going into full screen mode to see how a shot or a photo looks and more time editing scenes. Workflow is greatly reduced as I weed out good photos from bad ones because the thumbnails pack so much detail.

It is the little things that count. Things like the asymmetrically spaced fan blades that I can report indeed have a quieter effect, if they even get a chance to spin. The MBPr definitely runs cooler. Exporting a 1080p video yielded 100 degree celsius temperatures on the old model and I clocked the Retina version at 49 degrees rendering the same clip. The glare on the screen is reduced but the gloss still give colors that "pop." The speakers sound fuller and slightly louder than before. HDMI was a surprise feature but the two USB 3.0 ports were sorely needed and appreciated. The SDXC card slot is reliable now and fuss-free, not the case in older ones. Importing 40 photos literally took half a second. At first glance, it doesn't look all that much different but its after daily use that you truly start to appreciate its svelte physique. The amount of thought put into this machine is obviously high and the more I use it, the more grateful I am of it.

You should consider buying:

-video editing more than 5 minute clips

-photo editing large RAW files

-increase productivity via screen real estate otions

You should consider waiting for Haswell version:

-have a Sandy bridge version

-want the 13 inch version of a quad core chip

You should consider the new Macbook Air:

-if you don't fit any of the above

I bought mine here and didn't have to pay tax. Saved me $219 which I used to buy a $187 2tb external USB 3.0 drive here.Western Digital My Passport 2 TB USB 3.0 Portable Hard Drive -WDBY8L0020BBKNESN (Black)

Honest reviews on Apple MacBook Pro MC975LL/A 15.4-Inch Laptop with Retina Display

I bought a Macbook because I needed a new laptop. I'm a PC power user and I also work in the IT field. I've never hitched my wagon to one horse. I use Windows, Mac OS, and Linux. I normally purchase Windows PCs but in all honesty, I wasn't very impressed with the Windows 8 preview and until I see how this radically new Windows version pans out, I'm afraid to invest in a new Windows machine. I've already gotten burned (badly) when I was an early adopter to both Windows ME and Vista. I'm not eager to go through the same headaches yet again after dishing out four figures for a new PC. Besides, I needed to replace an aging iMac and I like to have at least one up-to-date Mac in the house, so instead of another Mac desktop, I chose a Macbook as my new laptop. Two birds, one stone. And if I want, I can run Win 7 virtually on my new Mac.

It's not perfect and it's not the world's most fantastic and ridiculously powerful laptop as some would have you believe but it's a pretty decent laptop in its own right. It's powerful enough to handle pretty much anything you can throw at it, be it video encoding, photo editing, gaming, whatever. The screen is absolutely gorgeous, despite all the stories you've heard about everything from image retention to fuzzy graphics. Don't get me wrong, the machine is not without it's issues (more on that later) but it's still a great machine and I have absolutely no buyer's remorse.

Pros:

I put the word "MY" before my pros and cons because these are features important to me. Other features such as USB 3, HDMI, and Thunderbolt aren't really pros to me because on a laptop costing this much, it had BETTER have at least USB 3 and an HDMI out port...

MY Pros:

Guts The CPU, SSD and GeForce combo in the base model is very powerful and more than sufficient for most of my computing needs. Quad-core Ivy bridge CPU mated with fast SSD drive means ultra-fast boot times. I boot in 15 seconds or less. It also means faster responsiveness from some apps. Everything flows so smoothly and I rarely see the spinning beach ball. I don't normally do a ton of multitasking. I prefer to open windows as I need them instead of having a million windows open at once all over the place in a cluttered and confusing array. Therefore, the 8GB of standard RAM is more than sufficient for me. I mostly dabble on the programming side, so I don't need this for any beefy work-related projects. I mainly use it for video editing, photo editing, household management and other personal tasks. I occasionally play a game or two as well.

Size Size is very portable. Although it's a little heavy (more on that below), the thin size still makes it easily transportable.

Cooling The design of the laptop makes it run cooler than traditional Macbooks. This is something you can see/feel for yourself. Go to the nearest brick and mortar store with both the retina and non-retina 2012 Macbooks on display and feel them. The non-retinas feel much warmer. This thing runs cool even when encoding video. I have yet to hear my fan kick in during an intensive task.

Power Supply I know a lot of former Macbook owners are angry with the new power adapter but it's my first Macbook, so I'm speaking from that perspective. It magnetically attaches and detaches to the Mac. Now, I've seen the old Apple ads where laptops got accidentally pulled off of tables etc due to tripping over cords. I've tripped and snagged my fair share of PC cords and most popped right out of the port instead of ripping the laptop off the table, so this isn't so much a necessary safety measure as it is a cool feature. The Magsafe adapter itself is huge. I wish it were a little smaller but compared to the typical power brick of as PC, I still love it. It resembles an over-sized iPad power adapter.

