Showing posts with label used notebook computers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label used notebook computers. Show all posts

Toshiba Satellite L505-ES5034 Notebook PC

Toshiba Satellite L505-ES5034 Notebook PCI had an HP laptop in the past. My office laptop is a dell laptop. I was sick of the quality of those laptops and looking for something that is reliable. I am hoping this one is better. This laptop has very good looks. The finish looks awesome. Extra keys on the keyboards for the numbers help. Media buttons (no one really uses them) are not given. I bought a 3 year warranty from squaretrade for just 80$ (3 years). Do no buy warranty from this website. I am loving this laptop for the price I paid (510 after 15% bing cashback bought on ) With windows 7 (4GB and i3 processor) the laptop boots very fast, detects the wireless network and is ready for surging in less than a minute. Cons: The only thing I have found (like everybody else) is the sound system. It is horrible.

SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless Mobile

SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless MobileIs it junk or is it not? I took a chance on this product because it seemed to me that most of the negative reviews associated with it were not based on product quality (though who knows how long it will last), but on how the product failed to live up to the purchaser's expectations. And it is those expectations that I think are misplaced.

I bought this at CVS for $100+tax; MY expectations were that it could replace my Palm TX, which got a cracked screen in a mishap. The Palm TX was a handheld PDA with pretty similar specs in terms of processing power, ROM memory, CF slot, etc. It was no speed demon on the internet luckily, most sites would call up a page optimized for mobile devices. So you avoided most of the fancy stuff that bloats web pages down (or, depending on your POV, adds rich and exciting content). I think what helps foster unrealistic expectations is that this Sylvania unit looks like a laptop, not a handheld PDA. So people come to it with expectations that it will perform like a laptop. Instead, it runs Windows CE 6, which, I understand, was an OS designed for PDAs, handheld PCs, etc. So it is against THAT class of device that this product should be judged. So far, I am impressed with what you get for the money, and I'm having a bit of nostalgia in terms of configuring things. It's not that hard, but if you never had a Win98 computer, you may be spoiled in the sense that you've never had to go under the hood and change a few settings. I'm no expert there are many settings that I don't understand at all but I did remember enough to get it going.

I did consider a modern netbook (I have a regular laptop and desktop too), but I decided to take a chance on this first. Here's why. I learned that my 2.5 year old laptop had a processor that was something like 3-5 times as fast (depending on benchmark) as a new netbook. Yes, you pay for it in battery time, but the real problem is that netbooks try to do everything a full blown laptop can do including accessing full-blown websites that are, day by day, getting weighed down more and more by Flash and other "enhancements" that just cripple the rendering time on a netbook. What I liked about my palm TX was that it didn't even try to load a regular website, for the most part. It did the "lightweight" mobile versions instead (even then, not really fast). I realized that the problem of netbooks is that they were trying to do too much. It was like putting a Honda Fit engine in a schoolbus and going to pick up 50 kids in a hilly subdivision. This Sylvania thing should do OK if you treat it more like a 65 hp classic Beetle driving on the flat roads of central Ohio.

With that, let's take a brief look at the good, bad, and the ugly.

The good:

Screen is quite good and large again, compared to PDAs. Compared to a laptop it's tiny.

size and weight is amazingly small.

Keyboard arrows have inverted T, a layout I much prefer.

3 USB ports; I've heard that two are USB 1.1, one is 2.0. Have not tried them.

CF card slot. Not sure if this will be limited to 2 GB, but it would not surprise me, as that was the limit on my TX, I think. I have a card from it and have used it it works.

Touchpad pretty good, though the buttons are stiff.

Has headphone and microphone jacks. I've used the headphones for earbuds, and sound is much improved over the built in speakers. My regular laptop has weak speakers too, so not a big deal.

Keyboard is small (as you would expect) but pretty good. I used to have a Psion 5mx and it reminds me of that, though it is about 1" wider than the Psion. The left shift button is not quite as big as I'd like, though. For some reason, the caps lock above it is bigger.

Windows CE uses reasonably familiar methods of arranging icons, launching programs, etc.

The bad:

Documentation is sparse. Just enough to tell you to fully charge it before use, and to label the features.

Windows CE is not quite as easy to customize nor, probably, as capable of it. . For instance, you can copy/paste new programs (see below) into the "program files" but that doesn't necessarily mean they'll show up in the start menu programs list. Come to think of it, I'm having the same trouble with Windows 7, too!

If you update the OS using the patch on the digitalgadgets.com website, you'll lose some features and gain others. For instance, I noticed that Wordpad disappeared and all the office apps were just viewers. Wordpad appeared to be replaced with a basic text editor named Ke or something in alpha release. But I came out ahead (see below). Another downside was that instead of connecting to a lightweight google search page, it connects to the full blown one now, which I did not want. And I cannot find the lightweight search page anymore using my desktop PC. It appears Google is only supporting such for mobile phones now. But supposedly this OS update fixes a "memory leak" and hotkeys, etc. I just didn't know they'd change the programs that were pre-installed.

Not expandable or upgradeable but then again, neither was my TX. Compare it to a handheld.

Case is a fingerprint magnet OK, this part you can compare to regular laptops.

Battery indicator was kind of unhelpful. I got maybe 2.5 hours out of the first charge of the 1800 mAh battery, with a good deal of that on WiFi and installing/copying/pasting. But I don't recall the indicator going anything like linearly to low. It kind of abruptly warned me power was low and it would shut down in 60 seconds, so I'd better save my work. Better than nothing, but still, not great.

As best I can tell, there's no email client. You have to use webmail (and I have gmail works though gmail chat does not). There are some chat programs though one called Pigeon, which apparently is not Pidgin.

The ugly:

The tomato-soup-red color is just awful. I am trying to think of a way to decorate the outside or "skin" it.

One thing I thought might help on this computer is to use Linux it tends to have lower overhead than windows, but again, this is not full blown windows, so Linux could actually be a greater burden than Win CE. But in the process of looking into that, I came across "Bento Linux" someone is working on a distribution for this system, and helpfully posted links to a "Mega Pack" of programs that he (or she) found to work with Windows CE. These included browsers, game emulators, utilities, media players, games, and even spreadsheets and word processors. I found two that appeared to be close cousins of Word and Excel even able to read/write to "Office 97" formats. Not too shabby. Beware of the game Doom, though it's a DOS port that only appears to work on CE. You can't exit it without forcing a shutdown of the machine (I didn't know how and could not alt-tab or ctrl-alt-del out of it, but holding the power button for 5 seconds did it).

So perhaps the $100 laptop has arrived ... but it's a PDA in netbook clothes. In some ways, better (keyboard, USB, ethernet jack, larger screen, productivity programs, clamshell design to protect that large screen) but in other ways, worse (can't find a PIM or calendar that imports modern file formats, though even among contemporaries, such importing is hit-or-miss; also, it's an older OS that is not really being developed any more). On balance, I think it is good replacement for the TX, if it has reasonable durability. But make no mistake it's slower than a laptop, it's slower than a netbook. It's a PDA in netbook form not unlike the original Asus EEE, frankly. For $100, it's a trip down memory lane (lack of memory lane?), eminently packable, and, if I can dig up some more freeware CE programs, quite capable of fully replacing my Palm TX as my computing travel companion.

this is a simple machine, to be sure. As the previous reviewer mentioned, the negative reviews come from people who apparently wanted a rolls royce for the price of a hyundai. I had very low expectations of this little machine..just needed to surf the web, really. It does that. It's slow. and some pages don't load. in fact, it doesn't support you tube anymore. This little machine should not be your only computer, it won't support all of your computing needs. However, I like that it's very portable, very simple and , frankly, disposable. if i lose it, or it breaks, I won't be crying. It has held up very well and has way outlasted the time period that I initially gave it.

just don't expect a fancy, fast computer. it's not. (duh!)

