Tayl
VIP Member
Hey hey.
Right well, it's come to the point that my main PC is dying, yet again (I swear something is completely frying them in this house because this is the third PC to die on me within 3 years). Well I'm sick of replacing one PC after the next, each costing me just over £1000 a time. So I'm going to invest in a laptop now because gaming isn't something I really have time for anymore. Basically I don't wish to spend anymore than £500 on a laptop. It'll be used for basic Internet use, work related tasks (mostly Office applications) and general buggering about (maybe a tiny amount of light old gaming but none of the new fancy 'looks almost realistic' type gaming, of course).
Now, I have absolutely no idea when it comes to buying laptops, and I'm very dated on computer hardware as of late so I'm feeling like a newbie all over again.
I've came across two laptops that are within my budget range and wondered your opinions on them. They are:
HP Pavilion dv9821ea Entertainment Notebook PC (FF493EA) - Specifications
http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/uk/en/ho/WF06b/321957-321957-3329744-64354-64354-3675209-3765588.html
That one being the most expensive of the two, nearer the barrier of the budget. Also, HP as a manufacturer, any good? Reliable, well made products or cheap bits of plastic that often have a reliability scale to that of a rock floating in water?
And the cheaper one being:
dell studio t2390 17:
http://www1.euro.dell.com/content/p...=uk~en~20211~sept_laptop_studio_17_n0973502~~
The HP laptop costs around £479 and the Dell costs around £399. They worth it? Can you think of anything better for less than £500?
Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
:: Edit ::
One more thing I'm curious of. With, for example, electricity surges, I imagine that with Laptops the battery acts, in it's own way, as a sort of UPS for the Laptop like UPS would for a desktop? In the sense that no doubt regardless of the amount surging into the battery, the voltages / power/ what ever would still be regulated to the laptop from the battery itself stopping any form of a surge from actually damaging the laptop? Or am I completely off on this one?
:: /Edit ::
Best regards,
Rove.
Right well, it's come to the point that my main PC is dying, yet again (I swear something is completely frying them in this house because this is the third PC to die on me within 3 years). Well I'm sick of replacing one PC after the next, each costing me just over £1000 a time. So I'm going to invest in a laptop now because gaming isn't something I really have time for anymore. Basically I don't wish to spend anymore than £500 on a laptop. It'll be used for basic Internet use, work related tasks (mostly Office applications) and general buggering about (maybe a tiny amount of light old gaming but none of the new fancy 'looks almost realistic' type gaming, of course).
Now, I have absolutely no idea when it comes to buying laptops, and I'm very dated on computer hardware as of late so I'm feeling like a newbie all over again.
I've came across two laptops that are within my budget range and wondered your opinions on them. They are:
HP Pavilion dv9821ea Entertainment Notebook PC (FF493EA) - Specifications
http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/uk/en/ho/WF06b/321957-321957-3329744-64354-64354-3675209-3765588.html
That one being the most expensive of the two, nearer the barrier of the budget. Also, HP as a manufacturer, any good? Reliable, well made products or cheap bits of plastic that often have a reliability scale to that of a rock floating in water?
And the cheaper one being:
dell studio t2390 17:
http://www1.euro.dell.com/content/p...=uk~en~20211~sept_laptop_studio_17_n0973502~~
The HP laptop costs around £479 and the Dell costs around £399. They worth it? Can you think of anything better for less than £500?
Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
:: Edit ::
One more thing I'm curious of. With, for example, electricity surges, I imagine that with Laptops the battery acts, in it's own way, as a sort of UPS for the Laptop like UPS would for a desktop? In the sense that no doubt regardless of the amount surging into the battery, the voltages / power/ what ever would still be regulated to the laptop from the battery itself stopping any form of a surge from actually damaging the laptop? Or am I completely off on this one?
:: /Edit ::
Best regards,
Rove.
Last edited: