Showing posts with label lenovo laptops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lenovo laptops. Show all posts

Sony VAIO E Series SVE1713BPXB 17.3-Inch Laptop (Black)

Sony VAIO E Series SVE1713BPXB 17.3-Inch LaptopThis is my second Vaio and it works fine after a week. There's a light "squeak" as I hit the space bar. Hope it will stop.

Keyboard is back-lit and it works great in low or no light.

Screen is big and there are no dead pixels. Speakers are better then on the old one. (VPCEB15FM)

Windows 8 is not as bad as I thought it would be.

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon 3444F7U 14' LED Ultrabook - Intel - Core i7 i7-3667U 2GHz - Black

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon 3444F7U 14' LED Ultrabook - Intel - Core i7 i7-3667U 2GHz - BlackThe X1 Carbon is very light, charges fast, and has the perfect screen resolution for it's size (1600x900). The model I purchased has an i7 / 8GB / 180GB SSD, so it is super fast. The keyboard is so much easier to use than the Macbook Pro and Air models, and you really start to enjoy using the touchpoint once you get used to it. It also is fully Linux compatible, so you can run Ubuntu out of the box.

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Lenovo U410 14.0-Inch Ultrabook (Graphite Grey)

Lenovo U410 14.0-Inch UltrabookHardware wise, the ultrabook is sound. But one of the keyboard keys came off.. it went back on easily .. but it was a slight disappointment..

Mostly, id say its Lenovo that was disappointing.

The seller, shipped an item that runs perfectly :D Thanks

PS.

This product has 4 GB of RAM( not 8GB)

This product has 500GB of Diskspace not (1024 GB), there seems to be some problem with the description of this product

Does not have a backlit keyboard.

Is not super light..

Build quality of this laptop is exceptional. Evenly thin and lightweight. Keyboard is comfortable and trackpad worked smoothly. However, wi-fi connections are a problem. At times, the laptop stayed connected for 3-4 hours at a time. Other times, it disconnected after a few minutes and threw fits like that until it finally decided to maintain the connection again for hours.

I feel like this may be an issue with the laptop and potential wireless routers being used. I feel that's a reason why some people continue to have issues with Lenovo models and others don't. Still, for the price, give it a shot. You'll either love it because it works or hate to dislike it because, again, it's such a quality product in every respect but the wi-fi problems.

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The computer works as advertised, but I thought I was specifically ordering Window 7 installed. Instead I received it with Windows 8.

I'm slowly learning to cope with this turkey of an OS, but I'm not happy with Amazon. Friends suggested I return the computer for credit, but I didn't.

Norm

Read Best Reviews of Lenovo U410 14.0-Inch Ultrabook (Graphite Grey) Here

I purchased this laptop as a Christmas present for one of my family members. I have always been under the impression that Lenovo made really good laptops, and I think that the hardware on this particular model lives up to that reputation. However, the software side is what really disappointed me to no end Not just because of Lenovo, but also Microsoft.

Before I begin, be fore warned that Lenovo put a whole lot of bloat-ware on this machine. Plus there are like 6 different partitions, which is ridiculous. Just to test it out, I tried using the laptop before making any modifications, but it was really slow and clunky to use. Needless to say, it was a mess and would be a burden to use as is. It makes me wonder how many PC users out there ever experience how smooth and fast a stock Windows 8 machine really is when there is absolutely no bloat-ware getting in the way... It's my opinion that these manufacturers ruin the Windows experience and are primarily responsible for the bad rep that Windows gets...

The first thing that I always do when I buy a new laptop or desktop is to wipe the hard drive and re-install Windows (You will need Windows OEM discs to do this). Since this laptop comes with Windows 8 core installed, I had went ahead and purchased an upgrade to Windows 8 Pro because of the low price (which I had downloaded the install disc from MS). So I went ahead and wiped the HD, and proceeded to install Windows 8 pro... Only, I had encountered an error during the installation that prevented me from completing the install. And this is the part that you should pay attention to When Windows 8 comes pre-installed on a laptop, know that THE SOFTWARE KEY IS EMBEDDED IN THE BIOS. Meaning, if you purchase a laptop with Windows 8 core edition, the only way that you can upgrade the laptop to Pro or Ultimate is through the control panel to the "get more features with a new edition of Windows...". Microsoft's reasoning behind this is to make piracy more difficult. To me, as a system builder, it just adds an annoying step. So no more of the good ole' days when you could just simply wipe out a machine and reinstall whatever version of Windows you like on it, as long as you had a valid key.

Honestly, I had to jump through a lot of hoops to get this laptop going. Since I had already wiped out everything on the hard drive, I had to purchase the factory discs from Lenovo to reinstall Windows.

And after two sets, neither worked. Lenovo's tech support is awful, and they weren't any help. Plus, they are obviously located in India (which doesn't bother me because they were nice people, but they really had a hard time with English). Despite my aching wallet at this point, I then went ahead and purchased an OEM Windows 8 core disc. With that, I was able to re-install Windows on the laptop (which, because the product key is embedded in the bios, it was never asked for during the install). Once I got a clean install of Windows 8 core up and running, I tried multiple times to use the Windows 8 Pro key that I had previously purchased, within the "add features..." in control panel. Despite my efforts, I was never able to upgrade the version of Windows 8 from core to pro. I spent may hours on the phone with Microsoft, but they were no help. So finally, I just said screw it. At least it has a clean version of Windows 8 installed...

In the end, the laptop now runs a clean, bloat-free version of Windows 8 and has turned out to be a pretty good laptop. The only problem that I have run into now is that the touchpad driver will sometimes just stop working which will require a reboot to get it working correctly again. I will also note that this laptop comes with a 24GB SSD and a standard HD. The SSD is pretty much useless. However, if you want to upgrade the standard HD to a better SSD, you can do so very easily. The bottom cover comes off pretty easily, and there is a video on youtube on how to do so. You can also upgrade the memory easily.

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Toshiba Satellite P755-S5396 15.6" Laptop (Intel Core i7-2670QM processor)

Toshiba Satellite P755-S5396 15.6' LaptopI got this laptop and I am happy to report...I am extremely satisfied. It is sleek, fast, durable and long battery time...delivers as promised. I am an old custom tower PC and mainframe guy. I am so used to blazing speeds and this laptop delivers as a consistent work horse. I am pleased with the back lights too...helps to view the keyboard in dark lighting conditions. I am adding more memory and from a guy who actually had a water cooled custom PC tower and to have used some crazy fast mainframe systems...and seen some crazy stuff over the years...this laptop impressed me and that is not easy to do. So far...not one single problem and I have not even seriously optimized it yet. DVD drive ran well in making DVD copies...but the drive is near the electrical adapter...can annoy some people, but I am fine with that. Comes with lots of Toshiba software.

Internet comes up before you log in and stays up and on either system Internet Explorer or Google Chrome...runs nice and quick. Very few bumps in the road so far. This laptop for 2 months straight...even when pushed with several applications running. It never froze up once...so far anyway.

Windows 7 runs consistently well...but updates seem to be eating up too much space and that is a serious concern to me. I have used up 39 Gigs of space out of what is available...449 Gigs...and seriously I will get to the bottom of it, but...I think I have to turn off some type of logging programs, but updates seem to be hammering me the most and I am working on it.

The video cards respond very well to HD video and all videos play smoothly and all programs pop up without much lag time. For someone like me...who needs the speed and power and space and is a pretty advanced user...I am pleased with Windows 7 too on this system. I am someone who HAS TO run multiple programs and push it...and I love this laptop...making a mainframe and server tower type go GO MOBILE and have the same power on the run. LOVE IT>

This is my second Toshiba Satellite in 3 years. I wanted the Harmon Kardon speakers like my first satellite and these are the same great Harmon speakers. I like the keyboard but wish it had a small mark on the keys to tell when I am on the right key. Wanted the lighted keyboard but cannot get it with the Harmon Kardon speakers. There is a small button above the touchpad to turn it on and off, very convenient as I always use an externa mouse. I may upgrade the memory but so far it is working well for my excel spreadsheets and net surfing. Shipping was superb and got it earlier than promised.

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I was able to pick this laptop up at a local Fry's here in the Bay Area for $550 which I think is about the right price point. I bought my wife a Core i5 Vaio at the same time (and about the same price point) and I have to admit there is a significant build quality difference. It's funny back in "the day" when Vaio was the top of the heap it used to come with an endless array of useless-ware, now Toshiba has taken the crown. Perhaps for an entry level user all the extra stuff is great (and most of it was required pre-Windows 7) but that is not the case these days. I suppose that is the only real drawback to the machine and if that is all I can find to gripe about that is pretty small.

The good: In my price range (again ~$550 locally) it's a Core i7-2670QM, so you get the benefit of 4 cores (or what looks like 8 processors in taskmgr for the home user). Full size keyboard including a number pad, seems very reliable runs Ubuntu very well, big drive, nice crisp screen, and very good audio.. The keyboard is either a good or a bad, I am undecided I think I like the feel, I do Unix work in my real life so I am forever hitting the keyboard for terminal sessions.

Plenty of USB ports, button to disable the trackpad (sometimes a button with an indicator is the cats meow), wireless works fine (with Ubuntu I had major issues with my desktop-distro of choice Fedora 16, but I may try again). USB 3.0; HDMI out, integrated camera works fine, (though not as good as i5 Vaio at the same price point), 4GB RAM is fine for the home user.

The bad: My biggest gripe is that I continuously hit the trackpad with my left palm while using my right hand to reposition the mouse resulting in a ZOOM effect in 7. I use an external mouse usually and the button to disable the mousepad is great. Build quality is definitely lacking but I look at it this way, after having a stream of Apple MacBooks, iBooks, iMacs, MacBook Pro's this may feel somewhat flimsy but it is drop proof. I don't feel like it's going to break if I drop it (which has happened already). BUT; the quality is not going to blow you away, the hinge already had a crack when I pulled it out of the box but it's pretty minor, for 500 bucks not worth my drive back across the bay bridge since this thing is for in the house use only.

No bluetooth; sure I picked this thing up for 550 bucks, but still bluetooth is in the cheapest of phones these days it wouldn't have killed Toshiba to source a board with bluetooth. Battery life seems marginal for me but I'm mostly plugged in, and it's okay but nothing to write home about. Weird wireless issues with Fedora 16; weird display issues with OpenIndiana/Solaris 11, I realize most people won't use these but putting them here just in case a spider picks this up and someone searches for it.

