I just bought a notebook last week.
But more for portable/holiday use. N140 it is nice but only 10 inch
screen.
That's Samsung , I kind of trust that name now.
The earlier 110 is down to circa �220.
Because of other reasons I have not had a lot of time to play with it.
But I was concerned about Win7.
But MMTTY and DIGIPAN have gone on ok.
Like you I was going to stick with XP.
But if you look back in the forum you will see comments when I asked about
WIN7.
I have not loaded DM780 yet however.
My son Stephen G8UEE has always had HP and they are used every day.
And just keep rolling on but more expensive.
My younger son has a Target delivery franchise he says is forever delivering
replacements for DELL.
It is a mine field.
Best of luck.
Johnny G3LIV
>well out we go with no help in choosing then ..........
Hello, Tosh.
additions to spec:
1.
computer part needs to be analogue.
2.
also needs to be easily re-cyclable in approx 6 months.
3.
ability to plug into a 12v lighter socket would be nice.
> 1.
> computer part needs to be analogue.
Those were the days. I wonder how many people these days know what
op-amps were actually designed for?
--
Visit the Amazing Online Fleamarket at http://www.fleamarket.org.uk
Always lots of amateur radio gear!
>Those were the days. I wonder how many people these days know what
>op-amps were actually designed for?
Ask Jimbo.
Analogue computing was part of my first degree course in the late 1970s.
One of my first work projects was related to replacing essentially analogue
computer circuitry with a digital equivalent.
--
73
Brian G8OSN/W8OSN
www.g8osn.net
Life is too short for cheap wine.
> Indeed... But then again, unlike Jimbo, I wouldn't buy any new
> computer this side of Christmas, when waiting just a few days would
> mean buying at SALE prices.
>
> Nick.
quite right as well ......
no I would never let anybody buy a dell...I have one next door and it takes
forever to do anything...and I have tried EVERYTHING to sort it out...next
move is out the back door with a box of matches ........
Advent are absolute garbage. Followed by Packard Bell.
Well about two years ago Dell lost 1st place to HP.
Market share, customer reports, batteries.
We have DELLs in work and they havent broken down at all.
Battery life is one thing that bugs me.
Only other problem so far is the cooling on the DELL LATITUDE 620
is the cooling fan, coling input/output is all just too close to each
other and too much of it is too close to table level.
http://www.dell.com/us/en/dfb/notebooks/latit_d620/pd.aspx?refid=latit_d620&cs=28&s=dfb
Me thinks - the DELL name adds a few bob onto the price tag.
Do Toshiba's still have the windows-key off up in the far right corner
or have they fixed that by putting it where every other keyboard has
it ?
I'd look at HP first.
well there is nothing wrong with our "his and hers" advent 4213 netbooks....
but then again I think they are made by ECS with 160GB SATA hard
drive.....not bad at �249 for the first one and �217 airside Dixons/Currys?
Glas Air for the second one ....
Panasonic Toughbook, by far.
I have to agree with you on that one. I've had a few of them over the
last 10 years and they all still work!
Certainly don't - it's damn near indestructable (I've launched it across
a room and driven a car over it), rainproof and the battery life is awesome.
The screen and speaker (mono) lets it down though - but it was never
meant to be a mulitmedia machine.
Who needs spares - they don't break!
Underpowered? What model you got? Mine's OK - not a flying machine, but
plenty enough for me.
Yes, every port seal. The power input one is starting to suffer a bit,
and the battery does hold less of a charge than it used to - but they
are available.
>> Underpowered? What model you got? Mine's OK - not a flying machine, but
>> plenty enough for me.
>
> A CF-28 ages ago and a CF-52 more recently. True, power isn't everything,
> but for the so-so spec you are paying a huge premium for the magnesium alloy
> case and the silicone that encases the hard drive. Oh, and Intel Extreme
> Graphics aren't, unless it's the lower-end extreme. They may have the edge
> in processors right now, but their graphics solutions are woefully
> inadequate.
>
> The Toughbook has a niche where it is irreplaceable. What pass for BT
> engineers these days would go through Thinkpads at the rate of one a week at
> least :o)
>
> I suspect you're using yours with an OBD II interface, amongst other things,
> which is another area in which they excel. You are correct that they are
> very difficult to destroy. A little seawater spray doesn't seem to bother
> them either, providing you don't actually drop them in the drink, and they
> make ideal moving map displays. They also make good field day logging
> machines; B&Q paste tables never were designed to hold a full station off
> the ground for long...
>
> It all depends on what you're using them for. I suppose I shouldn't have
> made such a sweeping statement about Thinkpads either, especially given
> Lenovo's propensity for bundling their own special brand of adware with them
> these days.
Mine's a CF-29, Mk5 with DDR2 RAM. Granted, the graphics are crap, but
it runs Command and Conquer: Generals and Hitman: Contracts, so that'll
do. The fact it has a real serial port is another reason I have no
intention of replacing it - both for OBDII, Vag-Com (VW group specific
OBD), and also for programming older PMR rigs (Kenwood TK-709 and
Motorola GP300 being the most common ones that won't work with Windows
or a USB serial port).