Buy SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless Mobile Now

These Cheap 7-Inch Netbooks are suitable only for dedicated hackers!

Also known as MiniLaptops, SmartBooks, Netbooks, etc.: Don't waste your time on this device if you're not willing to open it up and hack it!

But if you're already stuck with one of these, read on, as help is on the way. And please feel free to copy and post this review elsewhere on the internet, for the benefit of all of us hapless 7-Inch MiniLaptop/SmartBook/Netbook users out there.

I picked up mine, for $ 10.00, at a yard sale, from a very frustrated owner. Preliminary research on this device quickly revealed that it, and its many cheap spin-offs, has a notorious reputation. And it's quite obvious that almost all of the retailers of these devices are going out of their way to be unhelpful.

My version has a WMT, ARM-WM8505 300MHz processor, with a Windows Embedded CE 6.0 operating system (despairingly called "WinCE"), was a precursor to Windows Mobile, and is not supported well any more.

But, on a more positive note: Here's a complete and informative 30 page User Manual for your netbook: Titled, simply, as "usermanual.pdf", the 8.8 MB file can be downloaded from:

Google "files.chatnfiles" (an ftp site).

Scroll down and elect the "Sylvania_netbook" folder.

Select the "WinCE_6" folder.

Download "usermanual.pdf".

And, while you're on that ftp page, be sure to download "winCE6freeware.zip", a 109.7 MB MegaPack freeware bundle.

Also, here's another user manual: Although it was written for the CnM book portable mini laptop (Windows CE 5.0), and devotes some of its content to ActiveSync (not possible on Windows CE 6.0), it's another helpful user manual out there for your netbook. The 4.4 MB PDF file (38 pages) can be downloaded from the internet by simply googling "CnMNB7SE Manual.pdf".

The first thing the user of one of these devices needs to do is open up the internal battery compartment, and unplug and remove the internal 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack. That's right, completely remove the battery and simply run the netbook off the plug-in OEM 9 Volt wall wart, or maybe a 7.2 Volt to 9 Volt external battery pack (plugged in to the 9 Volt power jack, on the back of the device). The reason for this is that the CPU of the device runs very hot, with the OEM internal 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack in place, which explains the early failure of many of these devices. The 9 Volt power jack in the back of the netbook fits a standard 4.0 mm O.D. / 1.7 mm I.D. plug (aka: Radio Shack "B" plug, Part# 274-1532).

But a custom made rechargeable internal battery pack, 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride (6 AA's) will run (continuous video with full volume) the netbook for 3.15 hours. A 3 long x 2 wide battery pack will nest, half-deep, in the original internal battery compartment -without the original cover. And the CPU runs much cooler when powered by the improvised internal 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride battery pack. But most nickel-metal hydride batteries will self-discharge about 0.11 Volts per day (= 0.67 Volts per day, as a 6-cell battery pack), unless they're one of those newer nickel-metal hydride batteries that claim to hold their shelf-life charge at least 4 times longer. Unfortunately, the individual AA batteries, of the 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride battery pack, need to be removed and charged individually, as the netbook / OEM 9 Volt wall-wart will not charge an internal nickel-metal hydride battery pack.

But to bring my 7-Inch MiniLaptop up to industrial grade, I took an extra step and glued aluminum heat sinks on the CPU (mine is a WMT, ARM-WM8505 300MHz processor), as well as the Wi-Fi processor. The unit is easily opened up by turning it upside down and removing 12 screws, of which 2 of the screws are fine-thread screws that screw in to the sheet-aluminum underside of the keyboard. Unplug the internal battery pack, and with a thin, sharp knife, carefully separate and pop open the bottom of the plastic case. For the CPU, I superglued a flathead aluminum bolt onto it, drilled a hole into the underside of the plastic mini-laptop case, and, with an aluminum nut, attached a 4"x2.5" piece of aluminum flashing to the underside of the plastic mini-laptop case.

As mentioned, the Wi-Fi module in the device also runs way too hot, but the remedy for this is not as simple. The Wi-Fi module is a small .5"x1" circuit that is attached to the main circuit with 4 wires and a piece of pressure sensitive foam tape. Here I carefully peeled off the Wi-Fi module and removed the foam tape, as it traps heat and causes heat damage. I then soldered additional lengths of wire to the original 4 wires, superglued an aluminum heat sink onto the Wi-Fi CPU, and routed it through the right hinged joint of the video monitor case, and attached it inside the upper-right of the plastic case of the video monitor. I then drilled 6-.0625" holes above, and 6-.0625" holes below the Wi-Fi module, on the inside (video screen side) of the plastic case to allow for essential cooling ventilation. This also positions the Wi-Fi module for much better reception, solving the common gripe many users report of poor Wi-Fi range. I would upload photos of the modifications, but they would only cause serious misunderstandings with customer service staffs.

The next thing one should do is Google "winCE6freeware.zip" and download the ~104 MB MegaPack freeware bundle. Also Google and download "MioPocket 4.0 Release 68.zip" (~86.6 MB download). The OEM bundled software on many of these 7-inch netbooks is lacking. And there are not many apps available for Windows CE 6.0. But these two downloads are definitely a good start. They both include browsers, game emulators, utilities, media players, games, scientific calculators, and even spreadsheets and word processors. Also, Google "LEOFS_CMP.PPC_ARM.CAB" to download an excellent Windows Embedded CE 6.0 compatible flight simulator (jets, helicopters, sailplanes, a Piper Cub, and even a hang glider). Google "qcpparm.zip" for Q-Calc, an excellent scientific calculator that runs on WinCE 6.0.

"winCE6freeware.zip" extracts as three folders. Open the "winCE6soft" folder and browse and try out the numerous .exe software on your netbook.

"MioPocket 4.0 Release 68.zip" extracts as three folders. Open the "MioAutoRun" folder and the subfolder "Programs" and browse and try out the numerous .exe software on your netbook.

Two valuable softwares in these downloads are:

UCWeb Browser: Although it runs in Chinese mode only, it is intuitive, allowing one to bookmark their favorite English websites (Google, EarthLink, facebook, etc.), and this clever browser enables one to blaze through the internet.

Opera Mini: Another excellent internet browser, which runs quite well on Windows CE 6.0, by using the function and numeric keys on the keyboard open up options.

Minimo: Yet another excellent internet browser, which runs quite well on Windows CE 6.0, and is easy on the limited resources of the netbook. Of particular note is the opening home screen with quick access to Google, maps, local weather, etc.. But some of its features may exceed the limited resources of the 7-inch netbook.

*** A note about "Chinese" software:

China is notorious for pirating software, and Windows is no different. Only about 10% of Windows, sold in China, is fully licensed. 91% of Windows offered in China have some sort of malware. And 72% of those Chinese computers, with pirated Windows, have browser settings altered in a way to lead unsuspecting users to illegal sites, which then fish for financial data and other sensitive information.

I have had almost no success in downloading and manually installing .cab files on my netbook. .exe files seem to be the only software that will work with Windows CE 6.0.

And while almost all of these cheap 7-Inch Netbooks will long be remembered for what they aren't, one needs to focus on what they are, and can do:

Almost all of these devices have built-in stereo speakers, two 1.1 USB + one 2.0 USB jacks, a headphone/line-out jack (although the netbook speakers still work with the plug in), a microphone jack, a SD card slot, Wi-Fi, and a RJ45 ethernet jack.

Inside, most of these devices have a 2GB flash disk.

When loaded with compatible video files, and using "TCPMP" (the Core Pocket Media Player), the device plays video clips and full length movies with ease.

Using "nPOP", one can send and receive email, much like Outlook.

Using "UCWeb Browser", or "Opera Mini", one can blaze through the internet.

DSL, as well as WiFi connections is a breeze with the existing hardware, although WiFi seems only to work with open (unsecured) connections.