Body I won't lie. The aluminum body is a thing of beauty. I like looking at it almost as much as I like using it. I will admit, the sleek aluminum Macs are a welcome relief to the usual drab slate grey metallic bodies of the business laptops I work with daily at work and the cheap-looking plastic covered consumer grade laptops around my home.

Display I saved the screen for last because you've already heard enough about it. It has to be seen in person to be truly appreciated. I realize it's scaled-down to a lower resolution (depending if you select the default resolution setting best for retina") but whatever Apple is doing makes the image razor sharp, which I'm sure aging eyes like mine likely appreciates a lot more than most younger eyes.

Now for...

My Cons:

Completely and totally non-upgradeable. I see what Apple is doing, fusing the iPad and Mac to eventually become one, but it doesn't mean I like it. I had to really think long and hard about getting a rMBP. The reasons that led to me deciding on it are explained below. Just realize, whatever you buy initially is what you will be stuck with for the life of the computer. I use multiple computers and this is primarily for personal home use, but if you are buying one for commercial or really intensive power usage, think long and hard about what you need before ordering (If you even decide a rMBP is even still right for you).

Lack of Ethernet port. Sure... WiFi suffices for most needs, but what about bandwidth intense needs, like content-heavy VPN or Citrix sessions? WiFi is not a catch-all solution for everything. Judging by the body dimensions, I'm hard-pressed to figure out why they omitted it. It begins to diminish the portability factor, which I'm assuming was the primary reason they omitted so many standard ports in the first place, if I have to walk around with adapters for everything (firewire, ethernet, etc).

Battery is sealed, glued, and otherwise stuck in there forever. Wish it were replaceable or at least capable of being disconnected for maintenance. I guess the fact that you can't do any maintenance makes that a moot issue anyhow... But at least Ibattery life seems on par with my other laptops. I don't throw battery times out there because everyone uses their laptop differently. My usage may yield only 3 hrs whereas yours might give you twice that. I average at least 3-4 hrs of moderate usage on battery. If I use it lightly (email, web browsing and nothing more power-hungry than office programs), I can get a couple hours per day for about three or four days before needing to recharge.

Weight As thinner and smaller as the rMBP is when compared to the non-retina, once you pick it up, that advantage quickly dissipates. Imagine dating a super-model with a super-model body and when you go to lift her in your arms, you discover she somehow manages to weigh 200 lbs under seemingly skin and bones. It's sleek, lean, mean and heavy. It's not super heavy like some mobile workstations, but as my super-model analogy shows, the form factor is slightly deceiving. Don't expect it to be light as, well... Air

No K-slot. What good is a transportable friendly laptop if they give you no way to lock it down temporarily while on the go? When I was away, I'd loop my lock cable around an immovable object like a piece of furniture or something that would require much more work than a casual thief would be willing to invest. If they wanted my laptop, they'd have to cut the cable with bolt cutters or disassemble whatever I had the laptop attached to. Now they can freely walk in and either grab the laptop or locked case I store it in because Apple has given us no other way to secure it.

Display Yes, the infamous retina display makes both the pro and con list. The reason it makes the con list is because I have already returned one rMBP due to a yellowish hued screen. The second screen was much better. Although I haven't experienced any image-retention issues, I'm still a little paranoid because I have an LG panel. Everyone says "try to get a Samsung panel" but you'll be hard-pressed to find a rMBP without an LG panel. And I'm not obsessive nor petty enough to go through five or so Macbooks trying to get a Samsung panel. If I experience any IR issues down the road, I'll handle it. Otherwise, life goes on. As for other issues, yes, some web sites, apps, and other content do occasionally appear fuzzy or blocky. It's not anywhere near as bad as some are making it out to be and it really a non-issue for me, especially considering that the overwhelming majority of items that render badly are usually those spammy ads alongside the web page.

Intangibles like most first gen Apple products, there are the bugs. The display issues are widely known but some lesser known issues exist as well, like WiFi and Bluetooth. Whenever I tried to boot with both enabled, my WiFi would not connect. So, I disabled Bluetooth. I've had a few other weird anomalies but nothing that has tempted me to pack everything up and make a beeline for the Apple store. One thing I'd like to mention is the feud between Apple and Adobe appears to have mad its way to the laptops as well. There is no Flash installed out the box. So, unless you want to see a lot of error messages, I suggest either going straight to Adobe for Flash or downloading Chrome which has a much safer and more stable sandbox Flash.

