Showing posts with label laptop notebooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laptop notebooks. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Reviews of Dell XPS 17 Laptop, i7-2630QM, 6GB DDR3 Memory, 17.3in FHD WLED AG

Dell XPS 17 Laptop, i7-2630QM, 6GB DDR3 Memory, 17.3in FHD WLED AG Screen, NVIDIA GeForce GT 555M 3GB graphics with Optimus, 500GB 7200 RPM HD, Tray Load CD/DVD Burner, Windows 7 Home Premium
Customer Ratings: 3 stars
Buy Now
I got the latest XPS 17 aka L702x last month to replace an HP Pavilion dv6. The specifications are,

CPU: i7-2630QM

DRAM: 6GB DDR3-1333

Screen: 17.3in FHD 3D

GPU: GeForce GT555M 1GB

Hard Drive: 640GB

Optical Drive: Blu-ray burner

Battery: 9-cell

OS: Windows 7 Home Premium.

My first impression is that the XPS is huge compared to the HP, even though the screen is just 1 inch bigger. The weight is also substantially greater. The 9-cell battery protrudes from the bottom, making it even harder to fit into tight space. Although the 9-cell is supposed to extend the battery life, I get just under 3 hours in mixed usage. So, the XPS is a desk-top replacement through and through. If mobility is an important consideration, the XPS 15 can be had with the same CPU and screen resolution, and will be a much better choice.

In terms of computing power, the XPS does not disappoint. The i7-2630QM is capable of 8 threads simultaneously, and I have not experienced any slow-down so far due to CPU overload. The GT555M can run all the latest 3D games if the graphics is set to low quality, but it gets really hot and loud, not to mention the quick battery drain. For gaming, a good desk-top remains the best option. The XPS comes with a pair of 3D glass, but I have not had the urge to try it out either for movie, because of the lack of interesting media, or for games, due to the heat and noise the GPU generates. I intend to use the computer for numerical work, and the CPU, the memory system and the hard drives are the key components.

6GB of memory and a 5400-rpm drive do not match well with the high-performing 2630QM, and I had planned to upgrade them right after the purchase. Once the machine arrives and gets its belly opened up, however, I am shocked to find just 2 SODIMM slots. Dell is advertising "up to 16GB RAM" in 4GBx4 configuration, and this is clearly not the case. After some exhaustive research, I finally find the explanation in an obscure Dell customer forum. It turns out that, to save literally a few pennies, Dell has used two different motherboards in the same model: one with 4 SODIMM slots and 3GB of GDDR RAM, the other with 2 SODIMM slots and 1GB of GDDR RAM. I had noticed and got puzzled by the $170 price difference when one stepped up from the GT555M 1GB to the GT555M 3GB. This kind of explains Dell's thought process in the pricing hierarchy. Still, I am upset that Dell fails to explain any of this on its website because there are customers like myself who do not care about the graphic RAM but do want to have the potential to upgrade to 16GB of system memory. I had paid $300 extra compared to HP dv7 for Dell exactly because XPS was supposed to be a premium brand without too much corner-cutting, but I under-estimated Dell's capacity for taking advantage of their customers. In the end, I can only replace the 2GB SODIMM with a 4GB module. The swap costs me $30 after the old SODIMM is sold on ebay, still much less than what Dell would have charged me to upgrade to 8GB memory in the factory.

Upgrading the hard drives, on the other hand, is something that the designers of XPS obviously take into account. The XPS comes with 2 drive bays, with the 640GB drive occupying the first one only. I have a new Crucial RealSSD C300 Solid state drive 64 GB internal 2.5" SATA-600 ready and just have to move the 640GB drive to the second slot before replacing the SSD in the primary drive bay. Unfortunately, these drive bays are covered with aluminum shields that are attached to the motherboard with tiny screws. I strip one of the screw heads by using a driver a little too large. This necessitates some drilling followed by the application of a screw extractor. The whole process is extremely scary because of the danger of breaking the motherboard, and should be avoided if at all possible. In the end, I have to say that installing the SSD is quite straightforward if I had not had the accident with the screw. Once the hardware is in place, I reinstall the OS with the DVD which had cost me $19 extra, and wipe the 640GB drive to use for data. All the drivers are either included in a free DVD or can be downloaded from Dell's support site easily. The applications such as PowerDVD, however, are nowhere to be found. I have to call Dell support line and have the DVDs shipped to me, but they are at least free of charge. All together, the pre-installed softwares including the OS take up 30GB, leaving 29GB of usable space ("64GB" drives really have only 59GB of usable space in another case of misleading vendor advertisement.) on the SSD for other applications.

Once the upgrades are done, I am very happy with the performance of the machine. The SSD really makes a big difference. Windows 7 boots up at under 15 seconds and shuts down in 10. For this alone, I am willing to endure the bulk of the XPS 17 for the dual drive bays. Overall, however, I am somewhat less happy with Dell than HP for three reasons:

1. The HP dv6 just seemed more tightly put together;

2. I did not experienced misleading feature descriptions with HP;

3. I miss the fingerprint scanner on the HP notebook.

========================== Added 9/2/2011 ==========================

I replaced the boot drive on another PC with an SSD recently. This was an older computer and the drive had been cluttered with various files and programs. Reinstalling everything seemed impractical, so I went looking in download.com for a drive-cloning software. I tried Acronis first, but it was extremely buggy and the trial version did not allow downsized cloning. Eventually, I found EaseUs Todo Backup Free 3.0. It worked very well and, as the name suggested, was totally free. If I have to do it again, EaseUs is the way to go.

========================== Added 3/20/2012 ==========================

Although Intel does not officially support 8GB SODIMM modules with the HM67 chipset used in this Dell, intrepid users have tried them and generally found the new denser format to work just fine. As the price for these new SODIMM comes down, I give it a try as well and it works! Now this XPS sports 16GB of DRAM even though Dell has seen fit to equip it with only two SODIMM slots.

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

I bought a Dell XPS 17 directly from Dell. It came with a defective screen. So I called Dell. The screen replacement was on back order, but they said they could ship me a replacement computer with identical specs immediately. I received the replacement computer just two days later. Unfortunately the replacement computer had severely downgraded specifications. 900p screen instead of the 1080p screen, i7-2630 processor instead of i7-2720, gt550m graphics instead of gt555m.

In every way possible they replaced my computer with inferior components.

I immediately called Dell and proceeded to be put on hold and bounced around for over 6 hours trying to get the issue resolved.

As I write this I am on hold yet again with a Dell representative who is completely unable or unwilling to assist me.

I cannot speak to anyone in the United States for support without paying an additional $250 for some support package

Best Deals for Dell XPS 17 Laptop, i7-2630QM, 6GB DDR3 Memory, 17.3in FHD WLED AG

I bought this computer in 2011 and have had nothing but trouble with it. Almost every piece of it has been replaced at least once. I have had three keyboards, and I still have trouble with typing. I have had to reformat the hard drive three times, because Dell techs couldn't figure out what was wrong. I decided recently that I wanted to upgrade the hard drive from 500gb to 750gb, and I thought I would be getting a faster hard drive. Dell gave me the specs on one made by Samsung that they said would fit. I ordered it from Amazon, and it didn't fit into the laptop. So I ordered one from Dell and was told it would be delivered on June 5. It wasn't. The email they sent said to check for a tracking number, so I tried that and couldn't retrieve one. I called Dell and got two different answers: one, it must be in stock or we wouldn't have sold it to you; two, it isn't in stock, and we don't know if or when it will be, but we will find out. Today I get a third answer; it isn't in stock, but the expected delivery date is June 12; since it isn't in stock we don't know when it will ship, but you have to wait until June 12. One suggestion a customer service rep offered today is to buy a hard drive from Walmart or Staples who he assured me would know which brand and model would fit this computer. I don't trust either place to have the right answer. One option is to just buy a new computer, but this one was too expensive to discard after little more than two years. Besides the OS is Windows 7, and I've read too many negative things about Windows 8 to even try it.

Honest reviews on Dell XPS 17 Laptop, i7-2630QM, 6GB DDR3 Memory, 17.3in FHD WLED AG

PROS: Display is nice, weight not too bad, keyboard is good, speakers are awesome

CONS: Extremely unreliable, battery not great, track pad not good, and some serious hardware issues

OVERALL: This product is not worth your money.

When I bought it, it wouldn't play dvd's. Had to waste hours of my time dealing with completely lame customer service to get it fixed. Even after that, problems continued to pile up, conveniently right after the warranty ran out. USB ports will stop working randomly. The track pad, which isn't good to start with, sometimes will turn permanently on, making typing difficult, or not work at all. Last of all, using Photoshop makes the graphics card (which is supposedly good) crash my computer on a daily basis.

CONCLUSION: I will never buy a Dell again after how I was treated as a consumer.

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Dell XPS 17 Laptop, i7-2630QM, 6GB DDR3 Memory, 17.3in FHD WLED AG

The Specs Listed in the title aren't the Specs being sold by Hayley. The laptop Hayley is selling is a Dell XPS 17 but more beefed up then what the product name says it is. Its listed as "Dell XPS 17 Laptop, i7-2630QM, 6GB DDR3 Memory, 17.3in FHD WLED AG (1920x1080) Screen, NVIDIA GeForce GT 555M 3GB graphics with Optimus, 500GB 7200 RPM HD, Tray Load CD/DVD Burner, Windows 7 Home Premium".