Using "TCPMP" (the Core Pocket Media Player), or GSPlayer, mp3 (as well as .ogg, .wma, .mp4, .wav, etc.) music files can be played, with full equalizer controls.

Using "TextMaker" (SoftMaker Office), one can produce complete and professional documents, with photos and charts, as .doc, .rtf, .odt, .psw, as well as proprietary .tmd files.

Using "PlanMaker" (SoftMaker Office), one can produce complete and professional spreadsheets, as .xls, .xlt, as well as proprietary .pmd files.

Using "Presentations" (SoftMaker Office), one can produce complete and professional PowerPoint-type presentations, with graphics, as .ppt, .pot, .rtf, .bmp as well as proprietary .prd files.

With UltraG image viewer one can store and view detailed topo hiking maps, as well as handy road maps, as well as photos.

Challenge yourself with games like "ChessGenius", "PocketChess", "Nankin", and "Solitare".

There's also "CALC", a paper tape calculator, and when used in the ten-key touch keyboard mode, is quite useful for serious number crunching. And there's "Calc98CE", an excellent scientific calculator.

But there are some specific irritating issues with this netbook:

The 1/8" stereo out jack does not turn the internal speakers off, when ear buds are used.

The SD card slot manual eject mechanism crapped out early on. I had to straighten out a paper clip, and then fashion a tiny hook with needle-nose pliers, and pull the damaged micro-spring and mechanism completely out of the SD card slot. It now works just fine this way, as I simply left a 16 GB SD card permanently in place (but can easily be removed, if needed).

The built-in WiFi only seems to work with open WiFi networks, and many password protected networks, but not all. I tried, at home, to log into our secure WiFi, but was unable to get it to work. But it still works just fine in many WiFi coffee shops.

I have yet to find a YouTube application that works.

I have yet to find a Skype application that works, although it is inconceivable that any version of Skype could ever work on one of these 7-inch netbooks, with its limited capacity.

And I have yet to find a printer/printer application available. But there is somewhat of a silver lining in this deficiency in that it is a correct move in the direction of a paperless society. For example, I used to do a daily download of the local TV broadcast schedule, and inkjet print it out, both sides, on a landscape 11x8.5 piece of paper. Now I simply bring up the the Zap2It website (via Minimo browser), on my 7-inch netbook, and download the evening TV schedule, as a PDF file, to the Desktop of my 7-inch netbook. The PDF can then be quickly and easily viewed by my family, as needed.

The keyboard, while of excellent and sturdy construction, is only 81% the size of a standard keyboard. This will cause even the fastest, most skilled typist to feel like they're all thumbs on the keyboard.

As mentioned, the netbook has two USB 1.1 + one USB 2.0 jacks but, Windows CE 6.0 being somewhat of a primitive operating system, will not with all USB devices and accessories. But many mice, keyboards, multi-port USB hubs, flash drives, and SD card readers work quite well with the netbook. I haven't found a webcam that will work, but many digital cameras can be connected, by USB, and the stored photos viewed and copied.

Here is just a partial list of the many aliases this Windows CE 6.0 OS device is sold under (or simply known as):

Chinese CE Netbook

Cheapy-Creepy CE Netbook

Sylvania 7-inch CE6 netbook

CVS Sylvania 7-inch CE Netbook

VIA Mini 7-inch Laptop LCD

Lanyu eBook LY-EB01

ITA Smartbook 7

Cherrypal Africa

Datawind UbiSurfer

Menq EasyPC 790

3K Computer RazorBook 400 CE

Join Tech J1-Pro JL7100

Delstar DS 700

ITA Computers Smartbook 7

And the one thing most of them have in common is that they are mass-produced in Shenzhen, China.

As these 7-inch netbooks will not Activesync with your desktop computer, this is the time to format (be sure to select the FAT 32 file system option) a 16 GB, class 10, SD card, to serve as the "Storage Card" in your 7-inch netbook.

I advise one not to be too eager to reflash a new operating system onto their 7-inch netbook, as some functionality may be lost, due to variations in the motherboard/hard drive chip design, and not easily recovered. One such example is the driver for the internal battery pack. Many have complained about failures of the internal battery, not knowing that the new operating system they reflashed onto their netbook was not written for the existing motherboard. Just to be sure, I broke open the internal "8.4 Volt" (7.4 Volt rated), 1800mAH lithium-polymer battery pack, and the two internal 3.7 Volt batteries, as well as the internal battery management circuit test out just fine. The battery will normally run the netbook for about 1.5 to 2 hours, on a full charge, for routine computer work (word processing, etc.), .75 to 1 hour, if running a high-drain application, such as a video clip with full volume.

But if you choose to reflash, be sure to note the operating system, as well as version, as well as build, that originally came installed on your netbook. To find this information: Click "Start", select "Settings", select "Control Panel", select "System", and, under "General" tab, you'll find the operating system. There is a remote possibility that you will then be able to find, download, and reflash it, if the other operating systems fail. For example, I finally, and successfully, installed Windows CE, Version 6.00 (Build 3122) on mine. Also, under "General" tab, the Processor Type (mine is, for example, "WMT, ARM-WM8505") will be listed. This may prove helpful, and save you a lot of time, as operating systems are very specific as to which CPU they will work with.

And back to the subject of the internal battery pack: There are serious issues with the OEM internal 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack and the netbook motherboard. The overheating of the CPU is an indication of this. The early burn-out of the OEM 9VDC wall-warts, as well as netbook failures, reported by many owners, is another indication of serious internal power issues. I even rewired and bench tested a 7.2 Volt (two 3.6 Volt cells in series) Lithium-Polymer battery pack, without the OEM battery pack management circuit (aka: electronic battery cell balancer), and added a third wire, leading from between the two cells, to the third (middle) post in the internal battery jack, on a hunch that the netbook already had a built-in battery management circuit that conflicted with the battery management circuit inside the OEM internal battery pack. But this was not the case, since the rewired battery pack discharged without being "balanced" (both cells kept at the same voltage), and the rewired battery pack did not recharge through the OEM wall-wart / netbook.

I even built an new 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack, with a larger, more robust battery management circuit, but, it too suffered damage to the Lithium-Polymer cells.

Warning: Experimenting with Lithium-Ion and Lithium-Polymer batteries is a dangerous fire hazard. I bench tested the rewired battery packs outdoors, on a cement surface, with a fire extinguisher handy.

After all of this battery testing, the only option is the custom 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride battery pack, to serve simply as a glorified internal clock battery, as well as an emergency power backup for the netbook and a custom external 7.2V 12V battery pack. But, as mentioned above, the CPU runs much cooler with the internal 7.2 Volt Lithium-Polymer battery pack removed, and the OEM 9V wall-wart (or a custom external battery pack) used. But then, with the 9V wall-wart, you're not portable, are you? Also, the OEM internal battery will completely self-discharge (actually, the flawed motherboard slowly drains the battery) in less than a week. Oddly, a custom 7.2V, 2500mAh nickel-metal hydride battery pack does not self-discharge into the netbook motherboard at all, even though it does self-discharge, by itself, over time.

To make the netbook a truly portable device, I hacked a Sony NP-FX110 7.4V 3800mAh rechargeable battery pack: Adding a charging jack, as well as a plug for the netbook. Measuring 8.25"x5.75"x.375", the thin battery pack fits under the netbook and provides about 7 hours of heavy use (continuous video with sound), and even longer, if running only office software.

But if you really need to try new operating systems (... or love taking risks, like I do), Google:

"netbook.poodwaddle"

And go to the links to that website for a list of different operating system downloads.

There you will find video instructions on how to reflash a new operating system. But more importantly, numerous options for operating systems are available there to try on your netbook:

WinCE.rar

ChineseWinCE.rar (this was the best one for my 7-inch netbook: It appears in Chinese, but reboots to English)

SylvaniaWinCE.rar

BankofWinCE.rar

scriptcmd.rar

Android1.5.2.rar

Android1.6.rar

Android1.9.part1.rar

Android1.9.part2.rar

Android2.2.rar

Android2.2V2.rar

The reflash process is quite simple:

Download the .rar file.