Overall: For a few bucks (I got them here on Amazon) you can add 8GB RAM, and this thing runs like a champ. If you need to use *nix, VirtualBoxes, do some photo editing, or movie management for web uploading/sharing and don't want to pay an arm and a leg for an i7 look for this machine, like I said a weekend at Fry's it was going for 550, unbeatable at that price point, no complaints. For the home "PC" it replaces a circa 2006(?) Dell Core2 Vostro, so my bar was pretty high, that laptop was bullet proof and lasted for a very long time.(Reads not the 24" Intel iMac that had a drive die on it, nor the MacBook that had a motherboard go bad, nor the MacBook Pro that fell and had an LCD crack those were replaced by Sony's.)

But in all honestly if I had paid $700 I would probably have returned this box for another Sony VPCEG34FX Sony VAIO VPCEG34FX/B 14-Inch Laptop (Black), that is the other laptop I bought on the same day for about $530 locally. Even with the Core i7 for what I am doing there is little difference, and I think Netflix looks better on the Sony screen which is a bit higher dollar. I kept the Toshiba because, again for under 600 it's a great value, but if you are looking for a replacement laptop for yourself and you plan to travel with it and work on it daily then you may hold off until the price drops on this one.

As I would say when I lived back in Boston all of that and a buck twenty five will get you a ride on the T.

Read Best Reviews of Toshiba Satellite P755-S5396 15.6" Laptop (Intel Core i7-2670QM processor) Here

Acer Aspire V3-771G-6485 17.3-Inch Laptop (Midnight Black)

Acer Aspire V3-771G-6485 17.3-Inch LaptopBought this for my mom, despite the fact I hate windows 8.

she loves this laptop, and thanks me every time I go over to their house, I have used it for surfing the web, works very well and is fast. my mom plays flash games < pogo and facebook > and a few lighter games and they don't slow this pc down a bit,

Also, I bought a fan to go under the the laptop, but it doesn't get really hot like the last laptop she had. I would still recommend to ALWAYS have a external fan to set it on though to give it longer life.

I am a huge gamer, and I am actually jealous over this laptop. I know it would play all of my games, on at least low to medium settings with no issues. I wouldn't expect to play bf3 or crysis 3 on high though.

Upgrading to this laptop was a big step from my previous five-year-old one. I wanted my new laptop to be able to play games adequately, and couldn't afford a more expensive laptop. For the price, it's performance is actually better than I expected. I can play the games at want at top quality, with middling FPS (medium quality gets great fps). I use earbuds usually, but the speakers seem ok, with good volume. I was not sure how I was going to like Windows 8, having read that plenty of people are displeased with it, but I actually really enjoy it. Moving and docking windows is smooth and intuitive, and the start menu comes up quickly and due to filling the screen can fit many more programs, making it more efficient for me. Having had it for only little over a month, I can't vouch for it's build quality or longevity, but so far I've enjoyed it.

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I admit it took me a little while to get used to the windows 8 but aside from that this laptop is spectacular! It runs all my games in high settings and they run smooth and look beautiful! It is suprisingly light weight for being as huge as it is! Everything about it functions exactly as it should. The battery life is not super impressive but I didnt expect it to be just because the screen is so large and the graphics are so nice. If you are looking for a bussiness laptop or something SUPER portable then you are in the wrong place, but I would reccoment this laptop to any gamer or person who just wants a really fast and good looking comuter to to daily things at home with (aka: facebook, netflix, ect). Also I will say I was extremely pleased with the sound. The mini Dolby Home Theater sound bar packs quite a punch and has a vaugly surround sound feel to it! Oh and it also might be worth mentioning that the power cord is suprisingly long wich I love because I dont have to hug the wall to stay plugged in, I use my laptop on the couch, from bed and even in the kitchen when following video recipes and I never need an extension cord to stay plugged in! All in all, a fantastic buy, especialy for the price, you arent going to find a better gaming laptop for this cheap!

Read Best Reviews of Acer Aspire V3-771G-6485 17.3-Inch Laptop (Midnight Black) Here

I have used the laptop heavily and daily since I received it. I've played MMO's such as WoW (including raiding) and Defiance. Runs them smoothly. Good affordable option for the person who cannot afford top of the line. Great value for my dollars.

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I was looking at a number of similar laptops, and found a number in the same price range, but with significantly lower specs. This laptop was a great deal, and it's done quite well so far.

HP G62-407DX Notebook PC AMD Phenom II P650 2.6GHz - 15.6" LED Display / ATI Mobility Radeon HD / 3

HP G62-407DX Notebook PC AMD Phenom II P650 2.6GHz - 15.6' LED Display / ATI Mobility Radeon HD / 320GB HDD / 3GB DDR3 SDRAM / LightScribe SuperMulti 8X DVD±R/RW / Built-in HP webcam & microphone / 802.11b/g/n WLAN / Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bitI bought this laptop to replace my Compaq Presario 3640 w/Athlon 64 processor (0.8 GHz) when the LCD screen went out. I purchased it in 2004. I love AMD processors because they significantly reduce the price of laptops and desktops alike. I absolutely love my HP G62-407DX with it's AMD Phenom II P650 2.6 GHz processor. I needed a lightweight, fast, multitasking laptop with a decent screen size (15.6"in LED display) and a webcam. This laptop multitasks and allows me to connect most anywhere there is wi-fi. Windows 7 operating system (Home Premium 64bit) is better than I anticipated. I was only seconds from purchasing a MAC. Overall I am satisfied. If you are a superuser or a gamer this is not for you. If you send/receive email, bring some of your work home with you or just want a great mid level laptop then I would say buy this laptop. It has proved to be a great multimedia laptop and with a usb tv tuner you can DVR your favorite TV shows and plays well when connected to the pc port on my hd tv. It would be nice to have a 1080p resolution (only 720p display). Does not come with restore disk and it takes a long time create. If you need a good laptop for under $500.00 this is the one for you. In my case it was well under $400.00. I use mine to update my Cub Scout Pack website, desktop publishing and entertainment. Good webcam.

Tons of options. I use this note book for Amazon.com and tons of browsing. Windows 7 makes everything easier to navigate and figure out your computer if your as computer illiterate as me. HP support has been awsome despite the reviews Ive read about them. 3 usb ports,hdmi,mic in, headphone jack, wireless and ethernet supported dvd buner wwith lightscribe(just need the lightscribe disks), sd card input. But windows 7 makes it a good with the average seeds!

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This is supposed to be a faster processor, has more RAM, and a faster GPU than my wife's ancient HP dv6000 w/ 2GB RAM. But this computer is slooooower. Painfully slow.

Read Best Reviews of HP G62-407DX Notebook PC AMD Phenom II P650 2.6GHz - 15.6" LED Display / ATI Mobility Radeon HD / 3 Here

Update: I decided, I really don't like this computer anymore. It's runnign really slow. Takes one or two minutes to load to the startup/account menu. The body of the laptop/skin gets dirty and is hard to clean. The glossy black scratches fast. It's such a slow computer. And, the battery lasts me MAYBE an hour and ten minutes of just browsing the internet, on low screen light. I'm going to save up for an apple laptop. I've always had a good experience with apple.

________________

As a 14 year old, i'm up to date with the newest tech.

I like my products running fast, and working well.

I had been searching around for a laptop for awhile, and wanted something cool looking.

So heres some specs;

PROS:

Webcam looks pretty good,

Love the sound, pretty good quality

Easy keyboard,

Tons of cool programs,

Good for schooling.

CONS:

The mouse, it's pretty stupid.. but i manage since my wireless mouse broke.

the mouse buttons are hard to press untill you've used it for a few weeks.

my computer is starting to run kinda slow, and i'm hating that. i dont have many programs, music or files on here.

The USB ports are too close together, so my ipod cord and my USB flash drive cant be plugged next to eachother because they wont fit.

And of course, the battery. It DOES NOT last long, at all. which bugs me, because i have to bring my charger with me EVERYWERE. it lasts me maybe, 3 hours.

BUT, all in all. I do like this computer and hope to keep it for awhile. So i would reccomend.

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ASUS A53SD-TS71 Core i7 4GB/750GB NVIDIA GT 610M Laptop

ASUS A53SD-TS71 Core i7 4GB/750GB NVIDIA GT 610M Laptopgreat laptop, hard to beat for the price. plays all my games well, tho i cant run everything at full. which is a fine tradeoff, cant get better than this for the price.

Super fast and a very light laptop. Highly recommend Asus products after buying my first router from them. This laptop is no different. Great looking screen and the keyboard is designed for easy use and cleaning.

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Dell Latitude E6420 14" Notebook - Intel Core I5 I5-2520M 2.50 Ghz

Dell Latitude E6420 14' Notebook - Intel Core I5 I5-2520M 2.50 GhzPretty great laptop. Had no issue whatsoever with the screen like another reviewer said, worked great since day 1 for half a year now. Also installed linux ubuntu 11.10 on it, works like a charm the multitouch on the touchpad in ubuntu also runs great (there's a debian package for that). It's strong, powerful, and despite its tank-like build it's not as heavy as you'd expect. A friend has an older model of the series and 5 years later and a cup of coffee on the keyboard and it still works great.

I'm working on a degree in Computer Science and needed a laptop with good processing capability. After doing some research on the processors out there (I wanted at least an Intel I5), this laptop looked like a good choice for my price-point criteria. It does have good number crunching capabilities, but when I set up a mysql database on it and ran a database intensive program it maxed out the disk drive access (this is easy to monitor in Ubuntu). When I checked the programs running the database queries, I found they were using only small percentage of available CPU power. In other words, this laptop seems to have some IO limitations that keep it from making full use of the CPU (in some applications).

Outside of the IO bottleneck the laptop does fine. The bezel is a bit wide, making the effective screen space smaller, but the screen resolution is decent. As long as my eyes can make out the smaller fonts it is workable. The built in webcam and microphone work well. I tried training the speech recognition software in Windows 7 using the built in mics and it did OK. Perhaps I can use that later to dictate my dissertation...

All in all, I am fairly pleased with the laptop. I spent some time optimizing the database to see if that will help relieving the disk access limitations. We'll see how that works.

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Thia is a solid business machine for the money.

Pros:

3 Year Warranty

Built like a tank

I like the rubbery feel of the armrest.

Nice High Resolution screen.

Fast

Long battery life especially with the 9 cell battery

DELL stands behind their products (might take some time on hold but they have been excellent repsonding to my needs in the past)

Cons:

Touchpad needs to be adjusted in the software for best use it has many options and I recommend unchecking inertial scrolling.

Slightly heavier 1/2 pound? than similar 14 inch laptops I overlook this due to it's obviously better build quality.

Read Best Reviews of Dell Latitude E6420 14" Notebook - Intel Core I5 I5-2520M 2.50 Ghz Here

I've used this laptop for work, 8+ hrs a day, for the last 18 months, and the thing is a rock. Very stable, fast boot, overall very very happy my employer chose this model. I have had a number of laptops over the last 10 years, inlcuding Lenovo, Toshiba, Dell, Samsung. This is by far the best, even 2 years after it's release. Running Windows 7 Pro 32-bit.