The seller Hayley is is offer the Dell XPS 17 with in the following condition and specs, "From Dell, never used or opened" with specs that include: " Genuine Windows® Home Premium 64-Bit English, 2nd generation Intel® Core(tm) i7-2720QM processor 2.20 GHz with Turbo Boost 2.0 up to 3.30 GHz, Memory 8GHz Shared Dual Channel DDR3 Memory, Standard Keyboard English, "17.3" HD+ (900p) LED Display with 2.0MP HD Webcam, NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 550M 1GB graphics with Optimus and TV Tuner, 1.0TB 500GB 7.2k HDD x 2, Color Elemental Silver Aluminum,Integrated 10/100/1000 Network Card, Adobe® Acrobat® Reader 9, CD ROM/DVD ROM Blu-ray® Triple Writer (reads and writes CDs, DVDs, BDs), JBL 2.1 Speakers with Waves Maxx Audio 3, Wireless Plus Bluetooth and Intel® Centrino® Wireless-N 1000, Office Productivity Software (Pre-Installed), Microsoft® Office Starter: reduced-functionality Word & Excel w/ ads. No PowerPoint or Outlook, Anti-Virus/Security Suite (Pre-installed) McAfee Security Center with VirusScan, Firewall, Spyware Removal, 30-Day Trial

Battery 56 WHr 6-cell Lithium Ion Primary Battery, Hardware Support Services, and very importantly 1 Year Limited Hardware Warranty (Mail-in repair in 10-14 business days Shipping not included), Data Safe DataSafe 2.0 Online Backup 2GB for 1 year.

When I clicked on the link to the XPS 17 to check it out I was skeptic because it didn't seem to be much from what i could see from the specs listed on the site. When I did click on the link I was wasn't let down by the specs listed because I knew this was a laptop that that had the potential to be beefed up. If it wasn't for the good things I've herd about the XPS 17 I would have never clicked the link, and after I did I saw the specs listed in the title weren't even as good as I hoped, but when I checked the other new XPS 17's by other users, which was Hayley's because she was the only person that had some listed for sale, The specs blew me away and came with a Dell one year warranty, I was shocked. The equivalent XPS on the Dell site was selling for more but the specs listed for the XPS Hayley is selling here on Ebay, but the specs reflected what I thought a High Performance Dell XPS 17 should be.

I highly recommend this laptop if your looking for a great overall high performance laptop and the warranty it comes with can be renewed.

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Reviews of Dell Inspiron i15RVT-8571BLK 15.6-Inch Touchscreen Laptop, Intel

Dell Inspiron i15RVT-8571BLK 15.6-Inch Touchscreen Laptop, Intel Core i3-3227U, 4GB Memory, 500GB Hard Drive
Customer Ratings: 3 stars
List Price: $649.99
Sale Price: $465.00
Today's Bonus: 28% Off
Buy Now

Good:

Upgradable (I've already added in one 8GB RAM chip to bump it up to 12GB)

Touch-Screen

Long battery life

Numeric Keypad

USB 3.0

Not so good:

1366*768 resolution

Was difficult to get data cloned to my SSD. Finally figured out that I had to boot from USB and set the BIOS to legacy mode.

Don't care for touchpads, I prefer Lenovo/IBMs UltraNav little red dot.

DVD drive makes a noise every now and then, even though there isn't a disk in there... not sure what's trying to access it. Is a DVD drive even necessary anymore? It's just added weight, to me.

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

I ordered this computer from E stars LLC. The computer it self is excellent but this company sucks. I ordered this thing on a Saturday evening and paid extra for the over night shipping. I didn't get it until Tuesday. I would recommend this computer, windows 8 is actually fantastic with touch screen, and it is quick. It's perfect for school work. however if you do buy it please buy it from amazon prime, that way you'll get it on time.

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Friday, October 3, 2014

Review of MSI Computer Corp. S20 0M-048US 11.6-Inch Windows 8 Laptop

MSI Computer Corp. S20 0M-048US 11.6-Inch Windows 8 Laptop
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
List Price: $999.99
Sale Price: $779.95
Today's Bonus: 22% Off
Buy Now

This is a recommended slider tablet/ultrabook/laptop and I'm writing this review on this same computer here. Great for portability and nearly has the strength of a traditional tower PC (yes it does have 8 GBs of RAM one of the main reasons I got it for the RAM & it's a slider tablet laptop). I wanted a portable computer that could also be a tablet, but not be weak in specs (like most tablets are unfortunately). This is a hybrid of many different styles in one. It's supposed to be a laptop, but it's also a tablet too (without the weak specs).

The only bad thing about this is the small Solid-Slate-Drive (SSD) size, but you can hook up larger HDDs to it. I use the "Seagate Expansion 3 TB USB 3.0 Desktop External Hard Drive STBV3000100" at home and the "WD My Passport 2TB Portable External USB 3.0 Hard Drive Storage Red (WDBY8L0020BRD-NESN)" on the go (since the WD Passport doesn't need a power source, it gets power from the USB cable). Good red color on the HDD, a softer matte red.

It's a MUST to get a cooling pad for this thing, it gets fairly hot at the vents (only one area). It doesn't run cool at all like the other reviewer said. I know because I got 2 of these and the motherboard fried on the one when I tried to plug in a USB device (that one kept running hot too then died It did work good though before its 'death'). The MSI reps said that was the case when the one wouldn't power on at all. The rep was pretty good and helpful, but that one was beyond any help since it was fried.

Make sure you keep the packing material with any MSI products, you have to have the same box with the same serial #'s on the box to match the laptop and everything for warranty claims.

The fan doesn't make any noise and I can hear like a rabbit so I know. The cooling pad I got for it also hardly makes any noise especially when the laptop is on it.

Definitely get a cooling pad, this is the one I use: the "iHome Netbook Cooling Pad with 2 Built-In Fans, Red (IH-A714CR)"(it works the best for this laptop, highly recommended cooling pad!!!). There is no USB hub with it but a storage area instead.

I got a red wireless mouse to 'match' the cooling pad (which is not a sharp straight red, it's a slight dull off-carmine red); this is the mouse I got: "Bornd Bluetooth 3.0 Optical Wireless Mouse (C170B RED)". (I also have a blue one too for another tablet I have the Lenovo K3 Lynxthese mice work with the Bluetooth in these machines.) This red mouse is a nice sharp bright pretty red, while the blue one is a bit off blue (kinda dull), both work great.

This laptop is slowly replacing my old Windows 7 8 GB RAM 2.70 GHZ tower (which is nearly 4years old, but still works good). Windows 8 has its problems and when it updates itself, it takes a long time: 10-20 minutes depending on the updates. But when there's no needed updates, this laptop turns on in about 4-10 seconds and shuts down just as fast. Get the programs Stardock Start8 and Stardock ModernMix for Windows 8 ($4.99 for ModernMix and I think $8 with Start8) and they'll help you get some Windows 7 back in the frustrating Windows 8 layout so you can function better.

With my 2nd one, I kept it plugged in a lot and that's not a good idea since you need to 'train' the battery right to drain and charge fully. Mine stopped charging at 97% (I had it less than 2 weeks) and the charging light wouldn't turn on, so I used the included "Battery Calibration" feature on this PC to fix that problem. It took about 3-4 hours leaving it alone and it needs to be plugged in for this, but it got fixed and is charging again. I am happy. Do the Battery Calibration every 3 months is what is recommends, but I had to do it sooner. The Battery Calibration can be found in the 'Charms' Windows 8 menu near the far right end.

I recommend this laptop and with my recommendations above, you should have as much fun with it as I do with mine (well, as long as you don't get a defective one like I did2nd one is going good). :) 1 star off for the many different glitchy issues and the motherboard just frying out of the blue. Not completely perfect, but good enough definitely acceptable despite the small problems here and there. Hope this review helps at least one person out. Thank you for reading my review.

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

OK I wanted a tablet, but I needed a small laptop when traveling for work. I love this thing!!! It does exactly what I need. I did have to get rid of some free-wear 'gifts.' Its not pre-loaded with too many items I don't want, but there were a few. I gamed on it for hours, the thing does not get too hot nor is the fan too loud. Its light, easy to carry. I do need a better case. The one it came with, well, it leaves much to be desired. Asus gave me a cool backpack with my large republic of gamers laptop. I would have liked a better carry case from MSI.

Best Deals for MSI Computer Corp. S20 0M-048US 11.6-Inch Windows 8 Laptop

First of all, the specs here are closer to truth than the 2.2 lb listed elsewhere. I weighed my S20 on the kitchen scale and got 2.58 lb.

Anyway, my 11 year old son's school allowed him to take Computer Science and join the Robotics club this semester. He began by taking his mom's Apple MacBook Air MD760LL/A 13.3-Inch Laptop (NEWEST VERSION) to the CS classes, but the robots work only with PCs, so he also had to commandeer my 17 inch monster of a notebook. Eventually I decided to get him his own little PC.