Format (select the FAT 32 file system option) a SD card (2 GB minimum).

Open and extract the .rar file to the SD card.

The SD card will now read as a "script" folder only.

Insert the SD card in the SD card slot of your netbook.

Turn the netbook on. The reflash will automatically start and run by itself.

Give it enough time, as it's a large folder (~155 MB, more or less).

When done, turn the netbook off, remove the SD card, and turn the netbook back on.

Be sure to erase the "script" folder off the SD card, as it's no longer needed, and an accidental reflash is inconvenient.

Note that Android operating systems are best suited for touch-screen netbooks (versus WinCE keyboard netbooks), so may not work at all on your Windows CE netbook. But no big deal, just reflash with another operating system on the list, although I've read that small remnants of a previous reflash may still remain.

I've uploaded my own "Microsoft Windows Embedded CE 6.0 800x480 pixel jpeg desktop background, which will fit in well with your desktop icons.

I have gone through great lengths in this review, not only for the benefit of the users, but suggestions for the manufacturer(s) of these devices. It's a pity these netbooks weren't designed and built just a little better, as they could have been the ideal solution for a mass market in the third world. So, for the time being, this mass-produced netbook serves as mute testimony to the reality that the Chinese workplace can sometimes be all too similar to the American workplace, where initiative and innovation is swiftly punished.

After all of this, I have come to the conclusion that there is a place in my life, for this 7-inch netbook. In the move towards a paperless society, it's a handy and convenient substitute for my inkjet printer: Instead of being printed out, printed matter can, instead, be simply downloaded and saved as a PDF file, to the Desktop of the 7-inch netbook, and viewed as needed. But the 7-inch device is not instant-on: It does take about 35 seconds for the netbook to boot up, plus about 35 seconds to open up the downloaded PDF file, of, say, a downloaded evening TV schedule. This netbook is also perfect for reading downloaded books and such, on the go. This device complements my rugged Windows XP laptop, a real workhorse, with a 14-inch diagonal screen and internal battery that will run the device for about two hours. And when I really need to travel light, I have a Palm TX, with a 480x320 color screen (4" diagonal), Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, a 32GB SD card upgrade, a tiny battery powered thermal printer, and a full-size foldout keyboard (for full-speed typing), and an internal battery that will run the device for over 7 hours.

I hope this helps.

Good luck and have fun with it.

Read Best Reviews of SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless Mobile Here

As other reviews mentioned, we struggled to get the online set up (Roadrunner wireless). We called the customer service number and within little time we were up and running. Though the rep was clearly ESL, he did a great job letting my husband know what he needed. If this is a problem for another reader, I'd say hang up, call again, and hopefully you'll reach someone else on the next go. For the money well worth it.

As someone else mentioned, more documentation would be helpful e.g. what are the specs for SD cards? Is 8gbs to much? If I arbitrarily buy a standard SC card it'd be my luck is that it won't work for some reason.

Update Jan. 2011 Spoke too soon. It ran great while it ran. It became a little buggy and I think it was a company rep who had my husband download a patch that was supposed to fix his problem. Instead of helping he was no longer able to get online. Then, he was also unable to get anyone on the phone who could help him. There's not even an option to leave a message for a call back. The product comes with little documentation and no troubleshooting advice. After a few days of dealing with customer no service we took it back to CVS and set our sites on something more reliable. Reviewrs who said this is really a glorified smart phone are right except that it's not all that smart. Don't be conned by a low price a cheap piece of junk is still a piece of junk.

Want SYNET7WID 7 Inch Wireless Mobile Discount?

You get what you pay for. If you're paying $80-$100 for a computer, but expecting one that's usually priced at $250-$400, then expectations need to be more realistic. This computer is NOT junk. The start-up instructions for internet were sufficient and it actually comes with apps you wouldn't expect, like a pre-installed PDF reader. I received this about a week ago and, so far, no problems. Because my expectations were realistic, I'm very satisfied.

If you want to:

-browse youtube

-listen to music/mp3s

-do a lot of downloading

-do fancy word and powerpoint programs

-download and play games

-do anything with flash

...then DO NOT buy this, as none of these functions work.

If you want to:

-type simple documents

-browse simple (not flashy) web pages

Then this is a very efficient little machine.

HP Pavilion dv7 2.90GHz, 640GB, 17.3-Inch Laptop PC - Up to 7.5 Hours of Battery Life (Argento)

HP Pavilion dv7 2.90GHz, 640GB, 17.3-Inch Laptop PC - Up to 7.5 Hours of Battery LifePurchased this last month, best laptop I ever owned! Its fast, screen is bright and touch pad is cool. Great buy on Amazon @849 then, now its abit cheaper!

You all have gotta get one of these HP laptop's before the $630-$670 prices on them go away. These laptops are truly remarkable, and the laptop it's self is pretty dang fast. Mine came with bluetooth (which i thought it wouldn't but it did thankfully), there 17.3 screen sizes, and it comes with a chargers and battery and everything. You'd have to be crazy to pass up a deal like this, and to see a laptop like this at Wal-mart or K-mart that sales for $800+, and my laptop I bought right here and looking at the stats. I can honestly say, thank god for amazon and this great price. The laptop I bought was new and factory sealed like they said, Im very very pleased with my laptop.

Buy HP Pavilion dv7 2.90GHz, 640GB, 17.3-Inch Laptop PC - Up to 7.5 Hours of Battery Life (Argento) Now

Hardware

Product Name dv7-4177nr

Product Number XH121UA#ABA

Microprocessor 2.90GHz VISION Technology from AMD Premium with AMD Phenom II Dual-Core Mobile Processor N640

Microprocessor Cache 2MB L2 Cache

Memory 6GB DDR3 System Memory (2 DIMM)

Memory Max 8GB

Video Graphics ATI Mobility Radeon HD 5470 s

Video Memory itchable graphics

Hard Drive 640GB (7200RPM)

Multimedia Drive LightScribe Blu-ray ROM with SuperMulti DVD±R/RW Double Layer Support

Display 17.3" diagonal High Definition+ HP BrightView LED Display (1600 x 900)

Fax/Modem

Network Card Integrated 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet LAN

Wireless Connectivity

802.11b/g/n WLAN

Bluetooth

Sound

Beats Audio(tm) and HP Triple Bass Reflex Subwoofer

Keyboard 101-key compatible with island-style full-size keyboard with integrated numeric keypad

Pointing Device HP Clickpad with On/Off button

PC Card Slots

External Ports

5-in-1 integrated Digital Media Reader for Secure Digital cards, MultiMedia cards, Memory Stick, Memory Stick Pro, or xD Picture cards

4 Universal Serial Bus (USB) 2.0, 4th port shared with eSATA

1 HDMI

1 eSATA + USB 2.0

1 VGA (15-pin)

1 RJ -45 (LAN)

1 Headphone-out

1 Microphone-in

Other Devices

HP TrueVision Webcam with integrated digital microphone

HP SimplePass with integrated fingerprint reader

Dimensions 16.35" (W) x 10.8" (D) x 1.25" (min H)/1.46" (max H)

Weight 8.19 lbs

Security

Kensington MicroSaver lock slot

Power-on password

Accepts 3rd party security lock devices

Power

90W AC Adapter

9-Cell 93WHr Lithium-Ion Battery

What's In The Box HP TrueVision Webcam with integrated digital microphone

HP SimplePass with integrated fingerprint reader

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Software

Operating System:

Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit

Security and Support:

Symantec Norton Internet Security 2011 60-day Trial

HP SimplePass Identity Protection

HP Recovery Manager

Sun Java

HP Advisor

HP ProtectSmart Hard Drive Protection (3D DriveGuard)