So, why did I ultimately decide on the rMBP? Well, Apple almost forces your hand to buy the rMBP. Here's why

1) The standard resolution of the non-retina Macbook Pro is too low to justify the price. 1,440 X 900 is so... 2008. Sadly, Apple's own retina Macbook does a wonderful job of showing just how choppy and ugly that resolution is. Even after paying a $100 premium to upgrade to the Apple high-res screen option (matte or glossy), the 1680 X 1050 resolution still pales compared to the 1920 X 1080 resolution of most comparable Windows laptops. Even though the "optimal for retina" display is scaled lower, the screen still looks incredibly sharp when next to a non-retina Macbook, which looks grainy by comparison.

2) The size of the new retina Macbook makes it almost more comparable to a Macbook Air than a traditional Macbook but for those thinking "I'll just get the Air", you could, but it would be less capable machine. I was ready to return my rMBP and exchange it for an Air but by the time I configured an Air I was happy with, it was the same price as the baseline rMBP. Although it had the same amount of RAM and a 512GB SSD, I lost the screen, extra ports, extra two inches of screen size, discrete graphics and quad-core CPU. Although the air is lighter and more portable, I prefer the power of the rMBP over the extra 256GB of SSD and slightly better portability of the maxed-out Air. If I weren't buying this as a desktop replacement for an iMac, I might have gone with the Air.

So there you have it. Should you buy it? Well, if you're in the market for a desktop replacement or high-end Macbook and can live with the tradeoffs (non-upgradable, limited storage, first-gen issues), then go for it. You can't go wrong. If you already have a capable Mac with discreet graphics that can handle your power needs and are considering buying this as a mobile companion PC, then go for the Air. You really can't justify the price of this thing if you aren't a power user or already have a capable Mac. If you have a 2011 Macbook, I strongly advise just upgrading to Mountain Lion and awaiting the second generation rMBP. I think you'll ultimately be very happy you did. Just take this one fact away: Apple designed these things to be disposable, like tablets.

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Apple MacBook Pro MC975LL/A 15.4-Inch Laptop with Retina Display

I bought my first PC in 1987 and I had managed to avoid Apple products since then. I admit it, I'm biased. I never liked Apple's OS's or most of their hardware. I never cared for Steve Jobs either. However, despite my bias, I'm also rational. And the simple fact is that there is currently no better notebook for my needs than this one. I had to replace my Windows notebook and after a lot of research I found that there is simply nothing else on the market that matches this notebook's power, weight, and silent/cool operation. And of course, we all know the screen is unmatched. So, in a moment of weakness I fell to the Dark Side and bought an Apple product. As you can see above, I actually bought this product here at Amazon. I've been using it for about 3 weeks now for 10+ hours per day.

I can't say a thing about how this notebook performs on the Mac OS side of things because I run Windows 7 on it using Bootcamp (making sure I could do this was a key part of my research before buying). Fortunately, everything runs great on it using Windows 7. I'm a software developer and have been using Visual Studio, SQL Server, and Oracle without any problems. The screen is awesome. The notebook remains cool and I think I've heard the cooling fans running only a couple times. Since I travel quite a bit, what I love most about it is the light weight and thinness.

So, even if you're a die-hard Windows user like me I can whole-heartedly recommend this notebook. The only caveat I'd add for Windows users is that the keyboard is less than optimal for us. Apple's "delete" is our "backspace". Our "delete" is "fn" + "delete". Our PrintScreen is "shift" + "fn" + "f11". And there are a few others I won't bore you with, hopefully you get the idea. In the big scheme of things it's a minor annoyance considering how great everything else works on this notebook.

The only thing I dislike about this notebook is that big Apple logo on the back. Anyone know where I can get nice big sticker with Bill Gates' face to cover it up? In spite of that, I still have to give this notebook 5 stars. Again, I'm biased, but I'm also rational.

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Saturday, August 23, 2014

HP Pavilion dv7-7030us 17.3-Inch Laptop (Black) Reviews

HP Pavilion dv7-7030us 17.3-Inch Laptop
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
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I wanted a reasonably priced laptop using the i7 processor so, since my wife already has an HP, I decided to 'keep it in the family' and get this HP. It was at a good price compared to WalMart and other store fronts. It's super fast compared to my old Acer and it lets me play a few of my games as well. Movie Maker is MUCH FASTER as is just about everything else. The screen is nice and wide also. The battery promises a very long run time and I can see why. They have ingeniously packed an extra row of cells outside of where they normally would be situated inside the contour of the laptop. This row is actually OUTSIDE of the contour on the bottom and it acts like a foot to slant the keyboard toward you. It makes it very comfortable. Great idea!

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This laptop is by far, one of the fastest products available right now. Its' i7 processor combined with 8 GB will give you plenty of room for growth. The screen is crystal clear and this little gem comes with about 9 hours of battery power! The price is right on the mark for a laptop that will easily exceed your expectations.