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Been using this laptop for over a year now, and it has been rock solid. Great battery life and no hard drive issues. It runs applications quickly whether in Ubuntu 12.x, Windows 7, or even Windows 8. All have run great and without problems. I appreciate the simplicity of the system since it is primarily for business Office applications, browsing, and email. But there is still plenty of power to work in Photoshop, Lightroom, or other photo/video editing software. Gaming is limited by the built-in graphics card, but I'm sure you could find a few goodies to play on it. The primary downside of the system is the screen resolution 1366x768. So be sure to get the HD+ which permits 1600x900.

It also runs a bit hot, but remains silent even when the fans are working hard.

Overall, an aging, but still solid, choice for your business needs and/or limited media work.

Toshiba Portege Z835-P370 13.3-Inch Ultrabook (Silver)

Toshiba Portege Z835-P370 13.3-Inch UltrabookThe Toshiba Portege Z835-P370 is Toshiba's latest entry in a very competitive ultrabook market. Toshiba's aim here was to produce the lightest ultraportable laptop while maintaining some functionality and they've done a very nice job. The laptop weighs in at a hair over 2.5 pounds (which is about 3 slim magazines). This is a welcomed replacement to my eight pound 10 year old Apple Powerbook.

Structurally, the laptop is sound. You can pick up the laptop by one corner and the chassis will not flex nor bend. This is surprising considering how thin the laptop is. Conversely, the screen is very flexible and bends easily. I've read reports that the screen wobbles when you are typing with the laptop on your lap but I haven't experienced that at all. While the hinges are stiff enough, you wouldn't want to open the laptop screen with the corner of the screen. You would hold the screen from the center to open it.

The SSD is zippy and loading takes only 4-5 seconds from cold start and almost instantaneous from sleep mode. The i5 processor is very capable of handling the demands of most business users and casual gamers. The laptop never hiccuped when running Microsoft Office products with multiple documents or spread sheets open. While the laptop is not intended for gaming, I was able to play Star Craft 2 on the lowest settings without any lag at all. However, turning up the graphics settings slowed the game down quite a bit.

The only complaints I have so far:

spacing of the keyboard keys. The keys are spaced out in such a way that I tend to miss keys sometimes. It may be a good idea to go to a retail store and play with the keyboard for a bit to see if you like it.

built in webcam picture quality is slightly grainy not what I expected out of a laptop this expensive

fan noise in a quiet room, there is an audible hum coming from underneath the laptop, do anything processor/graphics intensive and the fan kicks into overdrive and can be annoying

Despite some shortcomings, my initial impressions have been very good thus far. This was my first laptop purchase online and I was a little hesitant that I wouldn't be happy but I have been nothing but pleased so far in the week that I've owned it. I'll be back in a few weeks to update my review after I've had a chance top play with it some more, but so far, I'd have to give it two thumbs up.

I'm giving this a Fiver. What a great little machine. At 2.5 pounds it's like the Jenny Craig of laptops. I did my due diligence research before I purchased and the Toshiba Ultras were rated highly on many different sites. Also I happen to work in the same lab as the Emerging Technologies group for my company and they had ordered 5 evaluation units from 5 different mfgs so I was able to compare them all straight up before purchasing. The Toshiba was definitely the winner and the Samsung Series 9 was very good also. The ACER, ASUS and HP were definitely trailing with the HP coming in last (sorry HP guys). The processor and ram specs were all very similar so I based a lot of my opinion on asthectics, keyboard layout, design and weight. I'm not going to go into so called "cons" like the size of the hard drive or lack of CD-ROM since the buyer knows these things up front anyway and if that won't work for you then look at another machine. A con to me is more like claimed performance not living up to expectations or a hardware component that is flakey. As far as the "heavy lifting" goes, you can do all the heavy lifting you want with the I5 processor as long as it's within the contraints of the capacity of the hard drive. I love the instant on feature and it truly does work as advertised. Along with Amazons usual kick butt fast shipping I'm very pleased with this purchase.

Buy Toshiba Portege Z835-P370 13.3-Inch Ultrabook (Silver) Now

After reviewing the Macbook Air 13, the Zenbook UX31 and the Toshiba Z835, I selected the Toshiba. In my opinion an ultra-book should include as many features of a standard size notebook as possible into the lightest, most compact form factor possible. The Z835 wins on the most ports and expansion options. The Z835 wins on being the lightest weight. The Z835 wins with having the most reasonable price. The MSRP is $1049.99, however OfficeMax had a sales promotion and the device was $949.00. On top of that, the Z835 also had all of the features I wanted including the i5 quad core processor, 6 gigabytes of ram, Bluetooth and HDMI out. I also like the sleep and charge USB port which allows me to charge my Clear hotspot, a huge plus because I don't have yet another ac adaptor to carry around. The subdued styling works for me being as I'm not crazy about shiny / polished gadgets. The keyboard is great with the key spacing and key travel just fine for me being as I'm a touch typist. The keyboard backlighting also works well for me. The multi touch touchpad is one of the best I've ever used. The response is extremely fluid and smooth. I've stopped using my arc touch mouse, it's that good. For such a small device, the sound system puts out high quality sound. Between the speakers and the audio enhancement software, the sound is excellent. The sound is also great on Bluetooth when I stream to my Plantronics BackBeat earphones. I normally stream music from jazzradio.com, digitally imported or audio galaxy so I've always got access to great tunes. When out taking pictures, I either use the included sd card slot or use my Eye-Fi 4 gig wi-fi card to transfer photos. Everything has worked without a hitch. With the i5 processor, 6 gigs of ram and the SSD, the Z835 is extremely fast and has handled everything I've given it with absolutely no performance issues. Being as I have not been on battery power that often, I can't accurately discuss battery life. However all of the reviews I read give it very high marks for battery life. About the only complaint I have is the small SSD. I hope when larger SSD's come available I can swap them out on my own. For now I carry my 1TB WD USB 3.0 drive, which contains all of my music, pictures, data and movies. For my school and personal files I use on a daily basis, I sync with my cloud based DropBox account. The Z835, along with my Apollo 4G hot spot have become my complete mobile solution, it is that versatile. No more tablet or smart phone and the associated data access plans that come with them. In my opinion the Z835-370 represents the best overall value of all of the ultra-books currently available. The Z835-370 comes highly recommended.

Read Best Reviews of Toshiba Portege Z835-P370 13.3-Inch Ultrabook (Silver) Here

I debated buying a Thrive or this and chose the laptop.

What's great:

+ Weighs very little and I can easily stow it in my leather padfolio case with expandable file.

I have gotten positive feedback on both. Be careful of making your executive team jealous!

Many a project manager and business analyst just want a lightweight PC for taking notes, recording a meeting,

processing email or surfing the web. Ideal match.

+ Thin! My LG phone is thicker than this notebook.

+ The Solid State Drive (SSD) is sweet. Instant on. No long boot times. Spoil me baby!

+ Includes 1 USB3.0 port and 2 USB2.0 ports, one of which is on the side, the rest on the back.

+ The Ethernet off the back is wonderful, being out of the way, though I had to get used to it being mounted upside down.

+ Anecdotal battery review: I unplugged at 10am this morning to use it in meetings all day and a working lunch and near 5pm

it was low and finally hibernated. 7 hours work without complaint? OK for my purposes.

What's not:

At 128GB, you start the Windows experience half-full. I upgraded from the Home version of Win 7 to Professional.

Now, I have 67 GB free. The formatted 128 GB is actually only 102 GB capacity, 67 GB now free.

Why oh why won't Toshiba make this product with 256 GB drives?

So, how do you get a little more space to buzz around with this tiny dancer laptop?

Well, while I bought a SanDisk Extreme Pro (45 mb/sec) SDHC card, I was wondering how it would play with the Portege.

Answer: Toshiba has a crappy 15 SDHC unit built in and all I could get out of it was 15 mb/sec.

Nevertheless, I am planning to pickup a slow (15 mb/sec) 64 GB SDXC card and check that for compatability.

Watch out for cooling. My first unit arrived and booted with an OS complaint the cooling system was not working. Exchanged!

The new unit arrived working fine, but I quickly learned the laptop is silent only when doing little or nothing.

If you dare to install something that requires CPU power, like a game, you will hear the fan ROAR as it tries to keep up

with the heat generation of the CPU. I dumped the games I installed immediately. Back to work I guess.

The screen is 1366x768, which is OK, but not great. This low res vertical is still one of the day-to-day

most annoying feature of laptops, when we live on the web and screen real-estate is king. 1024 would have made this an

awesome design, but it is only OK.

Last caution is that the thin screen is a handling risk. If it seems fragile (and it does) then it probably is fragile.

Get insurance.

Personally, I would have rounded the corners if I were on the engineering team, but the squareness fits in with the Microsoft

world. Haha, sorry MSFT.

So, am I happy with it? You bet I am!

Want Toshiba Portege Z835-P370 13.3-Inch Ultrabook (Silver) Discount?

I had the computer for one month and the screen malfunctioned. I sent it to Toshiba for them to repair it under warranty. Then about two to three weeks later I receive it back, with a copy of the warranty and a note saying the repairs are not covered but without stating the reason. What they did with it for three weeks is anyone's guess as I heard nothing from the company. After more hours on the phone with the company, it appears that any issues with the screen are assumed to be the customer's fault and Toshiba calls you a liar if you try to convince them otherwise. For comparison, I had an Asus whose screen malfunctioned after 11 months and they replaced it no questions asked. The computer itself is a fine machine but if you happen to get a lemon, you will get no love from Toshiba. So thanks to their policies, I will not look to purchase any Toshiba products in the future.

Update: After receiving it back from their repair facility, the computer would not charge or turn on when plugged in. Weeks more with the Toshiba repair facility await. What a horrible product

Apple MacBook Air MC969LL/A 11.6-Inch Laptop (OLD VERSION)

Apple MacBook Air MC969LL/A 11.6-Inch LaptopINTRODUCTION

I had considered buying the previous generation MacBook Air (pre July 2011) but just couldn't quite force myself to spend the money on machine that still used Intel's Core 2 Duo CPUs (despite the fact that the older Airs were still actually quite speedy). Apple was using the then newer generation Core i5/i7 CPUs on their other computers.

So when Apple updated their Airs with Intel's significantly faster Sandy Bridge i5/i7 CPUs, I became interested again. But, which size would be best for me?

11" VERSUS 13"

I've been struggling over this decision on which size 2011 MBA would be better. It's the usual dilemma with the 13" boasting pretty much better specs and battery life than the 11". Then I thought, well, the 13" is ONLY 2" larger diagonally, and ONLY weighs a "little" more (and ONLY costs a "little" more).