HP Support Assistant

Multimedia:

eBay; Beats Audio

HP MediaSmart: HP Music Store by Rhapsody; Snapfish; Facebook; Flickr; Hulu; Netflix; Roxio CinemaNow; MTV; Nickelodeon

HP Games Powered by Wild Tangent

Snapfish Picture Mover; Corel PaintShop Photo PRO X3; Corel VideoStudio Pro X3

HP Photo Creations

Adobe Reader; Adobe Flash

Windows Live Photo Gallery

HP Barnes and Noble e-reader ; New York Times E-Reader (15b)

Productivity and Finance:

Microsoft Office 2010 preloaded (purchase of a Product Key required to activate a full Office 2010 suite) (34)

Microsoft Silverlight

Internet Solutions:

HP Setup; ISP Partners (in HP Setup)

HP Wireless Assistant

Windows Live Messenger; Windows Live Mail

Bing Toolbar

Microsoft Portal

Read Best Reviews of HP Pavilion dv7 2.90GHz, 640GB, 17.3-Inch Laptop PC - Up to 7.5 Hours of Battery Life (Argento) Here

Love the laptop. Had old desktop knew it was slow, but now REALLY know how slow it was.

Highly recommend.

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Lifebook T900 - Intel - Core I5 - 520M - 2.4 Ghz - DDR3 Sdram - 2 Gb - Serial At

Lifebook T900 - Intel - Core I5 - 520M - 2.4 Ghz - DDR3 Sdram - 2 Gb - Serial AtI am a doctor in a busy practice. I own a Fujitsu lifebook T4220 for close to 5 years. The tablet gets used > 8 hours a day over that period. I have been very satisfied with it's durability and performance. I have been looking for a tablet with a pen digitizer and a larger screen but the 13.3" is the biggest they make theses days.

I believe the Fujitsus in my office have been surprisingly free of mechanical defects.

We use the tablet to sign off on documents , prescriptions etc., and they have worked quite well.

I would suggest getting a long term service contract (2-3 year upon purchasing the unit however given the fact it is costly to service.

Just what I needed to sign documents. Runs Windows 7 Ultimate. The screen rotation is a bit funky only in one view, but found a Youtube video on how to overcompensate for that. Other than that, this is a great laptop with a 'Real' pen for everything including taking notes, drawing, signing. Not that Capacitive Stylus crayon(y) looking stuff

Buy Lifebook T900 - Intel - Core I5 - 520M - 2.4 Ghz - DDR3 Sdram - 2 Gb - Serial At Now

Lenovo IdeaPad U110 11.1-Inch (1.6 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo L7500 Processor, 3 GB RAM, 120 GB Hard Driv

Lenovo IdeaPad U110 11.1-Inch BlackI've had the Lenovo U110 now for 1 year. It is light and portable. However, the plastic casing is very flimsy and breaks easily. Recently, I turned it on, but does not stay on. Support is non-existence. Searching forum on the internet for possible solutions is impossible. It seems like nobody owns one. Other than that, the lap top works fine.

I bought a Lenovo IdeaPad U110 through Amazon about a year ago, paying about $1,000 for it. It was pre-loaded with Windows Vista, software so bloated and heavy that it couldn't get out of its own way, sometimes taking 3 minutes to boot and over a minute to shutdown. I dumped Vista and loaded XP, and now it comes out of standby in less than 5 seconds and is conneced to my wireless network. At the current price of in excess of $2,000 I would not recommend it. But, if you can score one for around $1,000 and have the means to load XP, it is the incredible.

Buy Lenovo IdeaPad U110 11.1-Inch (1.6 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo L7500 Processor, 3 GB RAM, 120 GB Hard Driv Now

I bought this laptop just over a year ago. Its been great other then I noticed the hard drive occasional skipping. Noticeable during video playback and slightly moving the laptop. The hard drive finally died just after one year. (Just past the warranty period). Lenovo wanted $305 for a replacement 120gb 1.8in hard drive plus $49 processing and a mandatory $10 for the recovery disk (that I don't need) $365 for a 120gig hard drive. After hours on the phone with them and several diff customer service areas They had no alternatives. Im just going to junk the thing and buy a diff laptop...... Im never buying Lenovo ever again... bad company experience

Read Best Reviews of Lenovo IdeaPad U110 11.1-Inch (1.6 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo L7500 Processor, 3 GB RAM, 120 GB Hard Driv Here

Alienware m17x10-1847DSB 17‐Inch Gaming Laptop (Space Black)

Alienware m17x10-1847DSB 17‐Inch Gaming LaptopAfter being a SONY VAIO user for a few years I was very anxious to put the Alienware laptop to the test. Although I am not much of a gamer these days I DO multi-task to a ridiculous degree. I often have 3 browsers open with dozens of tabs as well as running web authoring software, Photo shop and other utilities. At the time of ordering my laptop from Amazon I also ordered a 4 GB RAM stick to even out the odd 6 GB included with the M17. 8 GB appears to be sufficient to my needs. My first impression was overwhelming. There is no denying this laptop was built to impress. Every one that gazes on this laptop has had nothing less than Awe to express. One friend said it reminded him of a stealth fighter. All the lighting and matte black case is really attractive. I love the slot loading opti drive, even though just like the SONY it is on the right side, totally bumping in to my trackball every time I eject a disc. But better than SONY it does provide plenty of USB ports, 5 over the 2 supplied by SONY. Most import there are ports on both sides. The SONY had 2 right next to the disk drive again being totally in the way of any mouse or trackball.....??

Now for actual use: I have been using it for a few weeks now. First off like another review indicates there was (ZERO) software, free or trial that had to be uninstalled like EVERY other laptop I have ever dealt with. That was VERY nice. I did not know at time of purchase that this unit had (2) hard drives running in a Raid O. Interesting. The access to the drives and Memory is very easy from the bottom unlike a lot of other laptops. It appears the multiple cooling fans are easy to get to and clean when required.

Even with the dual Raid O hard drive THIS laptop appears to boot up a bit slower than the VAIO. I think this has something to do with the Alienware face recognition and other ALienware related esthetics. I am sure this can be all uninstalled or deactivated. Not a huge deal at the moment but I thought I should mention it. Face recognition is very annoying until it gets to know you. Still may be quicker to just type in your password. A very unique feature any way you look at it.(no pun intended) There has been no issues installing any of my drivers to external devices I use.

This will be my short list of complaints:

The SONY has a better screen. no doubt. Plus a blueray player.

Matte Black looks really cool as long as you keep it clean. It seems to attract dust like a magnet and it shows bad.

The actual height of the keyboard is about an inch higher than what I am used to so I had to readjust my office chair to type comfortably.

After the newness of the pretty lights begins to become normal one might wonder if they may be an issue in the future. Also the machine has more of a kids look (not sure it would fit in to an office environment). I do miss the thin elegance of the SONY. This is a VERY heavy laptop. Even though I never take my big laptop with me anywhere (I have a netbook for that) this laptop is VERY bulky and appears to weigh twice that of the SONY.

I think if SONY would have offered some of the features found on the M17 I would be still using the SONY at 2/3s the price.

Bottom line: If you can afford this expensive laptop. Give it a try. Buying from Amazon I had it on my door step the day after ordering it.....NICE!!! Amazon return policy: THE BEST!!! I don't think I would have tried this laptop if Amazon did not offer it.

I hope this helps potential M17 customers make a decision.

This unit is amazing. Upon arrival my unit had a bad secondary 5870M GPU. I called Amazon up at 2AM Alaska time and the CSA overnighted me another unit that works perfectly.

I'm not going to rave about all the specifics because if your here reading this then you're already an enthusiast. This configured laptop retails for 2500.00 at Alienware/Dell website.

I am really impressed with my new M17x, more so with Amazon Customer Service.

