Originally posted by: TheStu
So, the Vostro has a worse vid card, better hard drive, worse screen, better webcam, worse wired ethernet, better battery (maybe)
It is $300 something cheaper... but I think the benefits of the MacBook Pro outweigh and detractors.
		
		
	 
Well PC laptops are cheap because Dell always has good sales. For example, the one I was looking at: 
Case in point:  
 thisnotebook (which actually looks pretty good. The best looking non-apple one I've seen). 
Specs:
    * Tuxedo Black
    * Intel Core 2 Duo Processor T7500 (2.4GHz/800Mhz FSB, 4MB Cache)
    * Genuine Windows Vista Home Premium Edition
    * Glossy, widescreen 15.4 inch LCD (1280x800) & 2.0 MP Camera
    * 3GB Shared Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM at 667MHz (2 Dimms)
    * 250GB 5400rpm SATA Hard Drive
    * Slot Load DVD+/-RW (DVD/CD read/write)
    * NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT
    * Dell Wireless 1490 802.11a/g Mini Card
    * Dell Wireless 355 Bluetooth Internal (2.0+Enhanced Data Rate)
    * 56 WHr 6-cell Lithium Ion Primary Battery
    * Integrated Sound Blaster Audigy HD Software Edition
    * Trend Micro Internet Security 15-months
    * 4Yr In-Home Service, Parts Labor, 24x7 Phone Support
    * 1Yr LoJack for Laptops Theft Protection (CD Shipped Separately)
    * DataSafe Online Backup 10GB for 1 year
    * Get a $200 Gift Card on systems $1499+ (cards to arrive in 6-8 weeks)
 
If you go about it right the price for this all less than $1280 if you include the $250 Dell gift card. 
If you bought a Macbook Pro and did the same specs, it would cost $2995. That is with the same processor, video card and 1GB 
less of ram. And that is only 3 year warranty. 
So around ~$1300 for the Dell and ~$3000 for the Macbook Pro. It is at least twice as expensive when you find a good deal on a PC. 
That said, I think I'm going to buy a Mac after all. My sole reason being that I want a computer that a lot of people have so that any bug, driver issue, etc will be a major concern to every Apple user and be taken care of promptly. 
If you have a PC on the other hand, which come with a combination of literally thousands if different motherboards and components, how is a company going to address specific problems for those thousands of computers? You can't. 
That is why I recently bought a nice computer music interface only to find out that it randomly would just not work with the PC motherboard I have. I wasted countless hours trying to fix it and then on tech support. That would never happen with a Mac. 
And I would like to think it will hold its resale value more, but I don't really know.