But the reality (for me) is that for a truly mobile device, like an iPad, only the MBA 11" has a shot at being mobile. The MBA 13" is great and certainly more mobile than a conventional MacBook Pro 13", but the MBA 13" is still IMHO more of a portable, than a mobile laptop.

The MBA 11" is actually mobile.

Once I realized this, there really was no longer a comparison to be made. They are two different devices. One being mobile and the other very portable. I have a 2011 MBP 17" which is my ultimate portable, and now my 2011 MBA 11" is my mobile computer.

PROS

1. Extremely fast CPU The MBA 11" comes with a Sandy Bridge 1.6 gHz dual-core Core i5 CPU (or a 1.8 gHz dual-core i7 directly from Apple). Despite rumors to the contrary, the Turbo Boost and hyper threading capabilities were NOT turned off in the Core i5 CPUs. Geekbench benchmarks show extraordinary speed increases. The previous generation MBA 11" 1.4 gHz Core 2 Duo produced 2024 on Geekbench, while the 2011 MBA 11" now produced 5040 for a 149% increase. This speed even rivals the 2010 MacBook Pro 17" which scored 5423! The 2011 MacBook Air 13" uses a slightly faster 1.7 gHz dual core i5 which scored 5860.)

2. Extraordinarily small! The MBA 11" measures 11.8 x 7.56 x 0.68 inches, while the MBA 13" is 12.8 x 8.94 x 0.68 inches. This means that the 11" is "only" 1 inch shorter and "only" 1.3 inches less deep, but in reality, when you hold up both machines, the MBA 11" feels like a completely different machine. My wife uses a 2011 MacBook Pro 13" which has a similar footprint to the MBA 13". The MacBook Air 13" still felt too much like a laptop, albeit an extraordinarily thin and light one.

3. Extraordinarily light! The MBA 11" weighs 2.38 pounds (while the MBA 13" weighs 2.96 pounds and an iPad 2 weighs 1.35 pounds I actually sometimes hold the MBA like an iPad while reading in bed because it's so light. If you are seeking just a light, portable laptop, then the weight of the MBA 11" or 13" would be great, but if you (like me) are seeking a truly mobile device, then even fractions of a pound matter. The MBA 11" weighs less and is consequently the better choice, but as amazingly light as it is, even lighter would be better. Its doubtful that a mobile device will ever exist that would be considered too light.

4. High-speed Thunderbolt (i.e. Lightpeak) port offering bidirectional 10 gigabits/s throughput Thunderbolt technology is far more revolutionary than USB 3.0 or eSATA. Thunderbolt is NOT limited to the use of a storage device. An external LCD can be attached. Although I use the MBA 11" as my mobile device, it may be acceptable as a primary computer if one attaches an external LCD display and a high-speed Thunderbolt drive. Supposedly an external Thunderbolt hard drive would be nearly as fast as an internal hard drive.

5. Everything is solid state! This MBA feels more like a true "mobile" device since it is fully solid state with its solid state drive. I am far less worried about damaging this versus other laptops I've owned in the past.

6. Extremely fast cold starts and shutdowns thanks to the solid state drive and OS X.

7. Great, full-size keyboard AND keyboard backlighting is back again! While this may seem like a minor point, the previous generation Core 2 Duo Airs did not have the backlighting.

8. The battery life between the 11" and the 13" was only found to be 36 minutes shorter for the 11" (and NOT the 2 hours claimed by Apple) for light usage by Anandtech (...). The battery life is Apple (conservatively) rated at 5 hours (compared to 7 hours for the MBA 13" and also 7 hours for my MBP 17"). Apple's battery life ratings have become much more stringent in the past few years are much closer to real world usage. I am indeed able to use my 11" for about 6 hours with light usage, which is much better than Apple's claimed 5 hours.

9. Tremendous, typical Apple build quality. The MBA feels like a piece of solid precision crafted machinery.

10. Same great glass trackpad with even more gestures in OS X Lion to be used.

11. Comes with the new Mac OS X Lion (which I won't discuss, but it will allow for apps to use a full-screen mode which is of benefit to MBA 11" owners)

12. Extraordinary aesthetics I can't express adequately in words how beautiful this machine looks.

CONS

1. Although I have a Samsung LCD, the vertical and horizontal viewing angles are not nearly as good as on my 2011 MBP 17". It's still more than acceptable, but it's something that MacBook Pro owners will probably notice.

2. Some MBAs come with a Toshiba solid-state drive which is not necessarily a con, but this may bother some users. In real world usage, I have read that one cannot detect any speed differences, but if you like to run benchmarks, then the Toshiba drives in the 128 GB size seem to be slower than the Samsung 128 GB drives in certain benchmarks.

3. MBAs come with either a Samsung or LG LCD panel. It's not clear what the differences are between them. There is pure speculation and mostly fear that one panel is superior to the other, but I have seen comparison photos of both types of displays, and the only difference I can notice is an extremely slightly warmer look to the LG panel. BUT this was on computers that did not have the screens color calibrated. In any case, I can state clearly that my 2011 MacBook Pro 17" display is vastly superior in color and viewing angles, but they are completely different machines.

4. There is no SecureDigital memory card slot on the 11" MBA, although there is one in the larger 13" size. I can't believe I got another Mac laptop WITHOUT a SD slot! My 17" MBP doesn't have one either while the smaller MBPs do! And now, the smaller MBA doesn't have one while the larger one does! I wonder if I'll ever get a Mac with an SD card slot!)

TIPS

1. Believe it or not (do a Google search) but if you use Adobe's Flash, your laptop battery life will most likely be significantly shorter. Some reports show that having Adobe flash turned off allows for 2 hours of additional battery life.

2. I purchased the MBA 11" with standard 1.6 gHz Core i5 and am happy with this. If you get the built to order ones from Apple, you can upgrade your 11" to include the same 1.8 gHz Core i7 that's also available as an upgrade on the MBA 13". Anandtech has found that the 1.8 gHz Core i7 upgrade produces significantly faster benchmarks >20% speed difference without a shorter battery life. The i7 upgrade did produce significantly more heat, however.

3. If you do not need a truly mobile laptop, then the MBA 13" is probably better for most people's needs as a standard conventional laptop (albeit very light, thin, and also beautiful).

4. If you absolutely must have USB 3.0, and you can wait, then you should know that Intel's next future CPU/chipset for Ivy Bridge will allow for native USB 3.0 support.

CONCLUSION

There is no such thing as the perfect computer for everybody just as there is no single tool for every task for every person. I needed a truly mobile laptop to fit with my lifestyle and work needs, which for me included a smartphone, tablet, mobile laptop, and a large laptop/desktop replacement. For the right person, this MBA 11" is truly in a class of its own.

I've been waiting for a new computer for my wife, something that she can use both as her desktop computer attached to a monitor, mouse and keyboard and still take along on business trips around the world. Ideally, something she could throw in her big purse and go. The previous edition of the MacBook Air was close, but too compromised in terms of processor speed. The Air is perfect for her.

At this writing, Amazon is selling two versions of the 11.6 inch MacBook Air, an i5 model with 2GB of RAM and 64 GB of SSD storage, and this model with 4GB or RAM and 128GB of storage . You can order elsewhere a third model with an i7 processor, 4GB of RAM and 256 GB of SSD storage--the i7 is the low voltage 2 core version. This review aims at helping the consumer decide if a MacBook Air is the computer for them, and if so, which one. I think most people will find this model, the middle model to be more than adequate but some will need to seek out the larger capacity version, while some can get along with the lower capacity version as a second computer.

The strengths:

This computer is fast. The combination of a Solid State Drive (SSD) hard drive and an i5 (or optionally an i7) processor make this the fastest computer I've ever used, and I have a 2011 13" MacBook Pro as my personal computer. The SSD gives it a qualitative responsiveness--application launching, task switching--which any spinning disk laptop will be unable to match. Quantitatively, it more than keeps up with its larger siblings in CPU intensive tasks. For example, my big laptop can compile a large, commercial application I maintain using Xcode 4 in 9 minutes 38 seconds, this tiny sub notebook can do the same in 9 minutes 5 seconds. Whichever computer is literally the fastest isn't relevant, what is relevant is that Air buyers are no longer trading speed for portability.

This computer is portable. I went to the local Apple Store and compared the 11.6 to the 13 inch MacBook Air, and while the 13 is extremely portable it is not a good fit for a woman's purse. This 11.6 can nearly get lost in a purse, I can imagine my wife hunting around for a few seconds trying to find it. It's ridiculously small.

Battery life when not under heavy load is good. I can web browse, and as long as I stay away from Flash websites, can do it for several hours. However, under load the 5 hours Apple promises for wireless web browsing becomes sub two hours. If the fan is on, the battery will not last, so it becomes time to figure out which page is running Flash, or which application is hogging all the CPU cycles. The larger Air has more room for a battery and thus has a longer battery life. The battery life of my MacBook Pro is certainly at least an hour or two longer under the same approximate load.

The screen is beautiful and crisp. Color balance and contrast seem superior to that of my MacBook Pro's (which isn't bad either). Viewing angles are good but not the spectacular IPS angles of an iPad. I had been wary of dropping down to the 11 inch screen from the 13 inch of my MacBook Pro, but I think I could work all day at this size especially if all I were doing was web browsing or video watching. I wouldn't want to edit videos or do long term software development at this size, but of course there is a Thunderbolt port and with the appropriate MiniDisplay adaptor I could attach it to any monitor. This will spend most of its life attached to a 21 inch LCD.

The keyboard is thankfully backlit. Typing is reasonably comfortable, although I'd prefer another milimeter or two of key travel. Again, this will spend most of its life attached to an external keyboard so it doesn't matter much but I much prefer the touch feel of my MacBook Pro.

The trackpad is large and Lion ready for all your taps, pinches, swipes (one, two, three and more fingers). Apple is renowned for its trackpads and this is no exceptions. Perfect finger feel, no stutters, accurate tracking.

Build quality. This is not some shoddy plastic netbook. The unibody construction is amazingly rigid and could be used to bludgeon an attacker in a pinch (and still keep on downloading).

The weaknesses:

Storage size is a bit cramped, especially at the lower price points. I think the 64GB model targets users looking to keep all of their documents, images, videos, music in "the cloud" and while I'm sure people will live in the cloud in the future, most of us live on Earth with our limited speed Internet connections. The larger capacities are fine for many people, including my wife, but not for me, I have too many videos, photos, and music files filling up my MacBook Pro to compress myself even down to the 256GB model.

There are not many ports on the box. Two USB ports, a headset port and a Thunderbolt port are limited. I purchased a USB to Ethernet adaptor which takes up one of the two precious USB ports--or pushes me into using a desktop USB hub--but I refuse to use WiFi on a desktop computer. Apple has announced a Thunderbolt version of its well regarded but expensive Cinema display for release in September and that will relieve most port complaints (replaced by I have to pay a thousand dollars for a monitor with a Firewire port? complaints).