Thank You Amazon!!!

Buy Alienware m17x10-1847DSB 17‐Inch Gaming Laptop (Space Black) Now

Holy Cow!!! This retails on Dell's website same specs for $2,400 less shipping. I740QM fully upgradeable as well as the whole laptop is upgradeable. However where does this need upgrading maybe the processor? I mean c'mon dual GPU's both being the high end ATI 5870's. No computer at this price point to include the ASUS G73JW A1 can compete with this beast.. Awesome computer with awesome potential. Also the M17X doesn't come loaded with bloatware like ASUS. I was an ASUS G73JH owner, still have it and yet it took a lot of time cleaning up the factory sent laptop from ASUS. I ordered this with beast with next day shipping and it arrived just as advertised. Awesome computer so far.. You can't beat the price for these specs and the Alienware brand name.

Read Best Reviews of Alienware m17x10-1847DSB 17‐Inch Gaming Laptop (Space Black) Here

Others have shown that this laptop ships with a huge under-powered AC cable. Has trouble playing high quality movies on battery.

Have experienced several catastrophic crashes (neon colored lines and blocks on screen, simply shut off without warning and wouldn't start without removing battery, etc).

When it works, it works great.

AlienFX (keyboard lights etc) continue to be glitchy with this model, as others.

Built-in touchpad is horrible, non-responsive and over-sensitive. I'd rather use a trackball, and I despise those. Touch-sensitive controls for disc ejection, audio, wi-fi, etc are difficult to get to work, requiring practice and coming up with your own method. When pressing keys, sometimes the adjacent key will grab your finger.

On the plus side, the hinges are pretty strong, as is the case. Engraved nameplate on the bottom was nice, wore it off in short order though.

I've heard a lot of people have overheating issues with this one, but it stays pretty cool for me.

It's a nice computer, but with all of the problems $2000 is way too much.

Want Alienware m17x10-1847DSB 17‐Inch Gaming Laptop (Space Black) Discount?

And it has dual 5870's in it. That means it is in crossfire mode. Don't believe the tool that says it isn't. This is a great price on the computer!!!!!!!!!!!!

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IBM/Lenovo ThinkPad Edge 15 0302A22 15.6" LED Notebook AMD Turion II P560 2.5GHz 1366x768 WXGA

IBM/Lenovo ThinkPad Edge 15 0302A22 15.6' LED Notebook AMD Turion II P560 2.5GHz 1366x768 WXGAI bought this computer for my parents 3 weeks ago and I gave it to them yesterday, they LOVE it! The screen is larger than my mac and the keyboard has more space so they can type in much easier. So if you are choosing a gift, it's perfect!

HP Envy dv6 Laptop(Latest Model), Intel 3rd generation Core i7-3630QM 2.4Ghz, 8GB RAM, 750GB HD, 15

HP Envy dv6 Laptop(Latest Model), Intel 3rd generation Core i7-3630QM 2.4Ghz, 8GB RAM, 750GB HD, 15.6' 1366x768, Beats Audio, Windows 8I like the computer in general. The only thing that I don't like is the hard drive which is 5400 RPM. It should be at least 7200 RPM to match the speed of the processor so that video editors like me don't have problem during rendering of video. The unit is over the need (requirement)for those who are just typing and doing some computer stuff but under rated for those who will use this for video editing and other task involving video rendering. I don't like the windows 8 as well, I cannot install some software that I need. They should adopt what windows7 have and compatible with. I give 4 star only because of the hard drive speed and windows8 compatibility.

This laptop comes with Windows 8, but does not have the touch-display capabilities. I find that the Windows 8 takes some getting used to, but there are pre-loaded videos that do a good job of explaining how to use this OS.

The display and graphics are rather disappointing, despite calibration. I wish I had paid the extra $$ for the Blu-ray player, but all in all, the memory, speed and functionality are decent for the amount I paid for this laptop.

Buy HP Envy dv6 Laptop(Latest Model), Intel 3rd generation Core i7-3630QM 2.4Ghz, 8GB RAM, 750GB HD, 15 Now

Excellent product, very fast, good performance / cost, very light, comes with excellent numpad!, Not heated by the new system fancooler hp.

Read Best Reviews of HP Envy dv6 Laptop(Latest Model), Intel 3rd generation Core i7-3630QM 2.4Ghz, 8GB RAM, 750GB HD, 15 Here

This laptop is advertised at having 1GB GDDR5 NVIDIA(R) GeForce GT 630M Graphics, but instead came with an Intel HD 4000 graphics card... needless to say I AM EXTREMELY disappointed....

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Like other reviewers, had to scale the learning curve on Windows 8 (start screen is designed primarily to market apps). Came up with satisfactory workarounds to get down to business quickly. The ENVY dv6 is FAST!!! Boots up virtually INSTANTLY, and I'm online in the blink of an eye! I LOVE the BACKLIT KEYBOARD as I work a lot at night. This is the best all-around HP laptop I've owned in its price range. Very happy.

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MSI Computer Corp. GT60 0NE-403US;9S7-16F311-403 15.6-Inch Laptop

MSI Computer Corp. GT60 0NE-403US;9S7-16F311-403 15.6-Inch LaptopGT60-ONE

Just a little backround, I build my own computers and also do so for my friends and family, probably about 20 or so over the years. I am not a professional, nor do i claim to be any type of expert, however i do have a decent amount of insight and knowledge in modern PCs. I also do a lot of research on the components i buy.

First let me start with the Cons, so you know upfront what you are dealing with.

This laptop is quite large and heavy for a 15/16 inch laptop, which is to be expected for a gaming laptop. The laptop is about the size of most normal 17" laptops. It is about 15 3/8"W x 10 7/16"D x 1 9/16 in the front to 2 1/8"H -this includes the feet in the rear. Whether you deem this "portable" is based on personal preference and uses. For me, being basically a portable Desktop that i can take to other locations, it is definetly portable and i dont mind carrying this around. (I have a tablet and a phone to use for light web surfing/social/media applications/checking scores etc)

The power brick is also quite large but yet a little slim at 6 3/4"x 3 1/4" x 1 9/16". You should basically expect to use most 17" laptop bags/carrying cases/backpacks.

Turbo Fan setting is loud, I would liken it to tower style fan (home fan, not desktop tower) on high setting loud. However while the noise level gets up there, it isnt irratating loud and has very little whine to it IMO. Seems like a great feature to use while alone and using headphones as the cooling boost is nice. Of course this can be turned on/off very easily

Windows 8.... still havn't found a reason to like it, it feels a bit more clunky to use than Windows 7. I am debating installing windows 7 back onto this computer.

No SSD, for the price it is debatable whether this is a negative, I installed my own SSD on the side so i can have a boot 250GB ssd and use the 750GB as a disk drive. Performance does suffer compared to any SSD laptop, so for the price i would definetly recommend an SSD.

There is shiny plastic around the screen, which sometimes can be annoying if it gets hit with the right light angle.

So with all of that said, here is what you get.

For basically $1900 -$2000 w/Mail in rebate (price of SSD included) you get:

GTX680M probably the reason most of you are looking at this laptop, It is also the 4GB version. This thing performs. Dont expect 680 Desktop performance, but for something you can carry around, you play most games at Ultra, or high and get great FPS. My 3Dmark 11 (No Overclocking) scores are about 6200 or 3000 or so less compared to my Ivy I7 GTX670 4GBVRAM Desktop. Keep in mind my desktop graphics car alone is probably 1/3 the size of this entire computer!

Optimus I get between 2 1/2 Hours to 3 1/2 hours off the plug depending what am doing. Keep in mind though that performance is throttled down when off the plug, so dont expect full performance off the plug. To me this is exceptional for a gaming laptop with desktop performance.

I7 3630QM slight upgrade from standard I7 Ivy QM, probably not much difference, but nice upgrade.

