Originally posted by: JmE13
Gorcorps,
I wouldn't give up on getting a good new or slightly used/near new deal.
I just purchased a DV1010US from a retail store last week for $500 w/ a $50 HP MIR. So it will cost me $450 + tax after the rebate. I talked with them at the store about my friend that was going to come with me, but had to work. They found the same deal for him the next day. The laptops were factory sealed and brand new, *not* refurbs or returns. Oh, I also got a nice laptop deal (different model) for my neice, $399 no rebates.
What retail store what this? We were discussing this same model
So here are some random things I have found, YMMV:
- The DV1010 is very nice. I really like it (but I am not a gamer). The Celeron M has 512 cache (vs 1MB of Pentium M of the time and 1 MB current Celeron M and 2 MB current Pentium M). The Celeron M also lacks SpeedStep for maximum battery savings. The performance difference between the old Celeron M and old Pentium M is negligable. The battery life difference should be very noticable if the laptop idles a lot. The hard drive in mine and my friend's was 5400 rpm, not the slower one listed in specs everywhere. The system is killer for general notebook usage.
The dv1010 came with a 5400RPM drive?? NICE!
- The Dell Inspiron 1100 I used to have was great (needed money, sold it). I had upgraded the Celeron to a P4 2.4ghz. These 1100 are going at really nice low prices out there when I look. (I wouldn't pay over $500 for one right now, personal preference).
- There are some $399 or $499 new retail laptop deals out there.
- The HP academic discounts are sweet, sweet, sweet! It might be worth it to you to wait until you get a student ID or get in touch now with a buddy at your new school.
- I would not buy a PIII unless it was dirt cheap because I have been finding nicer deals on more current laptops.
It is possible to find better deals, but for quality, used laptops (like Toshiba or IBM IMO); P3's are awesome values with very respectable battery life. I use a P3 Dell 256MB notebook running Win2K as my PC at work, and surprisingly it does VERY well for its age.
- Integrated graphics are OK, but not real hot for games. I you are not going to play intensive games, they are pretty nice because they keep costs down.
Rule #1: Integrated graphics are horrible for modern games. Repeat after me
- 256 MB RAM minimum. 512 MB much nicer. More RAM can often yield more performance than faster processor of same class. If you have a sweet deal on a laptop but RAM is 128MB, check prices of replacement RAM before you purchase. It may or may not be a deal killer.
:thumbsup:
- Internal wireless is very nice and useful. Dell 1100 did not have it. DV1010US has it. After owning the 1100, I swore I would not buy another notebook without internal wireless.
:thumbsup:
- Make sure your school is not using 802.11a. My grad school was and then 802.11a was a bit pricey. They finally augmented with 802.11b
Very few schools today use ONLY 802.11a, but check into it anyway.
- When buying on the used market, be very savvy. My old business partner and I wasted a lot of $$$ on used laptops over many years because we could have found far better deals on new or newer (slightly used) laptops. Most of the used PIII and below laptop deals I have seen out there are really, really over priced IMO.
He's looking @ a P3 notebook for like $400 right now, not a bad deal at all. However a dv1010 @ $500 out the door is almost unbeatable, I love the dv1000 series. And the CPU should be upgradeable to a Pentium M!
- Take your time in looking. The last two laptops I have owned, I looked around for at least a month and investigated prices & models obsessively. I was always glad I did, got great deals, and did not suffer 'buyer's remorse'.
:thumbsup:
Good luck and I hope some of this helped.
-JmE-