Fan noise under load is a bit loud. Surprisingly, this computer which is dead silent until the fan kicks in can be pretty loud due to the small space available for the fan vent.

The FaceTime camera is weak compared to the cameras in the Air's larger cousins. It's OK, but not the spectacular clear FaceTime HD of the camera in my laptop.

This is not a gaming laptop. The one performance compromise is the lack of a proper discreet GPU. The integrated Intel HD 3000 is OK, probably as fast as the last generation NVidia 320M used in the previous Air, but not something you'll want to throw the most demanding game at. It will be fine for watching video on, and just about anything else but high end gaming. This is the same GPU in my 13" Pro laptop.

The maximum memory capacity of the Air, despite being a 64-bit computer, is 4GB. This is a shame as RAM is cheap these days; I have 8GB on my MacBook Pro. The SSD is upgradeable although online prices for the unusual SSD on a board used in the Air are amazing; maybe in a couple years it will make financial sense to upgrade. The lowest model has only 2GB of RAM and that may be too low for many combinations of applications, or when running a virtual machine.

The lack of an optical drive. I had a USB DVD drive already but many will not. Apple will sell you a pretty one, but in most cases any cheap USB drive will do. The only time my wife used her optical drive on her old computer was once a year to install TurboTax, so this will not be a big problem for her. I did have a problem installing Windows 7 using the Parallels Desktop virtual machine in that the virtual machine would not see my cheap optical drive to install Windows. I ended up using Disk Utility to make an ISO disk image of the Windows installer disk and use that as image for installation. My advice here is to not buy an optical drive but wait to see if you actually need one. We are in a future where a household only needs one shared USB optical drive.

The lack of an SD slot reader. I use the reader in my larger notebook several times a week. The larger Air has a reader, and while USB SD card readers are cheap, they are also awkward, often slower and easily lost.

The expense. On a per pound basis, this is the second most expensive object I have ever purchased. My wife will mainly be using it to run Windows software, and I guess I could have gotten a netbook for traveling at a third (or less) the price. I felt it important to get a high performance computer that she could replace her desktop with too, one with a nice screen and a decent keyboard. The previous Air wasn't there yet, this is.

Tidbits:

This laptop ships with Apple's new operating system OS X 10.7 (Lion), which means new users will be getting used to the more gestural iOS like elements of OS X, as well as the infamous upside down scrolling. Thankfully, Lion is a solid release. As a developer, I've had many fewer problems with it than the previous 10.6 release which was a string of pain. Users should know that 10.7 dropped support for PowerPC applications so longtime Mac users should check that all their needed applications are Intel or Universal.

I've installed Windows 7 under the Parallels Desktop VM on this box, and it works well. I gave the virtual machine its own core and 2GB of memory and it is zippy fast. This was the main reason for moving my wife to a new box, the 5 year old Core 2 Duo she had been using was starting to slog under the weight of dozens of Excel spread sheets and scores of browser tabs. I don't know how well a VM would run on the smaller capacity model--splitting a mere 2 GB RAM and finding room to install Windows on the meager hard drive.

There are reports online that some units ship with Samsung SSD drives, and some ship with slower Toshiba SSD drives. There is no way to guarantee getting the faster drive, and you may not notice anyway. This review was based on a laptop with a Samsung drive.

Which to Buy:

There are 6 different configurations of MacBook Air. I chose the i7 4GB of RAM 256GB of SSD 11 inch model--a model available in Apple's brick and mortar stores or as a custom build. This is the more portable model and has an adequate RAM and fairly good hard drive capacity. I had been thinking of getting the 13 inch version, but on looking at them in the store, I realized the extra portability and the usability of the screen was enough to make the smaller version preferable. If you don't have a purse and will be putting the laptop in a case anyway, get the 13 inch version, everything will be a bit less cramped, the battery life will be longer and you'll have an SD reader built in. I actually only purchased the i7 because that's what came with the 256GB SSD, it probably isn't worth a premium over the i5 models for what the typical Air user would be using it for.

11-Inch i5 64 GB 2GB RAM -> People with no media who want a fast web browser, or as a second computer

11-Inch i5 128GB 4GB RAM -> People with little media who run applications occasionally on the go (Most People)

11-Inch i7 256GB 4GB RAM -> People with applications with high performance requirements such as running a VM

13-Inch i5 128GB 4GB ->People with little media who run applications occasionally on the go, like a larger screen over portability

13-Inch i5 256GB 4GB -> People needing a larger screen and high performance.

13-Inch i7 256GB 4GB -> People with applications with high performance requirements such as running a VM and a larger screen

Compared to Other Laptops:

I'll be keeping my 13" MacBook Pro with its much larger disk capacity. Replacing the 750GB laptop drive in my Pro with an SSD would be ridiculously expensive. Also, I like having an SD card reader, a high resolution camera, an Ethernet port and a Firewire port. In most other ways this Air is superior. The Air has a better screen, is much more portable, and with the SSD is noticeably more responsive.

Compared to the larger MacBook Pros. The larger models have real GPUs and bigger screens, and I think are only of interest to people with specialized needs: gamers or people who need to do video editing on the go. They won't be much faster at anything not requiring the GPU. I'm just not the kind of person who'd buy a 17" laptop. It wouldn't fit on my lap. I was at a neighbor's house today and the college bound daughter had just bought a monstrous HP desktop replacement portable, and it was ridiculous, just get a smaller laptop and an external monitor so you have the option of portability--or spend less money and get a desktop.

Compared to Windows laptops. If I wasn't such a consistent purchaser of Apple hardware, I'd have taken a hard look at the i3 version of the Samsung Series 9. It might be a bit more expensive (yes really), and has a lesser processor but for pure Windows use it seems like a fine piece of hardware in this ultra thin category.

In Summary:

This is a great laptop. Apple's going to sell millions of them. If it fits your needs and you have the cash you will likely be happy with it. I know people with the previous generation Airs, and they love them, and this Air is all that and twice as fast. However, be sure it fits your needs, check to see what your disk space requirements are. Check to see if you have any PowerPC applications which need to be updated. Maybe you'll need the extra battery life of the larger models. Go to an Apple Store and try out the keyboard, maybe the short key travel will drive you nuts. Maybe the short wide screen of the 11 inch will make you feel like you are browsing the web through a mail slot. Maybe you could get a refurbished last years model for a smaller amount and make do with the lesser processor. In short, because this is a pricey little laptop, you have to be sure its the one for you.

Buy Apple MacBook Air MC969LL/A 11.6-Inch Laptop (OLD VERSION) Now

MAKE SURE TO DOUBLE CHECK THE SPECIFICATIONS TO THE PRICE!

When Amazon sells out, the 3rd party retailers jack up their prices on the cheaper models to try and confuse customers into thinking they're getting a better deal than they really are!

For example, Apple's base 11" MacBook Air is $999, but after Amazon sold out, there were 3rd party retailers selling them for $1199 (the price of the upgraded 11" model) even $1299 and $1499, Priced WAY above MSRP!!!

Do not be fooled, make sure you know what you are getting and don't just assume because it costs $1200, that you're getting the $1200 model!!!

Read Best Reviews of Apple MacBook Air MC969LL/A 11.6-Inch Laptop (OLD VERSION) Here

I was in the market for a new laptop with the following requirements: small size, lightweight, has enough horsepower to run Adobe CS5 and Microsoft Office, had a lighted keyboard, and excellent battery life. My last 3 laptops have all been Windows laptops, but were in the 15-17" size range and a bit too large to be convenient.

When I read about people running Windows 7 on the latest MacBook Air's I took a long look at the product. At first I was a little taken back by the specs of the smallest 11" MacBook Air, which was about $100 more than my previous 15.6" Windows laptop but my Windows laptop had an HD screen, Blu-ray/DVD-R drive, 16GB of RAM, and a 650GB hard drive the works. I was asking myself if I was seriously thinking of replacing my high-spec 15.6" Windows laptop with an 11" Apple laptop that costs more and has less features? After all that was said and done, I decided on the 11" MacBook Air with the Intel Core i5 processor, 4GB of RAM, and 128GB SSD hard drive, and here's why:

1. PERFECT SIZE

You can read the measurements of the MacBook Air on Apple's website, you can even go into an Apple store and see one for yourself, but let me tell you you will never really get a feel for just how small the MacBook Air is until you have your own, on your lap on the couch, or at the foot of your bed while watching TV... when you actually use items as part of your daily routine you tend to notice more of the details. I chose the 11" over the 13" because I wanted something small and light and the 11" MacBook Air is both.

Size-wise the MacBook Air with its lid closed is barely an inch longer than an iPad 2 and can easily be mistake for one if it's left sitting on the table. Though the weight is about twice that of an iPad 2 (a shade under 3 lbs. according to my scale) you don't really notice it. Yet it's small enough to be able to cradle with one hand or hold up like a tablet. If I went with the 13" I would basically have a slightly smaller laptop than my previous one, and that wasn't what I was looking for. The 11" MacBook Air is truly portable, it's small enough to fit inside my car glove box.

2. SYSTEM PERFORMANCE (Updated 0916/12)

I had read about how OSX handles memory differently compared to Windows machines, and I'm not sure how much of this is actually true but for a machine with "only" 4GB of RAM, the MacBook Air sure does feel faster than my previous Windows laptop (same Core i5 processor but with 4x RAM!). I'm sure part of the speed bump has to do with the MacBook Air having an SSD instead of a magnetic hard drive, but there's just something else that makes this machine zoom. Start-up from a power-off state is measured in a matter of seconds, not minutes like on a Windows machine.

Programs launch fast, and I have yet to experience any system lag or slow-down; I did a test by running the following programs simultaneously: Adobe Photoshop CS5, Adobe Dreamweaver CS5, Microsoft Excel, iTunes, Google Earth, Google Chrome and VLC Player. I had documents open in each Adobe/Microsoft program, music playing in iTunes, a sample movie playing on VLC, and streaming video in Chrome while I used Google Earth and the MacBook Air didn't even flinch. I could switch from program to program and there was no slow-down whatsoever. Being a primarily Windows guy for the better part of 15 years, this was refreshing.

UPDATE: I wanted to add some notes about gaming and multimedia performance. With low-medium level games (App Store games mostly) the Macbook Air handles them fine. When I play more graphics-intensive games (i.e. Portal 2, Need For Speed) the internal cooling fan will come on after about 10 minutes. This is expected though, as the Air wasn't designed to be a full-spec gaming machine that said it can still do it if needs be. As for multimedia, I have yet to see a stutter when watching movies. I often run Netflix with a Thunderbolt-to-HDMI cable through to my 34" HDTV, and video playback is smooth. Finally, when I use real-time DJing software (Serato Itch and Virtual DJ in both audio and video mixing mode) I can set latency to minimum The fan does come on when using Serato for extended lengths which is understandable, since my Macbook Air's current configuration is slightly short of the "minimum recommended" system specs for Serato but even if it's running a little hot, there is no visual, audible, or program response lag at all.