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Received in two days, in perfect condition. I bought this as a replacement for my four year old refurbished 17" HP laptop and it is an improvement in every way. It's lighter, the keyboard is a joy to use, and neither the laptop nor power supply overheat. Got an Amazon Prime account with attendant free streaming video when I ordered and movies are fabulous viewed on the big screen. With 8GB RAM, it's fast and powerful. Will update with more info after I've had it longer, but at this point I am more than satisfied.

Honest reviews on HP Pavilion dv7-7030us 17.3-Inch Laptop (Black)

I purchased this laptop for my wife, who works from home. This machine is replacing a 6 year old Acer Aspire 5102wmli. This laptop is a true desktop replacement. The i7 screams, 8 GB RAM is more than enough for the average person (other than hard-core gaming or CAD work), the 1 TB drive is almost limitless in size, the keyboard is very good for a laptop, the screen is awesome and huge, and the battery life is very good (6+ hours, depending on use). I own a DV6-6110us (AMD A6 processor), and am very happy with it. However, I was surprised at how much better the keyboard was on the DV7 -they look the same, but the keys have a very different feel. I was perfectly happy with my keyboard until I used the DV7 while setting-up my wife's new machine. Also, the spacing of the keys is more like a full-sized keyboard. The machine has USB 3.0 and 2.0 ports, GB LAN, fantastic WiFi reception, and useful HP system utilities. Unfortunately, it also comes with the usual crap-ware loaded, which took a half hour to uninstall. For those in the market for a full-sized laptop, look no further. The machine is well-designed, well-made, and faster than you'll ever need.

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for HP Pavilion dv7-7030us 17.3-Inch Laptop (Black)

Great Laptop, Great Screen, very fast

i7 3rd Generation Ivy Bridge. 17" 1080i Screen. 8GB Memory. there is nothing I can complain. It's perfect for me.

I only did one upgrade. I upgraded the hard drive to SSD. WOW, Amazing. It runs super fast.

And it's a good value. I checked with HP website, for same configuration, it cost $1200 plus TAX.

So, you better buy it from Amazon to save money and tax.

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Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Samsung 17.3" AMD Dual-Core 500GB HDD Notebook Reviews

Samsung 17.3' AMD Dual-Core 500GB HDD Notebook
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
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Because the product specifications are lame, here are the details of it from the manufacturer:

Memory Module Specifications

Total Memory Size 6GB

Memory Type DDR3

Memory Speed PC3-12800

Memory Slots (Total) 2

Memory Speed MHz 1600MHz

Memory Slots (Available) 0

Maximum Memory Supported 8GB

Memory Configuration 4GB + 2GB

Monitor Specifications

Screen Size 17.3"

Maximum Resolution 1600 x 900

Display Type LED HD

Processor Specifications

Processor Brand AMD

Processor Class A6

Processor Type Dual-Core

Processor Speed 2.7GHz

Notebook Specifications

Lifestyle Desktop Replacement

Condition Refurbished

Operating Systems Windows 8 64-Bit

Platform Laptop

Hard Disk Drive Specifications

Capacity 500GB

HDD/SSD Drives Included 1x 500GB

Drive Types Hard Drive

Hard Drive Speed 5400 RPM

Graphics Specifications

Graphics Description Integrated Graphics

GPU/VPU AMD Radeon HD 7520G

Optical Drive Specifications

Optical Drive DVD Super Multi Dual Layer Burner

Supplemental Drive

Capacity 3-in-1

Supplemental Drive Type Media Reader

Media Types Secure Digital (SD)

SDHC

SDXC

Audio Specifications

Audio Description Integrated Audio

Audio Chipset High-Definition Audio

Audio Channels 3W Stereo Speaker (1.5W x 2)

Integrated Microphone Yes

Media Ports

USB Ports (Total) 2 USB 2.0

2 USB 3.0

LAN Ports 1 RJ-45

Audio Out Jacks 1

Microphone Jacks 1

VGA Ports 1

HDMI Ports 1

Communications

Communications Description Integrated LAN

Integrated Wireless LAN

Integrated Bluetooth

Interface Type Gigabit LAN

Bluetooth 4.0 + HS

Wi-Fi 802.11b/g/n

Protocols 802.11b

802.11g

802.11n

Dimensions

Width 16.19"

Height 1.39"

Depth 10.64"

Weight 6.17"

