economical laptop
John Abreau
jabr at blu.org
Thu Jul 8 00:12:01 EDT 2004
On Wed, 2004-07-07 at 09:05, Kalyan Vaidyanathan wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm trying to figure out the most economical way to get a functional
> laptop.
>
> I've never done anything like this before, but am willing to learn. I
> would like to know if building one from parts is cheaper than getting a
> regular laptop that I can upgrade over time (more RAM, bigger harddisk
> etc.). If building from parts, are there any recommendations of where I
> should start from?
> Ideally I'd like about 60GB harddisk, 512MB ram, >2GHz processor. The key
> requirement is a wireless network card so that I can use the laptop anywhere
> at home. Software, I plan to stay with linux. I've only worked with RH9.
Laptops are almost entirely made from custom parts; I doubt it would
be feasible to build one from scratch. If you did, I believe you'd
end up paying a lot more and ending up with something barely usable.
I bought a nice Thinkpad on eBay last year; with shipping, I paid about
$200 for it. I then paid about $60 at pcmall.com for a 40gb 2.5-inch
hard drive to replace the tiny one the Thinkpad came with. Wireless
network cards are fairly cheap, too.
I've used a variety of laptops over the years, and I must say the IBM
Thinkpads are my favorite, with the older Sony Vaio Picturebook a close
second.
--
John Abreau / Executive Director, Boston Linux & Unix
Email jabr at blu.org / WWW http://www.abreau.net / PGP-Key-ID 0xD5C7B5D9
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