3. USER INTERFACE

I remember trying to use a Windows netbook once and absolutely hated it the keys felt cheap, the layout felt cramped, and response was sporadic. I was initially concerned that the 11" MacBook Air keyboard would feel the same, but when they say "full-sized keyboard" they mean it. I can type just as fast on the MacBook Air as I can on a regular desktop keyboard. The spacing of the keys, and more importantly the feel of the keys, is excellent. The latest MacBook Air's (mid-2011+) have a lighted keyboard (which mine does) and they implemented it perfectly. I like the fact that you can set the keyboard lighting to a comfortable brightness, and then OSX will automatically adjust the brightness compared to ambient light automatically.

Being a Windows user I was also wondering if I would be able to use Apples "single button track pad" but you know what? It only took me an hour or two to get used to using the track pad and OSX's very useful multi-touch gestures. One thing that caught my eye about the track pad it's very precise. In Adobe Photoshop I can control the cursor with precision that I could only match with a mouse on a Windows machine. My previous Windows laptops' track pads pale in comparison, so much that I would always factor in a wireless mouse into the budget when buying a Windows computer.

4. EXTRAORDINARY SCREEN

For being only 11" in size, the MacBook Air's screen is amazing. Initially I thought I'd have something similar to a Windows Netbook due to the size similarities, but the MacBook Air's display is more comparable to my previous 15.6" 1080 HD laptop. Type is crisp, and the only time you'll realize that you're working with a smaller screen is if you run programs that use fixed-size pallets.

5. EXCELLENT BATTERY LIFE (Updated 09/16/12)

With normal usage (web browsing, mail, some YouTube visits, etc.) I get around 5.5-6 hours in between charges. When I have to use Adobe CS heavily that drops down to around 4.5-5 hours from my experience. It's weird not having to plug the AC adaptor into the MacBook Air every night before I sleep (which is what I used to do with my Windows computer.)

UPDATE: 7 months into ownership, I decided to see how the battery has held up. I used a timer widget on the OSX dashboard, and started with 100% battery. Throughout the test I was doing normal web browsing using Google Chrome, iTunes was playing music in the background, and I also had an Excel spreadsheet and a Word document open that I was working on. For reference I had WiFi on, Bluetooth off, screen brightness was at 8 bars (50%), keyboard backlight brightness was at 4 bars (25%), and volume was at 12 bars (75%). I used the laptop as I normally would, allowing the battery to run down as far as it would; even after the Air gave me the 8% warning, I kept computing as usual until it finally shut down on it's own. After a minute I connected the Magsafe adaptor to the Air, restarted the computer, and the battery indicator was at 1% and charging. The timer widget indicated 5 hours, 53 minutes, and 33 seconds before complete shutdown when starting from 100% full charge excellent performance I'd say. Oh by the way, this "test" was done with Mountain Lion 10.8.1 not the original Lion OS that came with the laptop when I bought it which contradicted the reports of Mountain Lion being a battery hog, at least compared to what I experienced during this test!

6. THE LOOK AND FEEL OF QUALITY

From its aluminum unibody to the texture of the keyboard keys to the responsiveness and precision of the track pad, you know that the MacBook Air is a high-quality product. Nothing feels cheap from the way the screen hinge moves to the fact that every external port is machined into the aluminum body, not a plastic faceplate. Even the Magsafe power connector snaps into place with a convincing click. There is no Windows laptop this size that I've ever seen that can match the quality that the MacBook Air possesses and believe me, I shopped around A LOT for a Windows laptop before I chose the MacBook Air. Did I forget to say that the MacBook Air looks beautiful? Well it does.

7. STUFF I MISS... SORTA

Nothing is perfect, but the MacBook Air is pretty close. I do miss having a built-in SD card reader (the 13" MacBook Air does have a built-in card reader) but I can easily plug in a $5 SD card reader into one of the USB ports and I'm set.

There is no built-in HDMI or VGA output port, but with a profile this thin it's understandable. To remedy this I bought a Mini Display port-to-HDMI adaptor (the new Thunderbolt port also doubles as a Mini Display port) in order to put Skype on my HDTV when talking to relatives overseas.

I was well aware before purchase that the MacBook Air did not have an internal optical drive, but after a few weeks of daily usage, guess what? I don't miss it at all. Thinking back to my old laptop, I probably only used the Blu-Ray drive once for movies, and only a handful of times to burn DVD or music CDs.

8. ONE MORE THING OSX MOUNTAIN LION (Updated 09/16/12)

Remember how initially I was looking into installing Windows 7 as my primary operating system onto the MacBook Air for the ultimate portable Windows machine? Well I did try Windows 7 on the MacBook Air using OSX's Boot Camp Assistant. I had a fresh Windows 7 installation in place, and then I realized that I'd have to do Windows Update. Then I would have to install Service Pack 1. Then I'd have to install all my Windows programs and update those as well. And then I realized that I'd have to run anti-virus software and a firewall. It became such a hassle that I decided to try OSX Lion out as my primary operating system, and I set out to use OSX daily, to see if I could use OSX as comfortably as Windows 7. After 3 weeks (give or take a day or two) I was so comfortable and adept at using OSX especially the multi-touch gestures that I deleted the windows 7 partition completely and I ended up sticking with OSX Lion. I still run Windows 7 on my desktop, but on the MacBook Air there's nothing like Lion. This coming from a die-hard Windows user should tell you something. I'd suggest that if you are a Windows user, give OSX a shot you'll probably end up liking it, and then you'll probably ask yourself why you put up with Windows all this time.

UDPATE: I updated the operating system to Mountain Lion when it was released, and unlike some reports of higher battery drain, I have not experienced this at all with the Macbook Air. I have Notifications active, as well as iCloud syncing of Notes, Reminders, and Contacts. I also use iTunes syncing over WiFi for my iPhone, and battery life doesn't seem to be affected (see more detailed info in the "EXCELLENT BATTERY LIFE" section, above.)

IN A NUTSHELL

So what rating do I give the MacBook Air? A solid 5 stars. If you look at the first paragraph in my review, the MacBook Air met or exceeded all of my requirements. The MacBook Air is perfect for those of you who want something portable, fast, and comfortable to use all while having a high-quality look and feel compared to the competition. If the price concerns you, it's understandable given that there are larger Windows laptops out there for the same price, or smaller Windows laptops at a lower price. In this case however, you absolutely get what you pay for the quality, the system performance, and of course the ease of use that Apple is very well known for.

I am so glad I switched to a MacBook Air, and I'm sure you will be too!

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hi there

i am not going to go into a deep review, as there are already a lot of reviews out there covering the same things. but I will talk about special things that other reviews may not have covered. I personally have owned the 2010 11" and 13" airs, and I currently own the 2011 macbook pro 15" and 2011 11" air. the 15" is about 2x the processing power as the air (according to geekbench), but it lacks an SSD for faster daily tasks.

-on Engadget, they recently covered that the 11" air has a faster SSD than the 13" ones. not a difference you'll notice but still a nice excuse to purchase a smaller one :) (it was something like 240mbps vs 180mbps estimated)

-the battery life on the 11" is actually down from the previous generation by about 30 minutes on battery saving settings. Last gen can get about 7 hours, this one is just over 6 (about 25% brightness, web browsing only). Also, air's battery life plummets if it does moderate to heavy processing (flash, photo/movie editing, gaming), the pro's battery life goes down, but by much less.

-online benchmarks show that the 2011 11" air is about 2.5x faster in processor speed than the 2010 model. however, if you never used an i5 or i7 processor before, know that you will also be able to multitask a lot better than the old core2duos. for example, you can edit in iMovies and photoshop at the same time (something that will lag the crap out of the old generation).

-DO NOT WORRY ABOUT THE SCREEN SIZE. with Lion, applications can take advantage of its fullscreen function. For example, for many native applications like Safari, Mail, Calendar, etc, you can fullscreen them and they'll take up the entire screen, however, they dont actually take up the main desktop screen, but a whole new screen on its own. if you have multiple fullscreen apps, you can use 4 fingers to flick between them, fast and efficient. I owned the last gen air 11" with 10.6 SL, and it was a bit frustrating having multiple windows open, i usually have to minimize most of them. Now, you can browse in full 11" screen, and use 4 fingers to flick to check your mail.

-keyboard and trackpad have more of an "umfph" feeling to them. a bit more resistance than the older models. the 2010 air was my first mac, and i was disappointed a bit by the light and cheap feeling keyboard, but the 2011 made it right.

-FYI, if you never owned a macbook, the "instant on" feature is actually in all the unibody MacBooks and Pros, but they are just a bit slower than the air's. so don't think of it as a feature only the air has, it's just a bit faster.

-you can't change anything in the air once bought, unlike the pro.

-screen quality is actually worse than the Pro line up. Yes the air has more pixel density, but the vertical viewing angle is pretty bad. it is NOT made of the same screen as the Pro and iPad (IPS), however, it is a matte screen so a much better screen in the sun. i owned both the 11" and 13", the viewing angle problem was much more noticeable on the 13" just because the screen is bigger. I always found myself adjusting the 13" screen every time i move a bit.

-2gb ram is enough to run lion just fine.

-sound seems to be slightly louder on the 13" vs 11". 11" sound is TINY. i always turn it to max whenever i'm watching videos. headphones are a must.

-if you are deciding between a pro vs air, in general, i would say go with the pro if you do professional work with photo/movie editing, hardcore gaming (at least 15in), or if you plan on buying or already have a tablet. go with the air if you are a light user, want a tablet replacement. Owning an air and a tablet is a huge waste of money.

-I would personally recommend the 1.6ghz, 4gb, 128ssd 11" macbook air. I believe that is the most useful and "bang for the buck" you can get vs the rest of the lineup. but everyone's preferences are different.

All in all, my only complaint about this air is the price. the $1200 macbook pro 13" vs the $1200 11" macbook air, the air has a better hard drive, but thats it. it's using less material to make, a slower processor, smaller battery, small and worse screen, less ports, i would think Apple can price it less than the macbook pro. basically, less everything, but paying the same price because it has a good design. thats my 2 cents at least. $899 for the entry model would shut me up :)

Hope this will help you decide.

Toshiba Satellite L755D-S5359 15.6-Inch LED Laptop - Brushed Aluminum Blue

Toshiba Satellite L755D-S5359 15.6-Inch LED Laptop - Brushed Aluminum BlueI seem to always go to Amazon when I want to venture into new unfamiliar territory on products because I can lean on the reviews to get an idea if I'll be happy with the product. Well this was the first time I bought something that did not have a review! After researching a few laptops in this price range I was torn between this laptop and another one with good reviews but this laptop is a quad core AMD and the other was a dual Pentinum. Since I was down sizing from a quad core pentinum gamer desktop I didn't know if I'd be happy with a dual core or an AMD since I never had one before.