I looked among the 11.6-inch Windows 8 touch-capable ultrabooks, and picked this MSI. It has a cute white exterior, different from run-of-the-mill silver shells his classmates have. The transformer effect further impresses his friends and satisfies the vanity of a kid. The keyboard is spacious for my son and usable for me. The screen is bright and vivid. The retail vendor (not Amazon) gave us a free padded jacket that fits like a glove. The whole thing weights less than 3 lbs and takes up less space in my son's backpack than the bigger ones among his textbook. It runs all his programs and Microsoft Office without any stutter. The battery lasts long enough for the toughest school days. There are two USB slots, so he can use his Logitech V220 Cordless Optical Mouse for Notebooks (Dark Silver) and connect to the Parallax PLX-28336 Programmable Scribbler 2 Robot (with USB adapter and cable) at the same time. I also like the 8GB of RAM, which should be sufficient for the life of the machine; thus I won't have to upgrade it.

Now, the nitpicking: First, the 128GB SSD will not last forever. I have a spare 512GB for it, but a warning sticker covers the screw and threatens revocation of warrantee if the case is opened, so I decide to wait a year before the upgrade. The lack of a built-in pointing device and the intrinsically imprecise nature of touch interface mean that a mouse is needed. Finally, the last generation (Ivy Bridge) Intel i5 is certainly fast enough itself, but its built-in GPU is pathetic to the point of having occasional dropped frames on full 1080p video. This is an issue shared by all ultrabooks, however, and not MSI's fault.

Overall, we like this machine a lot and expect 4-5 years of good service from it.

Honest reviews on MSI Computer Corp. S20 0M-048US 11.6-Inch Windows 8 Laptop

Not enough memory..sloooowww processor...freezes...screen unresponsive most of the time....cant see the keyboard keys in not so well lit room...or plane...expensive for the features it has ...

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Review of Dell Latitude D610 Laptop + Windows XP (Microsoft Authorized

Dell Latitude D610 Laptop + Windows XP
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
Buy Now
Not pleased--after one week of use the laptop's hard drive failed completely and I had to purchase a new hard drive. With the additional costs that went into this unit I could have bought a decent new laptop.

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

The computer was OK but had only one USB port which was loose and needed to be tightened before it worked. Only one USB port is not a misrepresentation -but I would think I could assume that one could expect more than one port on a computer like this!

Best Deals for Dell Latitude D610 Laptop + Windows XP (Microsoft Authorized

This is an awesome laptop. Just as it was described by seller. Stellar and super fast. Great Latitude by Dell.

Honest reviews on Dell Latitude D610 Laptop + Windows XP (Microsoft Authorized

arrived in a timely manner works fine ...but loaded with trojan viruses, blackholes u name it!! over 20 found on first scan and more show up when started up

so great for use other than for putting any private data on

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Dell Latitude D610 Laptop + Windows XP (Microsoft Authorized

I bought this for my own use during college and have since then, used it many times as a backup computer for my desktop. Battery life is long, computer is fairly fast, and the price is cheaper than a new one.

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Cheap HP EliteBook 8770w C6Y84UT 17.3' LED Notebook - Intel - Core i7

HP EliteBook 8770w C6Y84UT 17.3' LED Notebook - Intel - Core i7 i7-3630QM 2.4GHz - Gunmetal
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
List Price: $2,839.00
Sale Price: $2,470.97
Today's Bonus: 13% Off
Buy Now

This machine is built to withstand almost anything you throw 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.

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

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.

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Friday, June 27, 2014

DELL D620 CORE DUO LAPTOP, 1.66 GHZ CPU, CD Burner, DVD Player, 1GB Reviews

DELL D620 CORE DUO LAPTOP, 1.66 GHZ CPU, CD Burner, DVD Player, 1GB RAM, 80GB HDD
Customer Ratings: 3 stars
Buy Now
The computer came without a functioning wi-fi or down arrow key. I didn't bother to find anything else wrong with it since that was enough to return it. The seller has a problem with responding to e-mails and has had the computer returned to them, without giving me my money back, for nine days now.

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

This computer is good enough for school online, like LIBERTY.EDU or wherever you dream of going; its worth the price for an education with money back for federal financial aid refunds. Or games for kids............

Please try it, it might work........

It works ok.

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Monday, June 2, 2014

Buy HP 2000-2b80DX - 15.6" Laptop - 4GB Memory, 320GB Hard Drive, DVD

HP 2000-2b80DX - 15.6' Laptop - 4GB Memory, 320GB Hard Drive, DVD Burner, Windows 8, Black Licorice
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
List Price: $399.99
Sale Price: $348.88
Today's Bonus: 13% Off
Buy Now

Worth every penny, it's a good internet and gaming computer.This is a great laptop for starters or teens.I purchased the laptop after my 9 year old laptop died. This was a great deal for the price and for what I need it for. Love the slick black color. Not a lot you can do with this other than play with it.I believe this laptop is as good as you will find for a budget laptop. It has 4GB of RAM, a 320GB hard drive, and excellent functionality. Some people may not be used to Windows 8 yet, like another person who reviewed it, but if you take the quick tutotial on Windows 8 online, you can easily adapt and find it's a very good computer. Overall: Good sound quality, A touch pad that works great, Perfect for Business, Big screen size, easy to set up, lightning fast!

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

This one is great for all the daily usage, but not powerful enough for gaming. We take advantage of it and purchased this product for our son as his first own laptop. So he could not use it to play 3D games but enough for web browsing, social networking and finishing home work. He like it. We suggest this product for any people who just need a laptop for daily usage. worth every penny

Best Deals for HP 2000-2b80DX - 15.6" Laptop - 4GB Memory, 320GB Hard Drive, DVD

Good product with good price ! I love it . You get a lot with this laptop after comparing prices at other retail stores.

Honest reviews on HP 2000-2b80DX - 15.6" Laptop - 4GB Memory, 320GB Hard Drive, DVD

Perfect for my daughter who just started her first semester in college. She loves it and has no complaints. it's compact and does everyrthing she needs.

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for HP 2000-2b80DX - 15.6" Laptop - 4GB Memory, 320GB Hard Drive, DVD

I was looking for a laptop to get me started. Just something to get around on the internet, check email, and store music and video. For the price of around 350$ this computer is amazing. I found that the harddrive is perfect for people that love music and movies like i do. The camera is a good one. Not amazing but still worth using. The laptop as not froze on me and runs at a very good speed. Takes only about 3 mins from a cold start to me being on the internet. The screen is plenty wide and a great size for music and video. The only downfall is the built in Windows 8 so i wouldn't recommend it to anyone in a gaming stand point but for everyone else youll learn how t use it and move through the interface in about a week.

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Monday, May 26, 2014

Discount SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless Mobile

SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless Mobile
Customer Ratings: 2.5 stars
Buy Now
Is it junk or is it not? I took a chance on this product because it seemed to me that most of the negative reviews associated with it were not based on product quality (though who knows how long it will last), but on how the product failed to live up to the purchaser's expectations. And it is those expectations that I think are misplaced.

I bought this at CVS for $100+tax; MY expectations were that it could replace my Palm TX, which got a cracked screen in a mishap. The Palm TX was a handheld PDA with pretty similar specs in terms of processing power, ROM memory, CF slot, etc. It was no speed demon on the internet luckily, most sites would call up a page optimized for mobile devices. So you avoided most of the fancy stuff that bloats web pages down (or, depending on your POV, adds rich and exciting content). I think what helps foster unrealistic expectations is that this Sylvania unit looks like a laptop, not a handheld PDA. So people come to it with expectations that it will perform like a laptop. Instead, it runs Windows CE 6, which, I understand, was an OS designed for PDAs, handheld PCs, etc. So it is against THAT class of device that this product should be judged. So far, I am impressed with what you get for the money, and I'm having a bit of nostalgia in terms of configuring things. It's not that hard, but if you never had a Win98 computer, you may be spoiled in the sense that you've never had to go under the hood and change a few settings. I'm no expert there are many settings that I don't understand at all but I did remember enough to get it going.

I did consider a modern netbook (I have a regular laptop and desktop too), but I decided to take a chance on this first. Here's why. I learned that my 2.5 year old laptop had a processor that was something like 3-5 times as fast (depending on benchmark) as a new netbook. Yes, you pay for it in battery time, but the real problem is that netbooks try to do everything a full blown laptop can do including accessing full-blown websites that are, day by day, getting weighed down more and more by Flash and other "enhancements" that just cripple the rendering time on a netbook. What I liked about my palm TX was that it didn't even try to load a regular website, for the most part. It did the "lightweight" mobile versions instead (even then, not really fast). I realized that the problem of netbooks is that they were trying to do too much. It was like putting a Honda Fit engine in a schoolbus and going to pick up 50 kids in a hilly subdivision. This Sylvania thing should do OK if you treat it more like a 65 hp classic Beetle driving on the flat roads of central Ohio.

With that, let's take a brief look at the good, bad, and the ugly.

The good:

Screen is quite good and large again, compared to PDAs. Compared to a laptop it's tiny.

size and weight is amazingly small.

Keyboard arrows have inverted T, a layout I much prefer.

3 USB ports; I've heard that two are USB 1.1, one is 2.0. Have not tried them.

CF card slot. Not sure if this will be limited to 2 GB, but it would not surprise me, as that was the limit on my TX, I think. I have a card from it and have used it it works.

Touchpad pretty good, though the buttons are stiff.

Has headphone and microphone jacks. I've used the headphones for earbuds, and sound is much improved over the built in speakers. My regular laptop has weak speakers too, so not a big deal.