Mouse Specifications

Mouse Type Integrated Touchpad

Scrolling Capability Scroll Scope

Keyboard Specifications

Keyboard Type 101 Key US Keyboard

Battery

Battery Type 6-Cell Lithium-ion

Webcam

Integrated Webcam Yes

Webcam Resolution 1.3MP

This is a very nice laptop, and I have a few comments on it myself. It's battery life is about 4 hours at 80%(set at that to preserve battery life), the graphics are great, and the sound is LOUD, but it does sound kind of tinny(no bass, duh). It comes with a Plants vs. Zombies trial, and a shark dash full version. The laptop plays Star Wars Battlefront 2 on it, so you know it has good speed. It plays it without delay, and is very fast. On all the other computers the internet is slow, but on this thing for some reason it is very fast. Now for the problem that most users are afraid of: Windows 8. It really isn't that bad. I am not the I-phone kind of person, so I disregard most of the stuff on it. Basically what it is is an app menu that you can put what you want on it(like installed games, or Google chrome, which, by the way, doesn't come with it), and have ease of access to things like S-Player(aka, a twisted version of windows media player), and the internet. The only problem I have with this computer is the touch pad. It is unresponsive to the scroll feature(two fingers in a direction), so you may have to buy a mouse for this computer. Luckily, I already had one so this wasn't an issue. I would recommend this laptop to anyone, because it is a masterpiece of laptops. Save your money on a big expensive one, and buy this one!

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The laptop is not as gigantic as i expected it to be, maybe i've gotten used to the screensize.

The battery life is decent, i live in a country with regular blackouts and this battery serves me well.

Once you get used to windows 8, it totally rocks. You can pinch to zoom with the mousepad of this laptop.

Consider buying a remote mouse. Right now i use my phone as a remote.

The sound is powerful.

What i hate: the regular solitaire etc are missing. pinball 3D is the only full game that comes with the system. I don't mind buying games, but data connection's very expensive where i live.

I needed a large screen for games, movies and pattern-making software. For less than $500, this baby is a dream come true.

Best Deals for Samsung 17.3" AMD Dual-Core 500GB HDD Notebook

Nice blue steel looking cover ,vary thin ,super fast loads up quick storage for a lot of stuff,should last for years

Honest reviews on Samsung 17.3" AMD Dual-Core 500GB HDD Notebook

Good buy fast good storage size loads up quick looks great steel blue thin not as thick as older one I have should last for years

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Saturday, August 2, 2014

Buy Acer Aspire AS5750-6664 15.6 LED Notebook Intel Core i5 i5-2450M

Acer Aspire AS5750-6664 15.6 LED Notebook Intel Core i5 i5-2450M 2.50 GHz 6GB DDR3 500G HDD DVD-Writer Intel Graphics Card Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Black
Customer Ratings: 3.5 stars
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Just bought it and so far I am very happy with it.

Large screen with good quality image.

Looks very sturdy.

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Came in really quick. Overall good quality. Would definitely go with them again. Definitely recommend to anyone looking for good quality.

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Junk is the best description. I bought the Acer Aspire 5750 series. Worked well for first 90 days. On day 91 it decided to not stay connected to the internet. I use wireless. I did the chat with the tech and after many tries at a fix. They had me send it back. Well, the tech in Texas did nothing. Said it worked and sent it back. I have had it back a little over a month and now it does the same thing. So, here I go again with the chat person...doing the same thing over again and expecting different results. Ha! Now they want me to talk to a level 2 tech on chat but I have to do that during business hours and this is Saturday. I asked if I could ship the bloody lemon back and no I got to talk to the level 2 tech. I have another laptop a Samsung. sweet and it works but my husband uses it for his business. So, just bought a Dell Inspirion. Our old Inspirion...really ancient still works but is too slow and can't be upgraded. So my recommendation buy a Dell or a Samsung. Do not buy the insanity of an Acer. I still have the manufacturers warranty and actually bought a 2 year extended warranty. I imagine the Acer will most likely not make it through the warranty periods and will die probably before the year is out at the rate it is going.

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Wednesday, July 9, 2014

HP EliteBook 2760p B2C42UT 12.1" LED Tablet PC - Core i7 i7-2620M Reviews

HP EliteBook 2760p B2C42UT 12.1' LED Tablet PC - Core i7 i7-2620M 2.8GHz
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
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This is one versatile machine. I needed a strong and rugged unit to run my business finances from a variety of locations. At the same time, I wanted it to help with my leisure pursuit of music composition and performance. I use the pad feature primarily for music display using Music Reader during piano performances (I'm putting my whole library on it!). When placed on a music rack the weight is not so much an issue for me as for some other reviewers.. Music composition with the stylus on the pad works much easier than with a mouse and keyboard. The fans are very quiet if they run at all, and the SSD makes bootup and wakeup very fast.

With my business, I do a lot of remote access, so the Windows 7 pro provides a smooth connection. The i7 processor easily handles the half-dozen programs I run simultaneously. I'm especially pleased with how easily this unit switches between the various monitors I connect to extend my desktop at different locations. The abundance of jacks and control buttons provides an advantage over ultrabooks if you depend on such connectors and controls like I do.