After using this laptop for over a month and doing everything from surfing the net, watching a movie, editing in Photoshop, and making a 5 minute movie in Windows Live Essentials this laptop does everything I need it to and as quickly as I hoped. I'm very happy with it.

We ordered this computer for my 13 year old son. While he needs it for school, he also likes to play games like Minecraft, Amnesia, and Skycraft. This computer can handle remarkably new games with its quad core processor. Can you run it rates the processor at 3.1 ghz when you're testing to see if your computer can play a game. The built in graphics card is much better than the intel HD series for laptops. Plus, Toshiba builds solid computers (my son's prior Toshiba lasted 5 years until it finally fell apart...not bad for a computer that started it's life with a 9 year old). The only issue is that Toshiba's warranty process is weird if the computer was manufactured over 6 months ago. It took me 3 phone calls to service and an email to finally get the warranty registered (although having owned 3 Toshiba's I have never, ever had to make a warranty claim).

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I got this laptop for my daughter for college. She loves it! She was able to set it up completely on her own, and has been using it often. It is easy to use, fast to turn on, and processing is quick.

Read Best Reviews of Toshiba Satellite L755D-S5359 15.6-Inch LED Laptop - Brushed Aluminum Blue Here

This machine runs very well. It says I have to write fifteen more words. What else do I need to say? Oops, that was 16 words.

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I bought this computer for me and my boys to use. This is the first Toshiba that I have ever owned, and I love it. It has really good graphics and the sound is also good. I wanted to wait a while before I wrote this review to make sure that nothing went wrong. It has now been over a month and I haven't had any problems at all. I would recommend this computer to anyone.

Toshiba Satellite L555D-S7930 TruBrite 17.3-Inch Black Laptop - 2 Hours 30 Minutes of Battery Life

Toshiba Satellite L555D-S7930 TruBrite 17.3-Inch Black Laptop - 2 Hours 30 Minutes of Battery LifeI purchased this laptop as a replacement for my 5+ year old Dell Inspiron. Having recently had some bad experiences with Dell, I decided to try a Toshiba.

It's a good laptop for someone who isn't a road warrior-both the size and relatively short battery life make it less than ideal for lots of travel. Both of these problems stem from its very large screen (big screens tend to consume a lot of power), which is its biggest selling point. The large screen is great for work and watching films.

On the down side, the built-in speakers provide poor sound quality, which is not a problem if you use head phones.

Another minor drawback is the mousepad, which is positioned in such a way that your wrist is likely to tap it when typing, causing the cursor to jump inappropriately. You can tweak some settings on the mousepad's sensitivity to minimize this effect.

Toshiba Satellite L555D-S7910 17.3-Inch Laptop Black/Grey

Toshiba makes a decent laptop, but if you buy one of their products do not think for a moment that your warranty will be honored! I had an adapter cord (and transformer) that failed, and it has now been over 2 weeks that Toshiba has been "unable" to send me a replacement cord. They claim it is on "back order" with no date in sight as to when the part will be available. Of course (they tell me) I can go into a store and buy a replacement part myself (over $100) but they will not reimburse me for that I will simply have to wait for the back order in order to have it replaced under the warranty provisions. In essence, they are telling me that in all of North America they cannot put their hands on one of their own power cords, even though I could just walk into any store and buy one myself! This, they say, is their "policy" and the policy cannot be changed. In my book, this is not "policy" but rather consumer fraud buy their product, assume that you have a warranty, but when it comes to fulfilling their warranty obligation you're told to wait indefinitely or just go buy the replacement part out of your own pocket. Frankly, I had expected better from a company like Toshiba, and my experience has made me conclude that I should never consider buying another of their products ever!

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This is my 6th Toshiba Satellite laptop. Bought first one in 1998 when I was driving a truck. Have never had a problem with customer service with Toshiba as one other person has said. Lost my hard drive somewhere between Chicago and San Antonio, when I got to San Antonio on a Friday afternoon at 3:00.pm they got me in at 4:00.pm and it was fixed and I was ready to go by 6:00.pm The only time I had to wait on a part was in Charlotte, NC on a Friday for a new screen and I was at my sister's house anyway and it was ready to go by 10:00 .am., since it was all under warranty never paid a cent for repairs or parts. I am happy with this laptop because I do like the bigger screen. The one drawback that I can see is the touch pad because it is in an awkward position but you can fix that by buying a mouse and turning the touch pad off. Simple easy solution to a minor problem. The last one cost $3600.00 5 yrs ago and had a lot less on it so the price is reasonable. I would recommend this product for someone who likes a big screen.

Read Best Reviews of Toshiba Satellite L555D-S7930 TruBrite 17.3-Inch Black Laptop - 2 Hours 30 Minutes of Battery Life Here

Pros:

* 17,3 inch flat screen!!.

* Fast!.

Cons:

* The originall battery life, just 2 1/2 hours.

* Webcam low def.

* Office's 60 days trial.

* Not pre installed antivir.

In general I'm happy with my laptop. Most of the cons are things that I can fix or buy.

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this is the first laptop I have owned so my experience can only relate to a product I have. Purchased this computer for under 500.00 a week ago and have been thrilled. Has a great screen and a large keyboard that works well for an average typist. Delete button is strangely placed, but the keyboard reacts well at the factory settings. I have not found the touch pad to be in the way of typing as some have said. The touch pad is nice because of the texture and the fact it is virtually invisible when you look at the computer. It shows no fingerprints of any kind. The rest of the computer does pick up prints that are easily taken care of.The screen is a bit reflective in some settings and may work a little better with a filter or just change the backround of your pages and it helps. It is a bit large so it is not going to fit most standard briefcases. I have found several sleeves that work well and a bag that works. I take it to work and although a 15.6 would be a bit easier on the back...the large screen and great keyboard more than make up for it. Windows 7 has been great fun to learn and does provide some nice features. I run mozilla fiefox so i have told some features will not be optimized by not using IE. Set up was easy for home wifi a couple of other places have required a bit more work. Not sure how well the webcam works, not a big point for me. It is a beautiful product to look at, feels solid and has worked well for me.

Samsung Series 9 NP900X4D-A06US 15.0-Inch Laptop (Silver)

Samsung Series 9 NP900X4D-A06US 15.0-Inch LaptopI've had this a couple weeks now and I'm still as impressed as when I opened it. The 3rd generation i5 Ivy Bridge helps keep the temps low, and the 8 gigs of RAM is a noticeable bump over the usual 4 gigs that seems to be standard in ultrabooks these days. I often write with it on my lap and heat nor weight has ever been an issue.The laptop also comes with an ethernet adapter if you're looking to plug in. Wireless range is good, about what you would expect.

The real sell for me is the solid state drive. Being a 128, you can expect around 100gigs of free space. Windows 8 boots in just over 3 seconds. I'm not a fan of 8 so I went with a dual boot with Ubuntu. Ubuntu boots in a little over 4 seconds, very impressed between the two.

Battery Life is pretty solid. Between writing and just surfing the internet you can expect between 7-8.5 hours. Heavy multimedia you can expect right around 3.5-4.

Screen is gorgeous and respectable at 1600 x 900. As the previous reviewer mentioned it isn't a touch screen but if you're seriously thinking about picking this up you should already be well aware of that.

I just received the Samsung Series 9 NP900X4D-A06US 15.0-Inch Laptop. It is very impressive. Only problem is that it doesn't have a touch screen. How is it possible for a high-end Windows 8 Ultrabook to not have a touch screen? What happened? I can only guess Samsung wants to unload all of their old Windows 7 laptops by loading them with Win8 and a big smile.

I'll try it for a few days, but I suspect I'll end up returning it.

**********************

Update Apr. 6, 2013

**********************

I have returned the NP900X4D-A06US and replaced it with a Series 5 NP540U3C-A02UB.

Don't get me wrong, if you are ok with not having a touch screen, the NP900X4D-A06US is a very impressive machine. It is beautiful and light and there is a lot of attention to detail. It is very quiet and even at high process utilization it only gets a little warm. The only meaningful downside is that you end up with only about 100 GB of free space out of the box, but you probably thought about that already considering the computer comes with a 128 GB SSD.

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ASUS UL30Vt-A1 Thin and Light 13.3-Inch Silver Laptop (12 Hours of Battery Life)

ASUS UL30Vt-A1 Thin and Light 13.3-Inch Silver LaptopI got to use this laptop for a few days and it's brought me dangerously close to buying one for myself. If you are looking for a thin-and-light notebook with great battery life and a little gaming life under the hood this is (in my opinion) the best choice on the market today. What sets this notebook apart is two things:

1. At the push of a button you can switch from a low power Intel 4500HD graphics processor to a higher power NVidia G210M with 512MB DDR3 RAM (this defaults on when plugged in and defaults off when unplugged).

2. At the push of a button you can enable the "Turbo 33" mode which uses a mix of hardware (such as overclocking the cpu) and software to boost performance by up to 33%. I ran some basic benchmarks and it seemed to work pretty well.

CPU The 1.3GHz Intel SU7300 Core 2 Duo Processor 3MB Cache 800MHz FSB is a great fit. Some of the thin-and-lights in this class ship with either a Core Solo (i.e. single core) or Celeron CPU. I tend to avoid both because the single core CPUs tend to choke on all the Internet Security software you need these days and the Celerons come with cut-down cache and now power saving modes.

RAM The included 4GB of DDR3 is just the right amount to really start taking advantage of a 64 bit O.S. I also like that Asus used DDR3 which uses less power than DDR2.

HDD It comes with a 500GB hard disk drive which is more than most users need today. The 5400RPM speed is slower than the 7200RPM drive you will find on some models but I prefer the reliability and power savings that come with a 5400RPM drive.

DISPLAY The 13.3 inch widescreen is glossy and reasonably bright. Outdoor use will suffer from some glare but the backlit screen helps. I found the vertical viewing angles are a little tight but it wasn't a big deal.

GRAPHICS As mentioned above it switches between a low power Intel 4500HD graphics chip on the motherboard (fine for most non-gaming tasks) and a more power hungry NVidia G210M that will actually let you do a some 3D gaming (though newer games will still run best at reduced settings). This simple and clever innovation really sets Asus apart. Oh and either chipset can do 1080P HD video.

Battery It's rare to get a battery this good in a notebook this thin: 8 cell 5600mAh. I couldn't get the claimed 12 hours of battery life but I got very close (doing a normal mix of MS Office tasks and web browsing I got just shy of 11 hours). Even doing very compute intensive tasks like gaming or playing back video I went over 6 hours. Most notebooks can't run Word that long.

