POLL: Powerbook or Inspiron?

Page 2 - Seeking answers? Join the AnandTech community: where nearly half-a-million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.

amnesiac

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
15,781
1
71
I think I've decided on a Powerbook. You can't get the feature set of a Powerbook for the same price on a PC.

Ex:
1GB RAM
60GB HDD
DVD / CD Burner

That alone is an impossibility on most factory PC notebooks and using aftermarket solutions would make the prices astronomical.
 

manly

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
13,549
4,227
136
Originally posted by: amnesiac 2.0
I think I've decided on a Powerbook. You can't get the feature set of a Powerbook for the same price on a PC.

Ex:
1GB RAM
60GB HDD
DVD / CD Burner
And how much does THAT config run? Although apparently, getting a DVD burner on PC notebooks is currently unlikely, I doubt you'd get better hardware value from a Mac.
 

amnesiac

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
15,781
1
71
Originally posted by: manly
Originally posted by: amnesiac 2.0
I think I've decided on a Powerbook. You can't get the feature set of a Powerbook for the same price on a PC.

Ex:
1GB RAM
60GB HDD
DVD / CD Burner
And how much does THAT config run? Although apparently, getting a DVD burner on PC notebooks is currently unlikely, I doubt you'd get better hardware value from a Mac.

$3300 out the door.
$3000 even with a student discount. Too bad I already graduated. I wonder if I'm still eligible? :p
 

manly

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
13,549
4,227
136
Originally posted by: amnesiac 2.0
Originally posted by: manly
Originally posted by: amnesiac 2.0
I think I've decided on a Powerbook. You can't get the feature set of a Powerbook for the same price on a PC.

Ex:
1GB RAM
60GB HDD
DVD / CD Burner
And how much does THAT config run? Although apparently, getting a DVD burner on PC notebooks is currently unlikely, I doubt you'd get better hardware value from a Mac.

$3300 out the door.
$3000 even with a student discount. Too bad I already graduated. I wonder if I'm still eligible? :p
THAT config is $3300? I take back the value statement then. Those upgrades alone cost a small fortune.
 

Gooberlx2

Lifer
May 4, 2001
15,381
6
91
I'm pretty happy with my Dell (the only disappointment is that I didn't wait just a little longer for some better features at the same price :eek:). A few pixels on my display went bad within 2 months of buying it and Dell sent out a dude from the Twin Cities (1.5 hours away) to replace it, completely free of charge. Support was helpful, and response was quick. I know alot of people hate Dell support, but I guess I've always been lucky with 'em. It's worked just fine since.
 

amnesiac

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
15,781
1
71
Originally posted by: Deeko
Dell!!! I hate you Apple!!

By far the most helpful post ever.
rolleye.gif


Care to share WHY you hate apple instead of just mindlessly bashing it?
 

thraxes

Golden Member
Nov 4, 2000
1,974
0
0
I would get the powerbook... simply because it is a real eyecatcher. You won't be gaming and stuff and for doing serious work the apple will do just as good as PC laptops. Having a 'nix based OS helps aswell, I know a few admins getting powerbooks for those two reasons: (design, neat OS)

I would take the Powerbook for battery life (most important factor in a laptop IMO)
 

yoda291

Diamond Member
Aug 11, 2001
5,079
0
0
Unless you want to use applications that are native to the mac like photoshop, I'd go with a PC solution as that will get you better overall performance. I could say that apple hardware is underpowered garbage, but I'd be lying. For the most part, users don't really need all that much computational power. More than an 800mhz p3 is wasted on the vast majority of american consumers who "only need to check their email"
OSX isn't really an argument pro mac either because you can put bsd on either machine which is what osx is...kind of. I'm a big PC fan myself.

I'd look at it this way, for about 1k less(no 1gb RAM option), I can get a similarly configured system from alienware with alienware's superb support and spend the rest on applications and accessories. If you have 3k+ to spend. I'd also consider my needs. Would you really be better suited to lugging all your computing power on your shoulder?

My suggestion is to sit down evaluate what you want/need and then find the best solution to fill out all that.
Example:
For that much money, I can get a very good desktop system, a low end notebook for general computing outside home, a pda for portable computing/organization, AND accessories to match including usb hard drives, networking equipment, fuzzy dice, and I know that at least one machine is upgradeable in case something should come up that I need like usb 3.x or I win a SATA drive in a battle against the forces of evil.

Also don't forget, Mac Applications cost an order of magnitude more than pc apps for some reason with the exceptions of professional suites like photoshop and indesign.
 