If there are negatives for me, they would be the speaker placement pointing out the front below the keyboard. If you use it as a true laptop, the sound disappears into your lap. It would also be nice if it had a USB 3 port. Still, while it might not be the best for everybody, for me this machine is perfect!

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Great unit with steller performance and durable package. Our only hope is that HP will continue to make a unit that is as tough and durable as this unit.

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The HP EliteBook came with Windows 7 Pro but I immediately upgraded to Windows 8 Pro with no problems. The tablet is just what my husband wanted.

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Friday, June 6, 2014

Discount Toshiba Satellite C655D-S5200 15.6" 3GB 320GB Laptop

Toshiba Satellite C655D-S5200 15.6' 3GB 320GB Laptop
Customer Ratings: 3 stars
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This item was delivered broken with the screen cracked. It was dead on arrival. We were NOT ALLOWED TO RETURN THE ITEM as we have attempted several times to contact the seller and have been IGNORED!! The laptop is unusable and we already paid for it!! We are extremely distraught and feel cheated by the seller, Secondipity, which will not only give a broken item to a customer, but ignore their request to return or exchange the computer. One star is far too much to give to the lack of service and quality of product.

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WORKS GREAT/ will be upgrading to 8gig memory toshiba sells this for $70 great deal! Great price for a laptop with this many features, great battery(4.5 hours) keyboard has 10key number pad!

0

Monday, June 2, 2014

Review of Sony VAIO SE1 Series VPCSE17FX/B 15.5-Inch Laptop (Jet Black)

Sony VAIO SE1 Series VPCSE17FX/B 15.5-Inch Laptop
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
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My primary requirement for a laptop was for it to have a beautiful screen and long battery life. If this is what you are looking for, there are no alternatives besides a Macbook. This is why I give it 5 stars. I purchased the computer from a physical Microsoft Store and received 25% off (Nov 2011).

Pros:

Beautiful screen, 1080p, great viewing angle both vertical and horizontal. Nothing compares to this screen!

Battery life (with extra battery attachment) is probably between 4 and 8 hours depending on use.

Silent Performance mode. Supresses processing power but keeps the fan at minimum rpm.

Blu-ray playback is just stunning!

USB 3.0

HDMI out

VAIO control panel is neat. VAIO care is interesting too.

Cons:

Trackpad is difficult to find and mouse button is not easy to press. This is annoying, but I placed a little sticker on the easiest part to click and issue resolved.

No dedicated volume button (need to press fn+f3/f4)

The resolution is so high and the screen a normal 15.6 inches that I need my glasses with some applications without a zoom feature.

Sound is not great, but works well enough.

I prefer a centered keyboard without a numeric pad.

The laptop does not come out of standby mode when I open the lid/screen. I need to press the power button. My HP DV-6000 starts up when I open the lid. There may be a setting for this.

I have not found a mic input port for plug in mic. My HP has one.

No HDTV Tuner

Price

Conclusion:

It's not for everyone, but I love it. With this computer, I can take it all over the house and easily attach it to a HDTV anywhere without worrying about power, instantly making the HDTV, Blu-ray and internet capable (with no restrictions like Google TV). No HDTV in the room? You have one on your lap!

Update:

I recently purchased a PS3 Display and hooked up my Sony laptop. The PS3 Display is bright and beautiful. As compared to the laptop screen, the laptop screen has a very very slight (was never noticeable without comparison) orange/brown tinge when looking at white. The PS3 Display has a very very slight blue tinge.

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I have owned this vpcse 17fx for over 3 months. I have to admit that this is the best laptop I'v ever had.

Pros----------------------------------------

SCREEN

This is the best screen you can find in laptop industry. It has the almost 180 degrees of view angle, which you can only find on LCD TVs and Mac screens. Even Mac screen will change the white color to yellow when viewed from steep angles, this one will darken a little bit but the color unchanged.

Also ,this screen remains the same on the inferior versions of this model(VPCSE13,VPCSE16...)

Slim body

Long battery.

With out extra battery sheet, this machine only last 3.5 hours. But I highly recommend you buy a battery sheet, for extending time to 6.5 hours (middle brightness), as well as keeping the bottom cool. (The bottom is cool enough when not playing games, a batter sheet will make it even cooler)

Double graphic card.

I wanted this features for years. And now I finally got it. Also ATI 6630 is a class 2 graphics card, according to . When I play COD7 , it's easy to render at high fps at high settings.

CONS--------------------------------

1 SONY's driver is hard to install. You must download them from Sony's website and install in sequence if you intend to reinstall your OS. If the sequence is not right, it's easy to end up with some hardware not working.