Touchpad At first I hated the touchpad but as I got used to it I really liked it. It two-finger scrolling and three-finger right click which may trip you up at first but after a few days you won't want to go back.

It comes with most of the usual stuff: HDMI port (for an external monitor or compatible TV), Ethernet port, wireless b/g/n, 3 USB ports, headphone jack, microphone jack, and a vga (for an external monitor). It does lack any kind of optical drive, so no playing CDs or DVDs without an external drive. For this you would need the ASUS UL80Vt-A1 14-Inch Thin and Light Black Laptop. It's a "thin-and-light" which as you would guess means it is thin (1") and light (3.75lbs). I also found it to be very quiet. It comes with a facial recognition feature that allows you to login without a password but this was disabled by our IT department so I wasn't able to try it out.

I see a lot of notebooks and I've generally been impressed with the build quality of Asus notebooks. The build on this model looks great and it's helped by the sleek and simple design: no fancy little bits that fall off in a year. In my opinion this is the thin-and-light to have if you need great battery life but don't want to give up all the fun. If you don't do any 3D gaming you don't need the Nvidia chipset and you probably should save a little money on a notebook without it such as the nearly identical ASUS UL30A-A2 Thin and Light 13-3-Inch Silver Laptop. Otherwise this is a great choice for a student or business traveler who likes to do a little gaming.

I am told I over analyze purchases and must say I have been watching laptops for a couple of years. My goals were lightweight and portable but not so small I could not read the screen and LONG battery time. After all it is a portable! I tried a 15.6 but what a moose! A 14" seemed just right but the chassis was bigger and heavier. I was afraid of a 13.3 but then it dawned on me that is was the same resolution as the 14 and only .7" smaller, not a full inch. I went from store to store lining a 14's up next to a 13.3's and I really could not tell the difference! Listen my fellow middle agers,I have exceptionally poor eyesight so if it worked for me it will for you! (no offense to my eye Surgeon, Dr. Barry Lee, he did a great job with what I gave him to work with!).

I have a powerful desktop so I did not need a desktop replacement class Laptop. I also can't stand a slow poke so a netbook was out and so was a celeron. The T6600 CPUS are the sweet spot for price and value and they are plenty snappy but they are power hungry (compared to the SU's). The SU7300 was just the ticket. Yes, I got the TURBO 33 VT version but I don't think that matters at all. I wanted it for bragging rights only. Same goes for the separate GPU, I want to hedge my bets in case I do some vector art editing. I am NOT a gamer.

I wrestled with the lack of a DVD drive but hey you can download ANYTHING, DVD drives are really on the way out, don't sweat it!It's worth the size and weight savings. The keyboard is REALLY GREAT, I am not a touch typist and the keys have nice spacing and definition. (I would have paid BIG money for a back lit keyboard but that just narrows the field TOO MUCH. Touchpad is fine also but I live with my Logitech NANO V450 mouse anyway.

The battery life is the real deal and that sold me on this unit. I am coming up on 4 hrs with wifi, bright screen, remote desktop, iTunes, 2 browsers and only down 25% on the battery. Seriously! I charge it and leave without the power cord. I really wanted the silver cover after seeing a black one in person it really showed finger prints. Silver is GREAT!

Another thing I like about the VT version is a little bit faster DRAM and Bus, I don't believe anyone could tell a difference but it makes me feel like I have the latest and greatest and am hedging my bets regarding being outdated sooner then later. If you need to save a few dollars, don't worry about it!

There are no compromises here and if you don't know ASUS, they have been around FOREVER and have been an OEM supplier since, like FOREVER! Don't get hung up on the big name companies, it means nothing! The ONLY complaint is the lack of documentation. I got NOTHING to help me figure out the VT features like discrete graphics switching or the Turbo boost (That's the over clocking feature. It steps the CPU up 33% This is VERY unnecessary, I can not come close to pushing this thing in standard mode.) I suspect most will never adjust these features anyway but HEY ASUS, are you listening? Send me a manual, pdf is fine! If its on here somewhere then you made it too hard to find! :)

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I have been following the 13.3" laptop market for the past year waiting for someone to offer one with a powerful video card at a fairly low price. ASUS has done it with the UL30Vt! This is the second ASUS we have in our household and it definitely does not disappoint -the build quality is as good or better than the other name brand laptops we have in our stable and I traded a 14.1" HP for this. I do not regret it.

Pros:

Light -I can carry it one handed anywhere I go and I'm not worried about dropping it.

It is like carrying a spiral notebook!

Great video card -The laptop automatically switches between an intel video chipset

(low power demand) and a powerful NVIDIA card when as you plug and unplug the laptop

into the powercord.

Great screen -the HD screen is awesome and looks better than others provided by other

well known brands.

DDR3 Ram -blazing fast and low power usage.

Intel Power efficient processor -while the intel chip is rated below 2.0 Mz, it runs

faster than my 2.6Mz chip on my work laptop that also has DDR3 memory. Don't know how,

but it gets better "Experience Ratings". Also, you can overclock the chip using ASUS

software, but I haven't needed to.

Cool -the machine runs cool. I have never had it become uncomfortably warm.

Battery life -battery lasts a long time. Have put in a 7200 RPM HDD to replace the one

provided by ASUS... and the battery lasts 10 hours or more.

Looks -holy smokes, looks cooler than my daughter's school MacBook Pro. I cannot

keep her off my machine.

Keyboard -I was a bit leery of the 'chicklet' keyboard as I learned to type on a a

"Selectric". However, the keyboard supports my heavy typing style and hasn't slowed me down.

Cons:

A bit more 'bloatware' than I expected, but most was ASUS software to try to make the

machine more 'user friendly' Had fun figuring out what to turn off...

Overall?

A great buy and I'm glad I waited. There are at least two other named brand laptops that offer a similar laptop

(switching video cards to save power) but they run at least twice this price or more. ASUS created a winner here...

... and I'm the ultimate skeptic of computer hardware.

Read Best Reviews of ASUS UL30Vt-A1 Thin and Light 13.3-Inch Silver Laptop (12 Hours of Battery Life) Here

I have owned this laptop for about 10 days now and used it both at home and on the road. That being said...

The Good:

Absolutely beautiful screen display

Very lightweight

Battery life (not anywhere near 12 hours though, closer to 7)

The Bad:

Rude, non-existent Tech Support

HDMI / Graphics switching is buggy

Bloatware is overwhelming

Keyboard dropped keystrokes (knd of lke ths) when typing at moderate speeds.

My problems began when Win Media player would suddenly "pop up" unexpectedly. I believe this was due to the touch screen being flush w/ the front wrist pad. Somehow the combination of my keystrokes and inadvertent touchpad entries launched the program. Solved this by uninstalling media player but shouldn't have had to do this.

A journey on Google offered up the suggestion of uninstalling IE8 to solve the keyboard entry lagging and that did seem to help but the jury is still out on that one...

As far as the HDMI connection is concerned: One of the reasons I got this particular laptop was for the HDMI port (wanted to watch Netflix on my bedroom TV) so this was perhaps even more upsetting than the keyboard problem and warranted a call to tech support. Woe to anyone needing to call ASUS tech support. For my money you are much better off spending a day searching for the answer on Google or dropping the extra bucks if you know a local tech. My first call ended w/o tech ever picking up and the second, a day later, was answered after about 15 minutes on hold. Not great but not terrible for tech support waits I guess. My real problem was with the lack of support and interest I received. After the requisite "is the laptop turned on... is the tv turned on..." I was told "It should work." Well duh! I know it SHOULD work! The problem is that it DOESN'T! After 10 minutes of this the tech told me that he had done everything that he could do and it must be my HDMI cable (which I had already informed him worked perfectly w/ my DVD player) or my TV was unsupported. When I mentioned that it could be any number of other things as well he acidly replied "like WHAT?!". Um, maybe the HDMI port is bad? Maybe the driver is corrupted, how about a bad anything else you can think of on the motherboard? His suggestion? Wait for a few days and try again! If I still had a problem I could call back. Nice eh?

Well, now for the good part. I did get the HDMI to work on my tv. How? Google, perseverance on my part and a very informative laptop help site. The guru there mentioned that the graphics accelerator that ASUS uses in this, along w/ other UL style laptops, is buggy and screws w/ the displays during certain power stages. So a simple button push, a tweak in the graphics properties, and I got it working (for now at least).

Overall

Very attractive, fast to boot (win 7), good battery life, and an absolutely gorgeous screen display that is marred by subpar hardware-driver-software interaction, poorly located touchpad and support that does not come anywhere near deserving of the name.

If you get this and it works well out of the box you will probably like it a lot. If you have to call for help save yourself the trouble and go for a long walk. Who knows, it may work when you return.

Want ASUS UL30Vt-A1 Thin and Light 13.3-Inch Silver Laptop (12 Hours of Battery Life) Discount?

I did a LOT of research on this baby before I bought it and have NOT been disappointed. I had no issues with it out of the box what so ever. A couple of things I did, neither of which are necessary for an average user:

1. I did a clean install of Windows 7 64-bit and re-installed all my drivers without a hitch.

2. Over clocked the processor to 1.9 and had no problems at all. I should also add that I had been using the machine without over clocking it and thought it was plenty speedy. After the over clock, well, it just got better.

I was planning on upgrading to a SSD but I can barely even hear the stock drive when it's spinning and the thing is blazing fast (I can only imagine what people using a faster internal drive or a SSD drive are getting for response times, but I'm very happy with it as is). I think I'll wait for SSD prices to drop a bit before making that investment.

Trackpad wasn't responsive enough for me with the original settings, but it was simple enough to enter the settings and increase the sensitivity. Found it to be nice to have the dimpled texture as it helps me know when I've moved my finger off the trackpad while navigating the desktop.

Display is great. I guess some people may be used to something I'm not, but the viewing angles are more than good enough for me. Streamed HD video via Hulu, etc, is crisp and smooth.

No problems with the wireless at home, at a cafe, etc.

I don't do a lot of laptop gaming since I have a PS3, so I haven't had a chance to give that a go using the discrete Nvidia card.

I'm a touch typist so the non-backlit keyboard doesn't bug me, but it might be nice to have. Probably install one in a few weeks. The current keyboard is good enough, probably give it 4 or 4.5 stars. Not as loud as some would make it out to be.

The thing is light and I have no problem carrying it around. I use the Zeroshock case throw it in my backpack no prob.

Did I mention that this thing is fast? Yesterday I had MediaMonkey open playing music/podcasts, 4 youtube videos open but not playing, 6 other browser tabs open in Chrome, a pdf file open, an open office doc open, and doing some PHP work using Kodomo edit on the IIS webserver I setup on it. I'll try to remember to update this once I get a virtual box up on it running Ubuntu.

I'm in love and her name is ASUS.