Keyboard is small (as you would expect) but pretty good. I used to have a Psion 5mx and it reminds me of that, though it is about 1" wider than the Psion. The left shift button is not quite as big as I'd like, though. For some reason, the caps lock above it is bigger.

Windows CE uses reasonably familiar methods of arranging icons, launching programs, etc.

The bad:

Documentation is sparse. Just enough to tell you to fully charge it before use, and to label the features.

Windows CE is not quite as easy to customize nor, probably, as capable of it. . For instance, you can copy/paste new programs (see below) into the "program files" but that doesn't necessarily mean they'll show up in the start menu programs list. Come to think of it, I'm having the same trouble with Windows 7, too!

If you update the OS using the patch on the digitalgadgets.com website, you'll lose some features and gain others. For instance, I noticed that Wordpad disappeared and all the office apps were just viewers. Wordpad appeared to be replaced with a basic text editor named Ke or something in alpha release. But I came out ahead (see below). Another downside was that instead of connecting to a lightweight google search page, it connects to the full blown one now, which I did not want. And I cannot find the lightweight search page anymore using my desktop PC. It appears Google is only supporting such for mobile phones now. But supposedly this OS update fixes a "memory leak" and hotkeys, etc. I just didn't know they'd change the programs that were pre-installed.

Not expandable or upgradeable but then again, neither was my TX. Compare it to a handheld.

Case is a fingerprint magnet OK, this part you can compare to regular laptops.

Battery indicator was kind of unhelpful. I got maybe 2.5 hours out of the first charge of the 1800 mAh battery, with a good deal of that on WiFi and installing/copying/pasting. But I don't recall the indicator going anything like linearly to low. It kind of abruptly warned me power was low and it would shut down in 60 seconds, so I'd better save my work. Better than nothing, but still, not great.

As best I can tell, there's no email client. You have to use webmail (and I have gmail works though gmail chat does not). There are some chat programs though one called Pigeon, which apparently is not Pidgin.

The ugly:

The tomato-soup-red color is just awful. I am trying to think of a way to decorate the outside or "skin" it.

One thing I thought might help on this computer is to use Linux it tends to have lower overhead than windows, but again, this is not full blown windows, so Linux could actually be a greater burden than Win CE. But in the process of looking into that, I came across "Bento Linux" someone is working on a distribution for this system, and helpfully posted links to a "Mega Pack" of programs that he (or she) found to work with Windows CE. These included browsers, game emulators, utilities, media players, games, and even spreadsheets and word processors. I found two that appeared to be close cousins of Word and Excel even able to read/write to "Office 97" formats. Not too shabby. Beware of the game Doom, though it's a DOS port that only appears to work on CE. You can't exit it without forcing a shutdown of the machine (I didn't know how and could not alt-tab or ctrl-alt-del out of it, but holding the power button for 5 seconds did it).

So perhaps the $100 laptop has arrived ... but it's a PDA in netbook clothes. In some ways, better (keyboard, USB, ethernet jack, larger screen, productivity programs, clamshell design to protect that large screen) but in other ways, worse (can't find a PIM or calendar that imports modern file formats, though even among contemporaries, such importing is hit-or-miss; also, it's an older OS that is not really being developed any more). On balance, I think it is good replacement for the TX, if it has reasonable durability. But make no mistake it's slower than a laptop, it's slower than a netbook. It's a PDA in netbook form not unlike the original Asus EEE, frankly. For $100, it's a trip down memory lane (lack of memory lane?), eminently packable, and, if I can dig up some more freeware CE programs, quite capable of fully replacing my Palm TX as my computing travel companion.

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

this is a simple machine, to be sure. As the previous reviewer mentioned, the negative reviews come from people who apparently wanted a rolls royce for the price of a hyundai. I had very low expectations of this little machine..just needed to surf the web, really. It does that. It's slow. and some pages don't load. in fact, it doesn't support you tube anymore. This little machine should not be your only computer, it won't support all of your computing needs. However, I like that it's very portable, very simple and , frankly, disposable. if i lose it, or it breaks, I won't be crying. It has held up very well and has way outlasted the time period that I initially gave it.

just don't expect a fancy, fast computer. it's not. (duh!)

Best Deals for SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless Mobile

These Cheap 7-Inch Netbooks are suitable only for dedicated hackers!

Also known as MiniLaptops, SmartBooks, Netbooks, etc.: Don't waste your time on this device if you're not willing to open it up and hack it!

But if you're already stuck with one of these, read on, as help is on the way. And please feel free to copy and post this review elsewhere on the internet, for the benefit of all of us hapless 7-Inch MiniLaptop/SmartBook/Netbook users out there.

I picked up mine, for $ 10.00, at a yard sale, from a very frustrated owner. Preliminary research on this device quickly revealed that it, and its many cheap spin-offs, has a notorious reputation. And it's quite obvious that almost all of the retailers of these devices are going out of their way to be unhelpful.

My version has a WMT, ARM-WM8505 300MHz processor, with a Windows Embedded CE 6.0 operating system (despairingly called "WinCE"), was a precursor to Windows Mobile, and is not supported well any more.

But, on a more positive note: Here's a complete and informative 30 page User Manual for your netbook: Titled, simply, as "usermanual.pdf", the 8.8 MB file can be downloaded from:

Google "files.chatnfiles" (an ftp site).

Scroll down and elect the "Sylvania_netbook" folder.

Select the "WinCE_6" folder.

Download "usermanual.pdf".

And, while you're on that ftp page, be sure to download "winCE6freeware.zip", a 109.7 MB MegaPack freeware bundle.

Also, here's another user manual: Although it was written for the CnM book portable mini laptop (Windows CE 5.0), and devotes some of its content to ActiveSync (not possible on Windows CE 6.0), it's another helpful user manual out there for your netbook. The 4.4 MB PDF file (38 pages) can be downloaded from the internet by simply googling "CnMNB7SE Manual.pdf".

The first thing the user of one of these devices needs to do is open up the internal battery compartment, and unplug and remove the internal 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack. That's right, completely remove the battery and simply run the netbook off the plug-in OEM 9 Volt wall wart, or maybe a 7.2 Volt to 9 Volt external battery pack (plugged in to the 9 Volt power jack, on the back of the device). The reason for this is that the CPU of the device runs very hot, with the OEM internal 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack in place, which explains the early failure of many of these devices. The 9 Volt power jack in the back of the netbook fits a standard 4.0 mm O.D. / 1.7 mm I.D. plug (aka: Radio Shack "B" plug, Part# 274-1532).

But a custom made rechargeable internal battery pack, 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride (6 AA's) will run (continuous video with full volume) the netbook for 3.15 hours. A 3 long x 2 wide battery pack will nest, half-deep, in the original internal battery compartment -without the original cover. And the CPU runs much cooler when powered by the improvised internal 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride battery pack. But most nickel-metal hydride batteries will self-discharge about 0.11 Volts per day (= 0.67 Volts per day, as a 6-cell battery pack), unless they're one of those newer nickel-metal hydride batteries that claim to hold their shelf-life charge at least 4 times longer. Unfortunately, the individual AA batteries, of the 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride battery pack, need to be removed and charged individually, as the netbook / OEM 9 Volt wall-wart will not charge an internal nickel-metal hydride battery pack.

But to bring my 7-Inch MiniLaptop up to industrial grade, I took an extra step and glued aluminum heat sinks on the CPU (mine is a WMT, ARM-WM8505 300MHz processor), as well as the Wi-Fi processor. The unit is easily opened up by turning it upside down and removing 12 screws, of which 2 of the screws are fine-thread screws that screw in to the sheet-aluminum underside of the keyboard. Unplug the internal battery pack, and with a thin, sharp knife, carefully separate and pop open the bottom of the plastic case. For the CPU, I superglued a flathead aluminum bolt onto it, drilled a hole into the underside of the plastic mini-laptop case, and, with an aluminum nut, attached a 4"x2.5" piece of aluminum flashing to the underside of the plastic mini-laptop case.

As mentioned, the Wi-Fi module in the device also runs way too hot, but the remedy for this is not as simple. The Wi-Fi module is a small .5"x1" circuit that is attached to the main circuit with 4 wires and a piece of pressure sensitive foam tape. Here I carefully peeled off the Wi-Fi module and removed the foam tape, as it traps heat and causes heat damage. I then soldered additional lengths of wire to the original 4 wires, superglued an aluminum heat sink onto the Wi-Fi CPU, and routed it through the right hinged joint of the video monitor case, and attached it inside the upper-right of the plastic case of the video monitor. I then drilled 6-.0625" holes above, and 6-.0625" holes below the Wi-Fi module, on the inside (video screen side) of the plastic case to allow for essential cooling ventilation. This also positions the Wi-Fi module for much better reception, solving the common gripe many users report of poor Wi-Fi range. I would upload photos of the modifications, but they would only cause serious misunderstandings with customer service staffs.

The next thing one should do is Google "winCE6freeware.zip" and download the ~104 MB MegaPack freeware bundle. Also Google and download "MioPocket 4.0 Release 68.zip" (~86.6 MB download). The OEM bundled software on many of these 7-inch netbooks is lacking. And there are not many apps available for Windows CE 6.0. But these two downloads are definitely a good start. They both include browsers, game emulators, utilities, media players, games, scientific calculators, and even spreadsheets and word processors. Also, Google "LEOFS_CMP.PPC_ARM.CAB" to download an excellent Windows Embedded CE 6.0 compatible flight simulator (jets, helicopters, sailplanes, a Piper Cub, and even a hang glider). Google "qcpparm.zip" for Q-Calc, an excellent scientific calculator that runs on WinCE 6.0.