2 6630 Graphic card (or it's driver) does not support portrait mode(rotate monitor 90 degrees). Well maybe most people does not need this feature, but I do, when I view or design websites. I have a viewsonic monitor that can rotate, but the graphic card does not support.....

OVERALL, I highly recommend this machine or any of it's inferior version to my friends. The top-of-industry screen alone is a strong enough reason .

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I was really excited about this laptop until it I saw it and used it.

The huge cosmetic surprise was that this laptop is essentially ALL PLASTIC. Some reviewer said it is aluminum which is totally wrong. Every major external part is made of plastic (like many laptops).

The biggest functional flaw is by far the FAN PLACEMENT. It is located on the BACK of the laptop. Normally this isn't a bad thing, except on this laptop, when you open the lid/screen, IT BLOCKS THE FAN. IT'S SO FUNNY. I can't imagine who would design something so stupid? If you open the lid/screen, it essentially blocks the fan causing the fan to run harder and harder making a lot of noise. Essentially Sony sacrificed function for style (cooling and fan placement is not something you want compromised).

CONS:

-FAN PLACEMENT (See above)

-Fan runs on high and very loud even for minimal loads

-ALL PLASTIC BODY (the plastic seems sort of cheap and light, likely to reduce the weight)

-Battery is life not good (less than would be expected for a 15.6")

-Only three USBs, all placed on one side

-It just has a weird look to it. It's nothing like the more or less standard look you find on HPs or MacBook Pros. It looked amazing in the pictures, but I didn't like how it looked in person. I think the square, sharp edges and corner (instead of round ones) have a lot to do with it.

-The "Stamina" or "Speed" manual switch on the top left of the keyboard is almost unique to this laptop. It is used to switch between integrated or discrete graphs. Normally this is a plus, except this laptop CANNOT HANDLE THE HEAT from "Speed" or discrete graphs so you always leave it on "Stamina"

PROS:

-Very light, among the lightest 15.6" laptops you will find (the cheap plastic probably helps with that)

-Very comfortable keyboard (similar to Lenovo keyboards)

-Full HD 1920x1080 resolution (major plus)

-IPS LED Backlit technology for the monitor (again, major plus)

CONCLUSION: This laptop is a very light weight 15.6" laptop with an incredible display. Just expect an ALL PLASTIC body and expect loud fan noise even under minimal loads. Surprisingly, heat was not an issue, but very loud fan noise was.

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Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Buy HP - Pavilion G7-2320dx Laptop / AMD Quad-Core A8-4500M Processor

HP - Pavilion G7-2320dx Laptop / AMD Quad-Core A8-4500M Processor / 4GB DDR3 / 640GB Hard Drive / 17.3'LED / Multiformat DVD±RW/CD-RW drive / Windows 8 / Sparkling Black
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
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The laptop performs very well and works fast. I have recommended this laptop to a friend and another friend already has one.

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Very happy with this Hp g7 laptop. No issues to speak of other then I don't have a preference for Windows 8. I did although add a start button and run this unit as Windows 8 with a Windows 7 look. I'm very happy with this unit and I'm an experienced professional in the computer industry. Windows 8 on a laptop is probably not for the nuby. Microsoft needs to change course quickly and offer a tablet version of Windows 8 and a PC version...

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The color is bright and clear. We are still getting used to windows8 but the tutorials are easy to follow. We love the large screen.

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Started with a different maker at first, but it broke within a week.. kinda glad now because this HP has gotta have one

of the best pictures I"ve ever seen.. no pixelation issues and the large screen size makes it nice to watch videos and/or

movies..sound is great to...just love it.

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Windows 8 is terrible. It's already crashing and I don't live with the person I bought it for so I can't do the (what I can only assume would be) relatively easy fix. The reason I'm giving it such a low rating though is to sway other non-computer minded persons from purchase. Go with a computer that comes with Windows 7...Windows 8 can't even function properly for those who don't know their way around computers.

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Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Buy Apple Black Macbook

Apple Black Macbook
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
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I purchased this laptop in 2007 and nearly 6 years later it is still running. It has been all over the country with me and a few parts have been replaced, but it keeps on running. One repairman told me it shouldn't be running anymore, but it is! Mac is the BEST!

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The hard drive was not working. Didn't state in the advertisement that the hard drive was damage. Don't know if it's working or not ,have to buy a hard drive first.

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Bought the product with the highest expectations because my windows laptop was going to shit. Came within about 3 days and im an artist/producer and i cant say how much i love working with the UI and garageband as well is honestly the shit when you know what you're doing. Had a couple pieces chip off the laptop but due to a drop its understandable, i love this thing have been wanting it for 3 years, now that i have it, i couldnt be happier.