12GB Ram dont need to put extra ram in which saves some $.

15.6" 1080P Matte HD screen This screen is really really nice. Comapred to my desktop screens which are samsung LED's of last year, the screen on my laptop is noticibly better. It is bright, and clear, and most importantly has no glare (switching from an Alienware this is a huge difference). It is not one of those 95% NTSC High Gamut screens, however it also does not need color calibration programs which can be tricky to operate in some games and look off without proper calibration software, and also all of these screens cost extra on top if you buy Clevo Chassis Laptops.

Steel Series Keyboard this is one of those preferences, but i like the keyboard, it has a nice feel to it, and the backlight and customization are nice. Keys aren't quite full mechanical, but also not close to mushy like a lot of other laptops, a little firmer than my alienware which i liked for gaming. The keys have to me a 3/4 satisfying click of a mechanical keyboard id say, which is pretty darn good for a laptop keyboard.

Blu-Ray Burner! Pretty awesome to have a blu-ray burner not that i would burn any movies or anything. I think all nice laptops these days should come standard with atleast a blu-ray player. It is definetly a plus to be able to watch blu-rays on this nice of screen on the road without having to carry an extra drive. Also Blu-ray Disk rewrittables anyone?

Dynaudio Speakers I can say that these are without a doubt the best speakers I have personally heard on a laptop. The sound quality is really impressive for laptop speakers. The sub isnt that powerful, but the overall sound quality is really exceptional. I'm not an audiophile, but I have a decently trained ear. A lot of people try and compare these to their 5.1 or 7.1 home speakers saying how its not that good, but there is no comparison IMO because i am not going to carry a 5.1 or 7.1 speaker system or even a 2.1 speaker system around with me ever.

Killer 1202 Fast Dual band 2xMIMO wifi card, and also has bluetooth. Very impressed with the speed of the Killer Wifi cards overall.

750GB 7200RPM HD + (should add) SSD IMO this isnt too bad a deal. just add in your own ssd and use the 750gb as a disk drive since it is atleast 7200 rpm.

Has a nice combination of ports, no DVI, but it has HDMI, displayport, and VGA, USB2/3, esata ports. Also I like that the Ethernet port is on the back, I didnt like that my Alienware had the Ethernet on the side.

Cooling works well, laptop stays cool even during gaming. I havn't run any prime test because this thing performs perfectly for what I wanted to do out of the box minus the SSD and probably windows 8.

Build Quality Brushed Aluminum Wrist area and back cover, lots of plastic everywhere else. Doesnt bother me other than fingerprints, however I have not met too many laptops that are not fingerprint magnets! Overall Build Quality is good, not macbook level, but until macbooks can fit a 680M and/or even come close to the price with that card, I think this is your best bet if you want a GTX680M Gaming Laptop.

So In Summary,

Here were my guidlines

Must have:

Intel I7 Ivy Bridge

GTX680M-4GB or AMD 7970M (680M prefered due to speed and optimus if included)

1080P Screen nice looking hopefully:)

Killer 1202

Like design (Obviously preference)

Let me start out by saying I wanted the Asus G75 or G55. I like the design, and i actually buy Asus over MSI unless price is more of a concern.

Here is too me what is wrong with each of the computers and why I did not buy them.

Asus G55/G75 Weak Video cards, great design, but 660m-675M just doesnt cut it for me, especially for the same or more $.

Alienware IMO comparable to Apple Build quality. All these people who rag on alienware, they probably are just haters or just repeating things they heard. They are actually not overpriced anymore, and have the best warrenty/service and build quality of the gaming manufactuers IMO. But their prices are still too high for certain configurations and they do overcharge for add ons. Their best deal was for a 7970M, however while the 7970M is comparible, the Enduro issues and the fact you have to add on the 1080P screen just made this laptop too expensive for the configuration (considering how well priced the GT60ONE is). Oh and they charge Tax which adds on.

IbuyPower Best hardware for price, build quality and brand is questionable still. Very intriguing, however Not looking to burn 2K on a brand i dont really knowthey used to be mostly a pc building operation.

Samsung Nice build premium price, 675MX which is about 30 percent slower than the 680M.

Clevo Brands more expensive for same build, custom build time. I was set to get a sager or mythlogic, however the better speakers, better 720P webcam, better keyboard, mic not being on the keyboard all drove me to the MSI. Basically for what i paid overall, I am spending $200-$300 less for the MSI that has better speakers, about the same build quality, a better keyboard, better warrenty, 2HDD bays instead of 1, and I can buy it from Amazon!

Overall I am very pleased, It is a Great computer. Still trying to get used to windows 8. What really set this over the top for me is the speakers. I watch a lot of movies/netflix when I am on trips along with gaming. These speakers do not disappoint. Oh an Very little bloatware!

I own the MSI GX660R so I have enjoyed that enough to purchase another MSI Gaming Laptop.

Build Quality and Stuff:

I recently purchased this computer from another reseller and so far I have had zero complaints. I own the 15.6" variant so I could fit it into most laptop bags. The build quality is very good. It feels solid throughout. The body is mostly brushed black aluminum and the keyboard feels very sturdy,(more than the GX660R, mostly plastic body). It has a Steel Series brand keyboard which is an attempt to make it like a mechanical keyboard for laptops. They did a good job too because typing on this computer is a joy for me. The GX660R would flex a bit, but not this keyboard. It also lights up just like you see in the picture. It is fully customizable in color so you can make it what you want. It can light up in different modes as well. The sound system on this computer is the best I have ever heard for a laptop. Its not some low budget sound system I hear in most other machines. My build uses the stock screen and I must say that screen is amazing. The clarity is just brilliant. I wanted to get the 95% color gamut but couldn't justify it as I would mostly be using an external monitor (ASUS VE278Q). The laptop screen blows the doors off my external monitor though. The touchpad is nice as well. Although I rarely use it, it gets the job done. Built-in webcam is clear. Hinges on this computer feel solid. I have had zero issues with my previous MSI so I only expect improvement from here on out.

Performance:

This machine is currently able to run every game I have thrown at it. That isn't saying much in my opinion. What matters is that I can run mostly every game at the highest graphical settings in the native resolution of 1920 x 1080. Now that is saying something. The frame rates on this computer are sometimes choppy though depending on the game. Maybe I can get some feedback from someone who has encountered this problem and resolved it. I am currently playing Borderlands 2 and I get mostly 50fps but there are some instances where the frames drop to close to 16. I believe this to be a driver issue and here is why(Nvidia 310.90 Driver at the time of writing). If I stand still in that spot of low frames, the frames slowly ramp back up to the 50ish range (waiting 5 seconds or so). As I move around after the frames rise, they stay high and don't drop again until I arrive somewhere else completely new. Its like the video card doesn't know I need that power now, not in 5 seconds. I also am experimenting with the Nvidia Optimizer in hopes that this issue would be resolved, but no luck yet. I also signed up for the GeForce Experience but this appears to be in closed beta and I have not gotten an invite yet. I have also been playing WoW MoP, Saints Row 3, and BF3. All of these games pretty much run flawlessly and stay around 40-60fps.

I almost didn't buy this computer because I wanted to wait for the Haswell chip sets that I heard are coming out next but I think they were backed up to 2014 or something? Either way this machine makes me happy. I use it for everything, work and play. No regrets after 3 weeks of ownership. This machine is awesome.

My system is customized. It has all stock parts except:

I only have 1 hard drive, Samsung 840 SSD 500gb (updated firmware)

16GB DDR3 1600 MHz SDRAM, 4 x 4GB SODIMM

IC Diamond Thermal Paste on cpu and gpu

BIOS Ver. E16F3IMS.50U

Bluray Reader in place or writer

3DMark 11 Score P6071 Video Benchmark

Buy MSI Computer Corp. GT60 0NE-403US;9S7-16F311-403 15.6-Inch Laptop Now

I've had this laptop for just over a week. I installed an SSD in the second drive bay and had a pretty annoying experience completing a clean install my Windows 8 Pro license, but that is not MSI's fault in any way. I ended up having to install Windows 7 and then "upgrade" to Windows 8 in order to get my install to work.