"winCE6freeware.zip" extracts as three folders. Open the "winCE6soft" folder and browse and try out the numerous .exe software on your netbook.

"MioPocket 4.0 Release 68.zip" extracts as three folders. Open the "MioAutoRun" folder and the subfolder "Programs" and browse and try out the numerous .exe software on your netbook.

Two valuable softwares in these downloads are:

UCWeb Browser: Although it runs in Chinese mode only, it is intuitive, allowing one to bookmark their favorite English websites (Google, EarthLink, facebook, etc.), and this clever browser enables one to blaze through the internet.

Opera Mini: Another excellent internet browser, which runs quite well on Windows CE 6.0, by using the function and numeric keys on the keyboard open up options.

Minimo: Yet another excellent internet browser, which runs quite well on Windows CE 6.0, and is easy on the limited resources of the netbook. Of particular note is the opening home screen with quick access to Google, maps, local weather, etc.. But some of its features may exceed the limited resources of the 7-inch netbook.

*** A note about "Chinese" software:

China is notorious for pirating software, and Windows is no different. Only about 10% of Windows, sold in China, is fully licensed. 91% of Windows offered in China have some sort of malware. And 72% of those Chinese computers, with pirated Windows, have browser settings altered in a way to lead unsuspecting users to illegal sites, which then fish for financial data and other sensitive information.

I have had almost no success in downloading and manually installing .cab files on my netbook. .exe files seem to be the only software that will work with Windows CE 6.0.

And while almost all of these cheap 7-Inch Netbooks will long be remembered for what they aren't, one needs to focus on what they are, and can do:

Almost all of these devices have built-in stereo speakers, two 1.1 USB + one 2.0 USB jacks, a headphone/line-out jack (although the netbook speakers still work with the plug in), a microphone jack, a SD card slot, Wi-Fi, and a RJ45 ethernet jack.

Inside, most of these devices have a 2GB flash disk.

When loaded with compatible video files, and using "TCPMP" (the Core Pocket Media Player), the device plays video clips and full length movies with ease.

Using "nPOP", one can send and receive email, much like Outlook.

Using "UCWeb Browser", or "Opera Mini", one can blaze through the internet.

DSL, as well as WiFi connections is a breeze with the existing hardware, although WiFi seems only to work with open (unsecured) connections.

Using "TCPMP" (the Core Pocket Media Player), or GSPlayer, mp3 (as well as .ogg, .wma, .mp4, .wav, etc.) music files can be played, with full equalizer controls.

Using "TextMaker" (SoftMaker Office), one can produce complete and professional documents, with photos and charts, as .doc, .rtf, .odt, .psw, as well as proprietary .tmd files.

Using "PlanMaker" (SoftMaker Office), one can produce complete and professional spreadsheets, as .xls, .xlt, as well as proprietary .pmd files.

Using "Presentations" (SoftMaker Office), one can produce complete and professional PowerPoint-type presentations, with graphics, as .ppt, .pot, .rtf, .bmp as well as proprietary .prd files.

With UltraG image viewer one can store and view detailed topo hiking maps, as well as handy road maps, as well as photos.

Challenge yourself with games like "ChessGenius", "PocketChess", "Nankin", and "Solitare".

There's also "CALC", a paper tape calculator, and when used in the ten-key touch keyboard mode, is quite useful for serious number crunching. And there's "Calc98CE", an excellent scientific calculator.

But there are some specific irritating issues with this netbook:

The 1/8" stereo out jack does not turn the internal speakers off, when ear buds are used.

The SD card slot manual eject mechanism crapped out early on. I had to straighten out a paper clip, and then fashion a tiny hook with needle-nose pliers, and pull the damaged micro-spring and mechanism completely out of the SD card slot. It now works just fine this way, as I simply left a 16 GB SD card permanently in place (but can easily be removed, if needed).

The built-in WiFi only seems to work with open WiFi networks, and many password protected networks, but not all. I tried, at home, to log into our secure WiFi, but was unable to get it to work. But it still works just fine in many WiFi coffee shops.

I have yet to find a YouTube application that works.

I have yet to find a Skype application that works, although it is inconceivable that any version of Skype could ever work on one of these 7-inch netbooks, with its limited capacity.

And I have yet to find a printer/printer application available. But there is somewhat of a silver lining in this deficiency in that it is a correct move in the direction of a paperless society. For example, I used to do a daily download of the local TV broadcast schedule, and inkjet print it out, both sides, on a landscape 11x8.5 piece of paper. Now I simply bring up the the Zap2It website (via Minimo browser), on my 7-inch netbook, and download the evening TV schedule, as a PDF file, to the Desktop of my 7-inch netbook. The PDF can then be quickly and easily viewed by my family, as needed.

The keyboard, while of excellent and sturdy construction, is only 81% the size of a standard keyboard. This will cause even the fastest, most skilled typist to feel like they're all thumbs on the keyboard.

As mentioned, the netbook has two USB 1.1 + one USB 2.0 jacks but, Windows CE 6.0 being somewhat of a primitive operating system, will not with all USB devices and accessories. But many mice, keyboards, multi-port USB hubs, flash drives, and SD card readers work quite well with the netbook. I haven't found a webcam that will work, but many digital cameras can be connected, by USB, and the stored photos viewed and copied.

Here is just a partial list of the many aliases this Windows CE 6.0 OS device is sold under (or simply known as):

Chinese CE Netbook

Cheapy-Creepy CE Netbook

Sylvania 7-inch CE6 netbook

CVS Sylvania 7-inch CE Netbook

VIA Mini 7-inch Laptop LCD

Lanyu eBook LY-EB01

ITA Smartbook 7

Cherrypal Africa

Datawind UbiSurfer

Menq EasyPC 790

3K Computer RazorBook 400 CE

Join Tech J1-Pro JL7100

Delstar DS 700

ITA Computers Smartbook 7

And the one thing most of them have in common is that they are mass-produced in Shenzhen, China.

As these 7-inch netbooks will not Activesync with your desktop computer, this is the time to format (be sure to select the FAT 32 file system option) a 16 GB, class 10, SD card, to serve as the "Storage Card" in your 7-inch netbook.

I advise one not to be too eager to reflash a new operating system onto their 7-inch netbook, as some functionality may be lost, due to variations in the motherboard/hard drive chip design, and not easily recovered. One such example is the driver for the internal battery pack. Many have complained about failures of the internal battery, not knowing that the new operating system they reflashed onto their netbook was not written for the existing motherboard. Just to be sure, I broke open the internal "8.4 Volt" (7.4 Volt rated), 1800mAH lithium-polymer battery pack, and the two internal 3.7 Volt batteries, as well as the internal battery management circuit test out just fine. The battery will normally run the netbook for about 1.5 to 2 hours, on a full charge, for routine computer work (word processing, etc.), .75 to 1 hour, if running a high-drain application, such as a video clip with full volume.

But if you choose to reflash, be sure to note the operating system, as well as version, as well as build, that originally came installed on your netbook. To find this information: Click "Start", select "Settings", select "Control Panel", select "System", and, under "General" tab, you'll find the operating system. There is a remote possibility that you will then be able to find, download, and reflash it, if the other operating systems fail. For example, I finally, and successfully, installed Windows CE, Version 6.00 (Build 3122) on mine. Also, under "General" tab, the Processor Type (mine is, for example, "WMT, ARM-WM8505") will be listed. This may prove helpful, and save you a lot of time, as operating systems are very specific as to which CPU they will work with.

And back to the subject of the internal battery pack: There are serious issues with the OEM internal 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack and the netbook motherboard. The overheating of the CPU is an indication of this. The early burn-out of the OEM 9VDC wall-warts, as well as netbook failures, reported by many owners, is another indication of serious internal power issues. I even rewired and bench tested a 7.2 Volt (two 3.6 Volt cells in series) Lithium-Polymer battery pack, without the OEM battery pack management circuit (aka: electronic battery cell balancer), and added a third wire, leading from between the two cells, to the third (middle) post in the internal battery jack, on a hunch that the netbook already had a built-in battery management circuit that conflicted with the battery management circuit inside the OEM internal battery pack. But this was not the case, since the rewired battery pack discharged without being "balanced" (both cells kept at the same voltage), and the rewired battery pack did not recharge through the OEM wall-wart / netbook.

I even built an new 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack, with a larger, more robust battery management circuit, but, it too suffered damage to the Lithium-Polymer cells.

Warning: Experimenting with Lithium-Ion and Lithium-Polymer batteries is a dangerous fire hazard. I bench tested the rewired battery packs outdoors, on a cement surface, with a fire extinguisher handy.

After all of this battery testing, the only option is the custom 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride battery pack, to serve simply as a glorified internal clock battery, as well as an emergency power backup for the netbook and a custom external 7.2V 12V battery pack. But, as mentioned above, the CPU runs much cooler with the internal 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack removed, and the OEM 9V wall-wart (or a custom external battery pack) used. But then, with the 9V wall-wart, you're not portable, are you? Also, the OEM internal battery will completely self-discharge (actually, the flawed motherboard slowly drains the battery) in less than a week. Oddly, a custom 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride battery pack does not self-discharge into the netbook motherboard at all, even though it does self-discharge, by itself, over time.