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Product was just as I expected. Very satisfied with the outcome and I indeed love the item to death. Thanks Jack!

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Sunday, April 27, 2014

Discount Lenovo IdeaPad Y560 Series 064655U 15.6-Inch Laptop (Grey)

Lenovo IdeaPad Y560 Series 064655U 15.6-Inch Laptop
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
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I got this laptop on Christmas sale... which was at a discounted price... and got it shipped next day itself. It was a nice deal and having the laptop in my hand next day was a great plus.

Liked the overall look and the performance is good as a normal home multimedia laptop.... not for high end gaming though...

One more major plus point was the touch pad...

Would recommend anyone if they get it at a discounted price....

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For me, this laptop is quite good for me to play games and doing some entertainment. But if u turn too much software on at the same time, the speed of your computer will be very slow...

But in general, I feel satisfied with this laptop.

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Tuesday, April 15, 2014

HP EliteBook 8770w C6Y85UT 17.3' LED Notebook - Intel - Core i7 Review

HP EliteBook 8770w C6Y85UT 17.3' LED Notebook - Intel - Core i7 i7-3740QM 2.7GHz - Gunmetal
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
List Price: $3,539.00
Sale Price: $2,690.25
Today's Bonus: 24% Off
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This machine is built to withstand almost anything you through at it. The build quality and materials are exceptional. From a industrial design and manufacturing perspective, it is even nicer than a MacBook Pro.

I really like this machine, except for one issue, screen resolution. Apple has proven how beautiful and productive higher resolution displays can make even a laptop. Spending the extra money, weight, and bulk to get a 17.3 inch display should result in more room to work. Because the resolution on this machine is no higher than it is on 15 inch machines, you get a display that isn't as attractive and doesn't fit nearly as much content on it as it could with a higher resolution. This is especially important for content creators and for people that work in spreadsheets, but really it is an issue for all professional users. Apple gets this with their Retina displays, Google gets it with their Pixel laptop, and Dell gets it with their Ultra high resolution series of displays. Hopefully HP will make a higher resolution display available soon on their workstation class laptops.

The only excuse for the screen resolution on this machine is that most people are going to use it in a docking station with external monitors. I have mine attached to 2 Dell U2713HM Ultra High resolution displays. The screen resolution only bothers me when I am using this machine on the road, but then again, that is the whole reason I bought the 17.3 inch workstation.

When you are deciding on which machine to buy, I recommend you consider the screen resolution issue. A 15 inch or even 13 inch machine with similar specs and the same resolution display might save your back and shoulder some pain from lugging this heavy machine around.

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I've had my HP EliteBook 8770w 17.3 for almost 6 months now. I ordered it as a customized unit directly from HP they shipped it from the plant in China right to my door (which made FedEx tracker watching pretty interesting). I bought this as a backup to my home-office tower primarily because of Superstorm Sandy that knocked out power and cable internet for 10 days and I had no way of working. For that reason, I did include of couple of options that the off-the-shelf versions don't have, such as a 56K modem since I still have a copper POTS line that usually works in power failures, and in addition to the longer-life battery directly installed, I also ordered a pair of HP BB09 Notebook BatterySmart Buy (QK640UT) - these batteries are rated at up to 10 hours each when fully charged. This gives me a total of up to 25 hours of battery life... three 8-hour workdays... before a recharge is necessary.

As for the laptop itself, it's built to the same MIL-STD 810G that rugged cell phones meet, and is certified to remain functional after a 30-inch drop from a table/desk to a hard floor. The screen is matte-finish non-glare, and the keyboard (with a full numpad) is almost the size of a normal desktop keyboard, making it very comfortable to use. I don't need excessive disk space, so I went with a 120GB SSD, and 8GB of PC3-1600 RAM, along with a quad-core Intel i7-3720QM processor and AMD FirePro M4000 GDDR5 video. I ordered it with Windows 8 Pro 64-bit, same as my tower, and have the two units configured as identically as possible. I sync the key folders several times each month and keep the laptop updated, but thankfully haven't had the need to use it as a frontline unit much at all... just for a 2-week period of time earlier this year while I was waiting for a new tower that allowed me to get used to the laptop and Windows 8.

In addition to the regular AC charger, I purchased the HP 90W Smart Auto/truck Adapte so I can charge in my vehicle when needed. I also have the Kensington K62567US SP17 17-Inch Classic Sleeve Notebook Case (Black) which holds this laptop, all the batteries and chargers, a mouse, and a spare Cat5 cable with no stress.

To be fair, this is a large heavy-duty laptop that weighs a lot and is expected to see business use. It's not what you want for only occasional home use, or hardcore gaming. But it will most certainly fit the bill as a tower replacement or tower backup, and properly configured, can handle just about any business use you can dish out.

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