Mutilator

Diamond Member
Aug 22, 2000
3,513
10
81
Sager NP8886 Supra from www.powernotebooks.com
(Sager = Alienware laptop, without the Alienware markup) ;)
15.7" SXGA TFT Active Matrix w/ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 w/64MB DDR
2.8GHz Intel Pentium® 4 Processor w/512k L2 Cache - 533MHz System Bus Speed
40GB Ultra ATA/100 Hard Drive at 5,400 RPM
1,024MB (2 DIMMS) PC2100 DDR Memory
Combo 8X DVD/24x10x24 CD-RW w/Softwares
Built-in TV Tuner w/Remote
Detachable MP3 Player w/32MB SD Memory
Built-in 3.5" 1.44MB Floppy Disk Drive
Built-in 56k V.90 Data/Fax Modem
Built-in 10/100BaseT Ethernet w/RJ-45 Jack
Built-in IEEE 1394 (Firewire)
Standard Carrying Case
Free Ultimate 3-CD Bundle - $389 Value
Smart Li-ion Battery
Cash Discounted Price
$2,455.00

Whenever I get enough $$ together to replace my Inspiron 7500... I'm going to buy from them.
 

MrBond

Diamond Member
Feb 5, 2000
9,911
1
76
I'm with RossMAN, IBM all the way. The T-series is light, and super powerful.
 

iamme

Lifer
Jul 21, 2001
21,058
3
0
Originally posted by: MrBond
I'm with RossMAN, IBM all the way. The T-series is light, and super powerful.

I agree as well. If you were going to spend $3000 on a Powerbook, here's a hooked up T-Series THinkpad you could have gotten with it:

Mobile Intel Pentium 4 processor-M at 2.0GHz with 512KB L2 Cache
14.1 inch SXGA+ (1400x1050) TFT Display
768MB DDR RAM
16X/10X/24X/8X Max CD-RW/DVD-ROM Combo
60GB Hard Disk Drive
16MB ATI Mobility RADEON 7500
Cisco Aironet Wireless 802.11b Mini PCI Card
Microsoft Windows XP Professional
Bluetooth PC Card II
IBM Embedded Security Subsystem 2.0
5.1-5.67 lbs
FREE Palm Zire or HP Deskjet 3240 Printer

3,037.00 plus shipping and applicable taxes.

Originally posted by: yoda291
For that much money, I can get a very good desktop system, a low end notebook for general computing outside home, a pda for portable computing/organization, AND accessories to match including usb hard drives, networking equipment, fuzzy dice, and I know that at least one machine is upgradeable in case something should come up that I need like usb 3.x or I win a SATA drive in a battle against the forces of evil.
This is good advice as well, IMO. Two computers are better than one :)
 

ViRGE

Elite Member, Moderator Emeritus
Oct 9, 1999
31,516
167
106
Are you going to be hauling the laptop around a lot? If you are, I'd highly reccomend the PowerBook; heavy laptops get to you after a short while. Oh, and keep in mind that the 15" doesn't have integrated Bluetooth, or a slot for AirPort Extreme, just an AirPort slot.
 

gordita

Golden Member
Mar 24, 2001
1,020
0
0
I love the look of the VPR matrix widescreen lappy.
I'm thinking of buying one...........anyone has any experiences with that one?

I would use it for Network Management stuff/sniffers, watching DVD's, wireless surfing/email, burning Cd-R's, web development.

if not the VPR's, then what would you suggest.
I don't want to lug around a 7 or 8lb in a bag already filled with batteries and other stuff.
 

Darien

Platinum Member
Feb 27, 2002
2,817
1
0
If you're going to be luggin it around, the Powerbook.



Or you can consider IBM notebooks, as the people above have mentioned.



Still, if money is not a concern, I'd get the Powerbook, depending on what you'd be doing. OS X.2 is awesome. You've pretty much listed all the positives about getting the Powerbook in your original post.



- May be replaced with newer model in 3-6 mo.



Given that the other Powerbooks are Al, yeah the Ti might get changed to Al as well. You can always consider the 12" version. Even more portable. And the airport range won't suck like the TiBook.
 

Soybomb

Diamond Member
Jun 30, 2000
9,506
2
81
Originally posted by: amnesiac 2.0
Originally posted by: ViRGE
What's the descision?

Powerbook :)

Features vs. Price and Powerbook still wins.

I love the backlit keyboard and autodimming of it and the lcd on the powerbook..........sadly I can only afford an imac and it doesn't offer such cool-ness :D