To make the netbook a truly portable device, I hacked a Sony NP-FX110 7.4V 3800mAh rechargeable battery pack: Adding a charging jack, as well as a plug for the netbook. Measuring 8.25"x5.75"x.375", the thin battery pack fits under the netbook and provides about 7 hours of heavy use (continuous video with sound), and even longer, if running only office software.

But if you really need to try new operating systems (... or love taking risks, like I do), Google:

"netbook.poodwaddle"

And go to the links to that website for a list of different operating system downloads.

There you will find video instructions on how to reflash a new operating system. But more importantly, numerous options for operating systems are available there to try on your netbook:

WinCE.rar

ChineseWinCE.rar (this was the best one for my 7-inch netbook: It appears in Chinese, but reboots to English)

SylvaniaWinCE.rar

BankofWinCE.rar

scriptcmd.rar

Android1.5.2.rar

Android1.6.rar

Android1.9.part1.rar

Android1.9.part2.rar

Android2.2.rar

Android2.2V2.rar

The reflash process is quite simple:

Download the .rar file.

Format (select the FAT 32 file system option) a SD card (2 GB minimum).

Open and extract the .rar file to the SD card.

The SD card will now read as a "script" folder only.

Insert the SD card in the SD card slot of your netbook.

Turn the netbook on. The reflash will automatically start and run by itself.

Give it enough time, as it's a large folder (~155 MB, more or less).

When done, turn the netbook off, remove the SD card, and turn the netbook back on.

Be sure to erase the "script" folder off the SD card, as it's no longer needed, and an accidental reflash is inconvenient.

Note that Android operating systems are best suited for touch-screen netbooks (versus WinCE keyboard netbooks), so may not work at all on your Windows CE netbook. But no big deal, just reflash with another operating system on the list, although I've read that small remnants of a previous reflash may still remain.

I've uploaded my own "Microsoft Windows Embedded CE 6.0 800x480 pixel jpeg desktop background, which will fit in well with your desktop icons.

I have gone through great lengths in this review, not only for the benefit of the users, but suggestions for the manufacturer(s) of these devices. It's a pity these netbooks weren't designed and built just a little better, as they could have been the ideal solution for a mass market in the third world. So, for the time being, this mass-produced netbook serves as mute testimony to the reality that the Chinese workplace can sometimes be all too similar to the American workplace, where initiative and innovation is swiftly punished.

After all of this, I have come to the conclusion that there is a place in my life, for this 7-inch netbook. In the move towards a paperless society, it's a handy and convenient substitute for my inkjet printer: Instead of being printed out, printed matter can, instead, be simply downloaded and saved as a PDF file, to the Desktop of the 7-inch netbook, and viewed as needed. But the 7-inch device is not instant-on: It does take about 35 seconds for the netbook to boot up, plus about 35 seconds to open up the downloaded PDF file, of, say, a downloaded evening TV schedule. This netbook is also perfect for reading downloaded books and such, on the go. This device complements my rugged Windows XP laptop, a real workhorse, with a 14-inch diagonal screen and internal battery that will run the device for about two hours. And when I really need to travel light, I have a Palm TX, with a 480x320 color screen (4" diagonal), Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, a 32GB SD card upgrade, a tiny battery powered thermal printer, and a full-size foldout keyboard (for full-speed typing), and an internal battery that will run the device for over 7 hours.

I hope this helps.

Good luck and have fun with it.

Honest reviews on SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless Mobile

As other reviews mentioned, we struggled to get the online set up (Roadrunner wireless). We called the customer service number and within little time we were up and running. Though the rep was clearly ESL, he did a great job letting my husband know what he needed. If this is a problem for another reader, I'd say hang up, call again, and hopefully you'll reach someone else on the next go. For the money well worth it.

As someone else mentioned, more documentation would be helpful e.g. what are the specs for SD cards? Is 8gbs to much? If I arbitrarily buy a standard SC card it'd be my luck is that it won't work for some reason.

Update Jan. 2011 Spoke too soon. It ran great while it ran. It became a little buggy and I think it was a company rep who had my husband download a patch that was supposed to fix his problem. Instead of helping he was no longer able to get online. Then, he was also unable to get anyone on the phone who could help him. There's not even an option to leave a message for a call back. The product comes with little documentation and no troubleshooting advice. After a few days of dealing with customer no service we took it back to CVS and set our sites on something more reliable. Reviewrs who said this is really a glorified smart phone are right except that it's not all that smart. Don't be conned by a low price a cheap piece of junk is still a piece of junk.

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless Mobile

You get what you pay for. If you're paying $80-$100 for a computer, but expecting one that's usually priced at $250-$400, then expectations need to be more realistic. This computer is NOT junk. The start-up instructions for internet were sufficient and it actually comes with apps you wouldn't expect, like a pre-installed PDF reader. I received this about a week ago and, so far, no problems. Because my expectations were realistic, I'm very satisfied.

If you want to:

-browse youtube

-listen to music/mp3s

-do a lot of downloading

-do fancy word and powerpoint programs

-download and play games

-do anything with flash

...then DO NOT buy this, as none of these functions work.

If you want to:

-type simple documents

-browse simple (not flashy) web pages

Then this is a very efficient little machine.

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Reviews of HP TX2Z TouchSmart 12.1-Inch Laptop

HP TX2Z TouchSmart 12.1-Inch Laptop
Customer Ratings: 2 stars
Buy Now
Spent $360.00 for extended warranty "care pack" with HP. One and a half hours on hold failed to get a

representative that could provide directions. Could not stay on hold longer and notebook rendered

useless due to inability to access repair with warranty. Have to designate this product and company

as a "do not buy". Will never, ever buy HP again myself.

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

I purchased my TX2Z in March of 2009. It ran a bit slow due to bloatware and Vista but I was able to clean it up to make it at least as fast as my old Windows XP laptop. It also ran loud due to constant blowing by the CPU fan.

In February 2011, the computer failed, showing only a black screen with blinking lights on the keyboards. After several frustrating hours with the incompetent HP tech service, I paid $300 to have the out-of-warranty laptop sent in for a new motherboard.

Now, in February 2012, the computer's motherboard has again failed in the same manner, and HP wants another $300 to fix again. No thank you, HP. You can read around the internet about widespread overheating problems with this and similar models, and HP's poor service.

My first and last HP product.

Best Deals for HP TX2Z TouchSmart 12.1-Inch Laptop

I have had a HP tx2z touchsmart laptop for about a year now, I also bought the 2-year accidental protection plan (about a third of the laptop in cost). When I first bought it I had one issue with the touch screen that took about 3 weeks to get fixed and two hour long calls to HP. About a month ago I started having bad heat issues and my video card started going bad. I have spent 6 calls, 1+ hour each, on the phone with HP. One month later and I still don't even have a box to send my HP laptop in for repair. BEWARE OF HP.

Honest reviews on HP TX2Z TouchSmart 12.1-Inch Laptop

I'll keep this short and sweet. **Do your homework before ordering this tablet**

I bought mine in 7/2009 and am on my 4th one. Yes, I have sent it back for repair or replacement THREE times, and am waiting for the shipping box to return this one as well, as this one came back from repair with defective touchscreen, non-working fingerprint reader, buzzing power supply and an SD card reader which isn't screwed in (so it doesn't line up with the frame).

Only HP could ship out such a POS.

If this tablet PC actually worked as advertised it would be my dream notebook. It doesn't. In fact, it doesn't even come close.

The problems which make this great idea a horrible notebook to own:

-The mouse cursor jumps to a certain point on the screen over and over (sometimes clicking, which is always fun when that 'spot' is over the X button). The 'certain point' varies by the notebook, sometimes it is lower left, some right,.. you get the idea. Add to this the makers of the touch panel, N-trig, have yet to make fully working drivers for any OS. N-trig, the company which tells you flat out that updating your tablet's driver can render it irreparable.. and they mean it! TONS of people have had to return their TX2z to HP for replacement because the touch driver killed their tablet.

-The power supply buzzes.. loudly! The buzzing varies by how bright the screen is. If you are superman and can see the screen turned all the way down, it is ignorable. If you want to see your screen, it buzzes to no end. If you want a bright screen, grab your ear plugs.

-The fingerprint reader works.. sometimes. More specifically, it works about ~25% of the time. The other 75% of the time it completely ignores your finger swipes. That, of course, is assuming the software doesn't crash (yes, even on a fresh install).

-It's a tablet, you can hold it at any angle.. you just can't see it at any angle! The screen turns to a bright mush if you hold the tablet at any angle besides directly. If you are drawing, or writing, and want to adjust for your hand position, you no longer get to see the screen because it washes out.

If you really love this tablet, you can buy mine, just as soon as HP sends it back from repair.. FOR THE FOURTH TIME.

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for HP TX2Z TouchSmart 12.1-Inch Laptop

I purchased this laptop in October from HP's website. It came with a lot of bloatware, which really slowed it down. After removing many of the third party applications pre-installed on the laptop it was much more responsive. When I bought the laptop, it qualified for a free upgrade to windows 7 and after installing Windows 7 it was like a whole new computer. It boots up faster and seems more responsive than with windows vista.