Now for the good:

This thing performs as expected based on other reviews and the hardware included. It handles everything I've thrown at it thus far with ease (Total War: Shogun 2, Star Wars: The Old Republic, Borderlands 2) on high/max settings. It gets a bit warm in the upper left hand area of the keyboard under heavy load, but not disturbingly so. The speakers are very nice for a laptop. The potential volume output is great. The multi-touch pad is acceptable but nothing special (as in don't expect Apple touch pad like response, but you can 2 finger scroll and swipe in from the sides).

The not so good:

The build quality appears to be pretty bad. My unit has a few apparent problems. The plastic panel to the left of the power button pops out and will not stay in place. The backspace key is finicky and has to be hit just right to consistently respond. The keyboard itself doesn't seem to be fitted properly. There is a noticeable bulge/warp to it around the o/p/bracket keys. I'm probably going to need to make a warranty claim on it, but I'm concerned they will deny it because I "tampered" with the laptop by installing the SSD. I'll update on that later, if there is anything to report.

Overall, I'm very pleased with the performance of this thing, but am disappointed with the build quality. When I spend this kind of money on a laptop, I want to feel completely satisfied with my purchase. In this case, that cannot truthfully be said. If MSI stands behind the product and gets these issues taken care of, I will be a very content/happy customer!

Read Best Reviews of MSI Computer Corp. GT60 0NE-403US;9S7-16F311-403 15.6-Inch Laptop Here

I agree with many of the reviews you'll find here. Its hard to find a more loaded laptop at this price. I looked at alternatives and this was the best value for the money.

I'd give this laptop a 5 except for MSI's customer service. After having the laptop for 2 months, the hard drive is failing. I reconfigured my system to boot Windows 7 from a SSD and I use the 750 gig that came with the laptop for data. I couldn't save any files, got errors from Windows 7, the chkdsk program loaded on startup, and the drive failed the smart test. I called MSI and they wanted me to first rule out a software problem by reinstalling Windows 8 on the hard drive. They wouldn't just send me a new drive to swap out. They wanted me to send the laptop to them so they could do the work.

That's crazy. My laptop is confugured how I like it. It actually ended up being less trouble to buy a new hard drive for $72 then reinstall operating systems and send in my computer to them so they can realize that the problem is the hard drive and install a new one. Not very customer oriented.

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Don't think you'll be able to find a computer packing this much power for the price. If you're a gamer, you'll love it. It can be a little on the heavy side and the AC adapter is a brick but I'm satisfied with the purchase. I wish that it had a volume control on the side instead of having to use the function keys. Speaking of the keyboard, it is very tactile and the color changes are awesome.

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HP Pavilion dv7-4295us Entertainment Notebook PC - Silver

HP Pavilion dv7-4295us Entertainment Notebook PC - SilverBad

I bought this at Fry's for an equivalent price.

I'm now on my 3rd laptop after getting replaced for hardware failures. 1st laptop the video died on the laptop monitor. It was replaced after 2 days. The 2nd the fan failed after 3 days. I'm now on my 3rd laptop, hopefully its the charm.

Good

Ergonomics could be better. The battery extends below the body, creating a lift to the laptop. This is fine when on a table or desk, but rests just above my knee when on my lap. I'm surprised there is only one fan outlet, its blows out the back left and is also faces down, a blanket or thick rug can easily block the vent.

All ports are located on the left and right. I do wish there was at least 1 usb and the power in the back.

The HP logo also lights up when powered on, like Apple's. I'm not sure if there is a way to turn it off. I like to keep it running overnight and the light can be distracting.

Best

The laptop itself is fast as can be. The Windows performance index is only slowed by the speed hard drive, which is rare with a laptop, it's usually the video that slows down a system.

The software that comes installed is actually useful. Not much bloatware (except norton, sprint, ebay). The wildtangent games are fun and most are free. There are utilities to change how often the fan runs, and apps for bluetooth and wifi.

I purchased a Pavilion dv7-4295us two days ago. I am going to have to return it. I went through 3 hours on the phone with a technician. The problem is the mousepad. It jumps around when not touched, selects items without touching as you are scrolling around, moves the opposite direction as you move the cursor at times, pauses as you are scrolling in a random fashion, and is unfortunately the ultamite downfall of this computer. The specs are great on this model. I was fairly happy for all the bells and whistles for the price I paid. If I could get the mouse working I would keep it. Now I am going to have to potentially pay a restocking fee where I bought it from, lose all the time I put into loading it, and lose time, gas and money returning it to the store. I have to have a laptop ready immediately before I head up to remote regions in Alaska.

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It is hard to not sound negative about HP after my experience.

But Really? This is the best you can do HP?

$1200 laptop by the time it gets to your door ...OH after 4 weeks of waiting for it to be "Built" because you added "Upgrades"

By the time this junk gets to you, wouldn't it be great if it actually "Worked"?

But it did not and then began the endless loop of people that ask you to do static discharge tests and other time wasting garbage.

I spent 52 hours in one week with tech support!

Do you have time for that?

HP Should give me the laptop for free as pay for the hours I put in with them on this.

The Wireless in most of the HP mobile devices has issues and in these units it is fatal in my case it functioned for the first 15 minutes out of the box.

It may be that they are utilizing inferior wireless adaptors, I have read this on some of the blogs but I am not an expert, I just know mine would not work after many, many, hours of tech support calls and chats. The laptop simply didn't even "See" the adaptor. It was like it wasn't even in there?

At one point, I was actually asked by HP Tech support to take the machine apart and "Re seat" the adaptor (Read unscrew the cover take the card out by unscrewing it and then put it back together) I did it too! Did not help.

The restore to original factory setting...did that 4 times! No help.

These guys at HP do not have a clue but if you search on YouTube before you buy you will see there are pages and pages of folks that have similar "Issues" with HP products. They are not what they promise, you do not get what you pay for and while they look "Pretty" to some, the return is short lived before the gremlins appear.

Do not get caught in the HP "Trap" take your hard earn dollars elsewhere so you don't waste all the time I did.

Just trying to help others avoid the nightmarish experience I just went through and possibly save you valuable time and money.

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The keyboard is cheap feeling and gives poor tactile sensation of were your hands are on the keys. The keys themselves take too little effort to press and feel like they tip or rock too much.

The touchpad integrates the left and right clicks into the touchpad which makes it bigger but at the very least it takes getting used to.

None of the USB ports are at the back half of the computer (for a flash drive its nice to have convenient ports, for printer cables and mouse cords I would much prefer to have them tucked out of the way in the back.

The power cord sticks straight out the side. Other competent designers would put a 90 degree bend in the cable if they had it going in the side like that instead it has a few inches of plastic sticking out in the way of eveything and increasing the risk of breaking the port by way of leverage.

The fingerprint reader will only work with internet explorer, not firefox or other programs.

The case is a beutifull patterened/etched aluminum.

The display is beautiful.

The way they set up the disk drive tray it is recessed into the laptop and it requires a unique extension that is best described as cheap. I will be truly suprised if it holds up and it is dificult to open even new.

I am coming from an old toshiba sattelite A65 so I should be easy to impress here. There has been plenty of time for designers to improve things, I expected this layout to be better thought out, not worse.

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This laptop is very sleek and fast. For the price you can't beat it as it has everything except a faster hard drive. Seems as if the hardware for laptops is ready to take a big leap because looking at Dell, they are now offering 3GB video cards bluray writer; although when configuring it the ship date was in mid June, weight 1 lb more, and was at least $600 more. This computer feels and looks well made and should be future proof for a few years.