How to buy a laptop - buyers guide notes
Laptops are always a difficult thing to buy because there is such a widechoice and so many different prices and then there's the technicalspecifications to get your head around.. nightmare!So here's some ideas from the technical side of things, these are the main things that youwant to think about:Disk Drive-----------Usually referred to as 'HDD' (hard disk drive). This is where all yourstuff is stored - emails, office documents, photos, music, movies etcand of course all your software and applications. Their size is alwaysmeasured in Gigabytes (or GB). To decide what size you need, you shouldconsider what sort of stuff you are saving on your computer. If you useloads of images, movies and lots of music (in itunes, or as mp3s or inyour 'share' folders if you're into p2p filesharing), you shouldconsider getting a larger disk say 80-100 GB. If however you just wantto use your laptop for sending and receiving emails, surfing the worldwide web, writing word and excel documents and watching DVD's, then thedisk space isn't going to be so critical. I usually have 40GB and findthat's plenty. You might even be fine with 30GB, but I vertainlywouldn't go any lower than that.Processor---------Often referred to as the CPU (central processing unit). This is the bitwhich actually processes all the instructions within the machine andmakes things work. It's just a chip about the size of a two pound coin,which sits on the main board inside the computer. The speed of the chipis measured in MHz (megahertz, or millions of cycles per second). Somefall into the 'thousands of megahertz' category and are hence specifiedin GHz (gigahertz - that's one thousand MHz). The two main chipmanufacturers are Intel and AMD. For laptops, I would recommend anIntel processor, just because they perform better under hot conditions(laptops do get very hot). Intel processors these days also come withthe added advantage of 'Centrino' technology. This is useful, because itallows you to connect to wireless networks. I find that's really handy,because I have a wireless network in my house and I can connect to theinternet anywhere in the building from my laptop without having to useany cables. Another thing to look out for when choosing a laptop. Oneother thing to look out for when choosing the processor is the Pentium'M' range. If you see Pentium M, that's a good thing. It means thatIntel have optimised the processor for 'mobile' use, so it remains cooland doesn't go bezurk when you're watching your favourite DVD. Aim for2GHz if you can. Don't go below 1.2 GHz.RAM (Memory)------------RAM - that's Random Accecss Memory has a direct effect on the ability ofyour computer to do it's work. Whenever a program is run, that wholeprogram is loaded into this area of memory - any documents you haveopen, any proccess that you have running - they are all loaded off theHard disk into memory and then handled by the CPU. The implication hereis that the less memory you have, the fewer programs and documents youcan have open before the computer keels over. If you have loads andloads of memory, then your machine can handle loads of applicationwindows and documents without any performance degradation. When yourmachine finally runs out of memory it starts using swap-space - that's abit of the hard disk which has been put aside and is used as an extrabit of memory for when you've rum out of RAM. You can always tell whenyour machine has run out of memory, because it slows down to a snail'space, and your HDD activity light goes mad - that's because it's'swapping' between RAM and swap-space on disk. RAM is measured in MB(megabytes), but sometimes is quoted in GB (Gigabytes - thousands ofMB). So how much ram do you need? The laptop I'm using right now has 1GBof RAM. I never require any more than that. I can watch movies, use theweb, edit pictures and do all the normal stuff I want. 1GB is plenty.You'll probably find that 500MB (or 1/2 GB) is also sufficient. Itreally depends on what you can afford.VIDEO - Graphics----------------Yeah, this bit gets confusing, because suddenly you find all the aboveparameters being described all over again but just in a video context.Video stuff is handled by a separate piece of hardware called the 'videocard'. This card usually has it's own RAM, it's own processor, sometimeseven its own heatsink and fan. The important thing with video is toensure that you have enough Memory (video RAM) to handle your DVD's andmovies. If your Video RAM is too low, you will find that it buffers toslowly when you're watching you films and that causes jerkiness andspoils the picture. So try to aim for as much video RAM as you canafford. 64MB is usually okay. If you can afford more, then go for it.One warning - some motherboards have all the video capability 'onboard', which isn't necessarily a problem, but sometimes the videohardware borrows from your system RAM, which means that if you have 64MB of video RAM, that might impact directly on your system RAM (to thetune of 64 MB). I once got caught out by this and ended up with a laptopwhich was significantly under-powered especially when it was processinggraphical stuff - even Flash movies killed it horribly.Other stuff-----------These days a floppy drive isn't usually necessary - we have enough meansfor transferring files over the internet for floppy drives to be prettymuch obsolete these days.Most manufacturers offer a 3-year onsite warrenty. This is definitely agood thing to get. If your computer goes wrong and you can't fix it,you'll really wish that a nice man will just turn up and make everythingbetter again.Case - is handy if you want to carry your laptop around, otherwise don'tworry about it. You might even be able to buy a second hand laptop case,or even make one of your own.Power supply - if you use your laptop regularly in two locations (I usemine at home and at work), it's handy to have two power adaptors - oneat each location, so that you don't have to carry it around all the timeand also so that you don't get caught out on the days when you forget totake the adaptor with you.PCMCIA - this is the wide, flat-shaped slot on the side of your laptopwhich is used for plugging in extra cards - most commonly this is usedfor adding a network card, or a wireless card. If you have built inwireless capability, then an extra PCMCIA slot won't be so critical. Ifyour laptop doesn't have built in wireless be sure that it does have aPCMCIA slot so that you can plug a wifi card into the side.There are loads of other things to consider such as size and weight, butthese are the main things that I can think of for now.christo About the Author http://www.spiration.co.uk