In contrast to LawnMower Man's experience, my power supply is silent, the touchscreen responds well to my finger and stylus, and the laptop seems very sturdily built. The viewing angle of the screen could be better, but if the screen is facing you, you shouldn't have any problems.

I didn't think I would find much of a difference between my old notebook and a tablet notebook, but it has completely changed how I browse the internet, read .pdfs, and take notes. The handwriting recognition software is pretty good out of the box, but you can train it to better recognise your handwriting so you can convert your hand written notes to text with few errors.

I rarely ever use the touchpad mouse on the laptop. When using the tablet like a regular notebook, its much more convenient to move windows and highlight text directly on the screen than it ever was to manipulate a touchpad mouse.

I've really enjoyed using this tablet so far. The touchscreen is responsive and accurate, and it was much cheaper than other tablet PCs on the market (e.g. lenovo).

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Friday, May 9, 2014

Cheap Lenovo ThinkPad R400 Intel Core 2 Duo 2200 MHz 160Gig Serial ATA

Lenovo ThinkPad R400 Intel Core 2 Duo 2200 MHz 160Gig Serial ATA HDD 4096mb DDR3 DVD ROM Wireless WI-FI 14.0' WideScreen LCD Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 32 Bit Laptop Notebook Computer Professionally Refurbished by a Microsoft Authorized Refurbisher
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
Buy Now
this is fast and reliable

good price for great value

somehow this is fast close to I7 processor laptop I have

never put me down

I recommend to everyone

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Review of Toshiba Satellite S855-S5168 15.6-Inch Laptop (Ice Blue Brushed

Toshiba Satellite S855-S5168 15.6-Inch Laptop
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
Buy Now
I purchased this laptop at a Black Friday sale for $600. I am an avid Linux user, so I installed Fedora 17 on it.

PROS:

*OS For the short time I used Windows 8, it worked fine. I just didn't like it.

*Speed The quad-core i7 processor and 8 GB of RAM allow it to run high-performance software.

*Keyboard It feels very nice when typing for long periods of time.

*Hard Drive 1 terabyte (1000 GB) gives you lots of space to work with.

*Webcam As long as you have enough lighting, the webcam looks good.

CONS:

*Wireless Card This thing has an old Realtek; If you use Windows, it is slow. If you use Linux (like me) you have bigger problems. Realtek doesn't have up-to-date drivers for the Linux kernel. I had to buy a Panda Ultra Wifi (b/g/n) 150Mbps Wireless-N 2.4GHz USB Adapter Windows XP/Vista/7/8, Mac OS X 10.6/10.7/10.8, Ubuntu 12.04 TLS, Fedora 17 and Puppy 5.3.3 Compatible in order to access the internet.

*Touchpad Using this thing for long periods of time is horrible.

*Battery Life It only lasts about 3 hours.

OTHER:

*Speakers The built-in speakers are mediocre.

*Graphics The Intel graphics chipset is average.

*Screen It looks fine unless you're looking from an angle.

This was a good buy for $600, but I don't know if I would buy it again for $750.

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

I'm not a techie, but an experienced user; no benchmark results here.

The lid on the laptop has no catch securing it to the body, so even walking around the house carrying the PC at my side as I would a book, I can feel the lid chattering against the body. The keyboard works well, but that too vibrates and makes a fair amount of noise as you're typing. It doesn't affect typing, and I'm sure it can't be heard from across the room, it just makes more noise than I would expect from a keyboard. I work with numbers so I like the 10 key setup built into the keyboard. The overall build quality feels really cheap; when you pick up the laptop there are a number of creaks as the plastic parts flex and the battery shifts slightly. I would be very concerned traveling with it unless it was enclosed in a snug sleeve (to keep the lid from chattering)and then packed into another case with plenty of padding.

The trackpad is pretty bad. Extremely sensitive at times, oblivious at others. Coupled with the mysterious swipes and functions recognized by Windows 8, you can have a REALLY exciting time at the keyboard watching things come and go on the screen. I use the laptop mostly with a bluetooth mouse and wired keyboard. When I work out of the house I'll be bringing my mouse.

The display is very good, very bright and readable except in bright light, where the glossy finish makes things difficult.

I've had the machine a couple of weeks, cycling the battery to check its life several times, and the battery lasts about two hours.

It's fairly large, at about 15X9. The good news is the large screen. The bad news is the bulk. Choose your poison.

The speed is there. Obviously subjective, but you don't have to wait long for start-up, restarts (a little over 1 minute for my machine, now with 12GB RAM), whatever. It comes with 8GB RAM (2x4). At least one of the 4GBers has to be pulled to increase the RAM.

Windows 8 is OK from the user perspective. Not great or horrible (sounds like a lot of other Windows versions!). Once you get used to it and can navigate through the screens intended for touch-screen use, it only (!) adds a couple of clicks to get to the desktop. You really have to wonder at the design, though, if it has to be adapted to keyboard use.

In spite of what reads as a slightly negative review, I'd buy the machine again. The value provided by the combination of processor speed, RAM, hard drive and price are tough to beat. Both the machine and the operating system occasionally feel like sand in my shorts, but for the price I can live with it.

5/14/13 update

Windows 8: There's no excuse. Same problems. Unless you power the PC down daily or restart daily, something won't work. I guess my biggest problem is getting used to the elegance and easy functionality of my iPad and iPhone, then expecting something similar from the PC. Maybe it's time to spring for an Apple. Sigh...

Best Deals for Toshiba Satellite S855-S5168 15.6-Inch Laptop (Ice Blue Brushed

not to say I've experienced zero problems. Out of a batch of 5 of these I bought I had one quick HD failure while under warranty but they are consistently more hardy than my experience with HP / Compaq etc etc in this price range

Honest reviews on Toshiba Satellite S855-S5168 15.6-Inch Laptop (Ice Blue Brushed

I loved my new Toshiba when I bought it last December...so fast, the keyboard sweet to use...

...then the hard drive died. Not completely. Just sometimes...resulting in crashes...

After having some trouble getting the data off the hard drive (not Toshiba's problem) ... I saw another one, for the same price, with 50% more memory.

So I sucked it up, and bought that. In April. Took another month or so for me to put it in use ... and then a bit more to get everything I wanted installed. Last Sunday, Sept 22...it started making a HORRIBLE noise. I suppose it's the fan.

Call up to get a replacement part on Monday. I can't. The people Toshiba has me order through ($50 please -other brand laptop fans: $15) can't access the Toshiba website. It's DOWN for at LEAST two days.

Finally called on Friday, Sept 27. There are no fans in stock. When they do get in stock -5-10 business days before I can get it.

(You wanna know why I don't ship it out under the warrantee I DO have with this machine??? Imagine waiting for my machine to come back to me...blah.)

Two laptops, less than 12 months...not able to be used.

(My 4 1/2 year old "bottom of the line" Acer, however, continues to run like a champ.)

Needless to say... As much as I love the speed, the sexy keyboard, and all...I will not be buying another Toshiba. I had such high hopes.

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Toshiba Satellite S855-S5168 15.6-Inch Laptop (Ice Blue Brushed

The laptop works good, the aparience is new, great deal. I recomend. Is a beautiful laptop, the best computer with the best price, like new.

Buy Fom Amazon Now

Friday, April 11, 2014

Reviews of Apple MacBook Air MD712LL/A 11.6-Inch Laptop (NEWEST VERSION)

Apple MacBook Air MD712LL/A 11.6-Inch Laptop
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
List Price: $1,199.00
Sale Price: $1,139.98
Today's Bonus: 5% Off
Buy Now

So first I will say I am coming from a MacBook air 11' mid 2011 with 2GB ram and 64GB harddrive. This one I got has 4GB of ram and 128GB harddrive. I use this laptop mainly for browsing the internet and some programming. Now that you have a little background Ill give a quick review.

From the get go this laptop is MUCH faster then my previous Macbook air. When you open the lid you are ready to go that second. On the old one I would have to wait a little for it to load and if I left chrome up and clicked on it right away then I would get the loading wheel. I havent seen this do it once. That could be because of the harddrive being so much faster.

When I opened the box the laptop was already charged to 91% so im trying to kill it. Well I was on it ALL NIGHT last night and now its the morning and its only at 60%. That battery life is amazing and let me honest thats what we ask for in a laptop.

If you are up in the air about this laptop(no pun intended). I would say give it a go. You could even buy it from the Apple store and if you dont like it just return it.

If you are replacing an older Macbook air and have one thats because the mid 2012 then I would say get it but if you have the mid 2012 I dont know if I would suggest spending the money unless you really want battery. I hope this helps anyone trying to purchase this laptop.

I am not an Apple fan boy. My desktop is a custom build Window machine so I know both worlds. Please if you have any questions just comment and I will be happy to try things for you or just answer questions.

I am a Computer Engineer so im use to testing things so feel free to ask.

(This is my first review)

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

This might look like just a minor spec bump from last years model. However, the new MBA boasts all day battery life: 11 inch (9 hours) and 13 inch (12 hours). This is a big step up from the previous generation. This is due to a larger battery and more efficient processor. The upcoming OS X Mavericks is supposed to be even more energy efficient than Mountain Lion. The MBA is also faster due to the new processor and has a faster wifi connection. The solid state drive in this computer makes it much faster than a regular hard drive computer.

This is a great computer overall. The screen is not as nice as the retina Macbook Pro, however it is not a deal breaker. The MBA is a lightweight, portable computer and the Retina screen is thicker, heavier, and more expensive. Once they manage to make a thin, lightweight Retina Display this computer might be perfect. You will probably not miss the disc drive on this computer because it is a featherweight without it and you can use an external disc drive if you have to or remotely access another computer with a disc drive.

If you are debating between the 11 and 13 inch models, it depends on what you want to use it for. The extra screen space, SD card slot, and longer battery life for $100 more makes the 13 inch a worthy choice. However, some want a truly portable machine that can fit easily in a large purse or briefcase.

If you are debating between this computer and an iPad with a bluetooth keyboard, consider the ease of use of the computer versus the portability and cost of an iPad. For students, it is nice to have a real keyboard and be able to easily create documents, spreadsheets, and powerpoints on an actual computer, but I see more and more students with iPads and a keyboard case getting by just fine.

If you are debating between 128GB and 256GB (or custom order 512GB from Apple), consider cloud storage. Flickr now has 1 TB free photo storage with no size restrictions. Google Drive and Evernote are great for documents and you can always store your iTunes library on an external hard drive if you have a massive library.

If you are debating between this and a Windows Ultrabook/ Google Chromebook, consider the operating system, reliability, customer service, and resale value. People love Apple products and you can resell the computer if you want to eventually upgrade. They hold their value pretty well. The operating system takes a little getting used to but it is a lot smoother than Windows and you will probably never want to switch back to the dark side. If you really need a Windows Program, you can run Windows on a Mac.

Best Deals for Apple MacBook Air MD712LL/A 11.6-Inch Laptop (NEWEST VERSION)

Working off formerly a 13" macbook air mid 2011, I just bought this new 2013 model with the Haswell CPU and low power consumption infrastructure.

Off a full charge, I disconnected 3 hours 40 mins and had an external drive connected the entire time, restarted 4 times, and did NONSTOP heavy application installs (Office suite, Photoshop etc.), a total of 23 applications, and ran youtube vids in the background the entire time, and after all of that nonstop heavy loading, I had 76% on my battery, of which id have around 35% on my older Macbook Air.

Further still, the entire unit has run UTTERLY COOL during this EXTREMELY heavy loading, installing and heavy 1080P video graphics play. My other Macbook Air would be almost too hot to touch underneath near back under same conditions.

Even without 802ac (new Wifi connection thru the new Air), I notice roughly 25% faster throughput on likewise file downloads using my new Macbook Air than that of my older version Macbook Air.

This new Macbook Air contains PCIe-Based Flash Storage Approaches 800 MB/s Read and Write. I notice BLAZING fast write speed on my 1.1 Gig Photoshop app, and seemed about 40% faster than my previous generation Macbook Air. Also, this new Air model contains PCIe-based SSD modules made by Samsung and is smaller than the previous Air model SSD made by Toshiba.

These new Airs also sport batteries with increased capacity driven by higher voltages: increasing from a 7.3 V, 6700 mAh power battery to a 7.6 V 7150 mAh power battery. Other changes include a redesigned expanded heat sink covering both the CPU and GPU, which must be why this unit runs SO COOL even maxed out.

ALL my apps run perfect on this new Air, including Office suite, and the entire Adobe suite and the rest of my apps, ....which it should, its still running Mountain Lion OS.

I really have to say again, that write speeds on HUGE app instals is just faster than you dare hope for; its just blazing faster than my previous gen. Air.

My Macbook Air has been without a question my most treasured gem of "go-to" Mac product hands down, I own all of them (2 Airs, Macbook Pro, MacMini etc),...I was skeptical when I shelled out $1099 today for the new Haswell Air and its presumed prognosticated "crazy long" battery life and improved speeds overall; but the hype isn't hype, its real and amazing. The mere NOTION that I can overload this Air with App installs, and have a 2.5" HD attached for nearly 4 hours, run 1080P Youtube vids,...and still be at 76% Batt life is just, well, its stunning.

Tested out the NEW dual (stereo) mic and it IS much nicer in record, additionally the camera/vid is much sharper and crisper than my other Mac Air. Considering the price point is lower on these new Airs than the older ones, I give the new Macbook Airs a "110%". Having repaired laptops (non mac) in the past, and owned at least 20X more laptops than most consumers, I don't lightly conclude this is the cornerstone workhorse for everything I dare consider doing, fast got faster, and battery life now is enough to make a crusty "hates everything" person like myself nearly cry with joy. Congrats Apple! Homerun on this lovely gem.

I didnt get this delivered in one day, I picked it up from my local Mac store, I got my buddy to sell it to me 1 day before they officially "have" them which is today 6/12. As for the questions about using this new Air with Photoshop and it lagging on heavy filtering and photo editing, Ive tested that fully and this IS the machine you want for ultimate portability, it works fantastic.

Also of great importance is that this version of Mac Air is supposed to have "nearly double" fast write speeds as the Macbook Pro Retina. And the new Hard storage on this Air has "up to 6X faster than a 5400RPM disk drive" as found in current Macbook Pro which contain 5400RPM Toshiba Hard drives (made by Hitachi for Toshiba actually). In short, YES, this is a perfect "must own" book in the field or travel use for photoshop work, with just blazing fast write speeds, and crazy long battery life.

This new Macbook Air brings TRUE definition to being "disconnected" and "portable" to those who want to do a LOT of work free of the power socket! Genuine portable is finally here, ...no more staring at the battery % to rush to shut down!

Honest reviews on Apple MacBook Air MD712LL/A 11.6-Inch Laptop (NEWEST VERSION)

A lot has been written about how great the Macbook Air is. I agree, this is a truly fine thing. Forget the "feeds and speeds" metrics so many people seize on (although the performance is pretty good on this for what most people do), I just feel that this thing is in total harmony with me. It is powerful yet light and agile. I have a 13" Macbook Pro and it is great but a bit heavy. The Macbook Air is insanely light and yet very sturdy.

The one thing I really stressed over was whether to get the 11.6 inch model or the 13 inch model. Years ago I had an early netbook. It was nice as a novelty but it was really underpowered. It turned out the 10 inch screen was just too small. The size of the screen on the netbook was just too much of a compromise (my eyesight isn't what it used to be!). I was concerned that the 11.6 inch Macbook Air screen might be too small also. I really wanted to get it instead of the 13 inch screen because to me, getting a larger Macbook Air just seemed to defeat the purpose of getting a small, light computer in the first place. I really wanted the 11.6 inch model to work out. The price difference really wasn't an issue, I just wanted to have the perfect size for me. I saw a few 11.6 and 13 inch models and I thought the 11.6 inch would be okay but I had the nagging feeling that when I started using it, I would regret getting the smaller version. You know how that goes, your first look at something is brief and you don't really get a feel for how you will use it in the real world. Sometimes your initial conclusions turn out wrong and you regret your choice. Well, I took a chance on the 11.6 inch version and after using it for a while, I am really happy with the choice. It is the perfect size for me for a portable computer. If you are struggling with the same decision, I hope this helps.

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Apple MacBook Air MD712LL/A 11.6-Inch Laptop (NEWEST VERSION)

I have been using the new Macbook Air for almost a week now. I actually started with the 11 inch because I wanted the lightest possibly laptop, and I used to have a smaller screen, but I guess it was just too small. I was noticing things like a shaking screen and I had been using a 15 inch Macbook Pro with the aluminum keyboard for the last five years. When I got the 13 inch, everything looked and felt just right.

In my opinion, a laptop battery has one major task. It should allow users to do everything they want on their laptop without having to plug it back in. I used it for about 1.5 to 2 hours two evenings in a row doing internet surfing, minimal video watching, and some word processing. The next day I used it for close to 8 hours of word processing and internet surfing. You know you have an amazing battery when the bar goes red, and you check to see that you still have two and a half hours remaining. I did not check exact times, but I think I got over 11 hours before charging it back up (including 3 days of sleeping). I was also surprised to see that it had recharged before I went to bed!

In this day and age, laptop users should understand that you never get the same amount of battery life watching non-stop high quality videos as you would using basic software and the internet. I use a laptop fairly frequently for projects/entertainment, but can not think of one instance in which I would need over 12 hours of battery life. More than 8 hours and my eyes start to blur. The bottom line is that Apple's initial estimate of 12 hours is not off, and I am happy to say that I will not be taking my charger with me anytime I plan to return to my house to sleep later that evening. I don't have to worry about battery life for the first time.

One small quirk is that the time estimates of the battery are sometimes off. For instance, I have checked my battery status and seen an estimate of 17 plus hours remaining. I admittedly got overexcited before it quickly went back down to over 12. The percentage is always accurate, however, and it's intriguing to see how long you can last with 100% battery life remaining.

As for the rest of the computer, the keyboard is great, the screen is nice, but not stellar, and there is a slight glare when I work in direct sunlight though it's nothing objectionable. I think that Apple has set a new standard with this laptop because it's obviously light, but the battery is truly amazing. It's also picking up the internet feed in my house as good if not better than my other devices.

IMPORTANT UPDATE: I have noticed an issue with volume fluctuation when watching movies on Netflix and sports on ESPN. The issue persists on Safari and Firefox. Unfortunately, other are having this issue and no one that I could find as of yet reports it as being resolved. This is a shame. This laptop is so good otherwise I am still giving it 4 stars, but this is a major issue. I have downgraded to 3 stars until this gets resolved.

Buy Fom Amazon Now