Posted on 12/23/2013 12:43:41 PM PST by savedbygrace
So, I want to buy a new PC. I have a 4 year old Asus laptop and the screen has a lot of bad pixels. And I do not want to install Win7 again, but Start and Shutdown are both taking a long time, so I know I should re-install if I keep it.
So, my options are to buy a laptop with Win8, or a combo laptop/touch-screen with Win8. I will not buy a desktop PC.
What are the advantages of each, and which models would you recommend? I want as much RAM as possible, maybe 8GB, and the fastest processor I can afford. I want to keep it under $800, or not much more than that.
Note that I will not buy anything from Toshiba.
Go.
I would buy a cheap laptop and install the version of Windows that I want. Win7 is still sold at many places, like TigerDirect. I wouldn't be focusing on hardware because it wears down and breaks eventually anyhow. Do not buy an overly expensive laptop - it's a mobile thing, and it can be damaged easily. Buy a disposable one, as long as you are happy with its performance and like the keyboard. Some latest Lenovo laptops have an awful touchpad, for example (there are no mouse buttons; the entire touchpad tilts. This is amazingly bad.)
If you do keep it then google for a new display for Asus model number XXXX(whatever it is)
You might be surprised as it may not cost as much if you are not buying directly from Asus. Then find someone to install it as it is not usually hard if you know how. You very well might even find a How To video on Youtube.
Thanks for raising the question!
many companies sell lease returns at good price. Most of these come with win 7 on them. I have been told Wall-Mary on line sells used laptops. with a one year warranty at addition charge is still a great deal.
I want to buy a new PC too.
My budget is about $7.21
:p
As to the dead pixels on your screen: my wife dropped her laptop and ruined the screen. I ordered her another screen and installed it within days for less than $100. And I'm no computer whiz. There were Youtube videos that showed exactly how to replace the screen. I eventually replaced her keyboard as well. Just thought I'd throw that out there as an alternative to buying a new one.
Toshiba is fine as long as you don’t like batteries....
Buy a biz class Dell Latitude E5x30, E5x40, E6x30, or E6x40 refurb with Windows 7 x64 Pro from:
http://www.dell.com/us/dfb/p/latitude-laptops.aspx?c=us&cs=28&l=en&s=dfb&~ck=mn
If you go the E5xxx route, spend the extra $70.00 for the extra two years of warranty (E6xxx already has built-in 3-yr warranty, but they are more expensive.)
4-6 GB RAM
320 or bigger 7400 rpm HD (avoid SSD)
intel i5 processor (or i7 if real horsepower needed, which most people don’t usually need)
webcam if you need one and can find a refurb with it.
Avoid Windows 8.x like the plague. It’s a gawdawful OS and is basically a dead operating system at this point for all practical purposes given its collapsing adoption rate in comparison with Windows 7.
my niece has partly ruined her screen, should we sent it to SONY since its under warranty? or let you fix it?
//sarcasm
was it really that easy??
Toshiba has just announced a Chromebook and ASUS will have one soon. Load it with Linux and you’re in bidnyz!
Hey, I am a Windows guy too. But I am running Linux too and it is great! Plus it is free. Can’t beat that.
What the heck is up with the latest version of IE. It seems to get sick after a while, slows down, crashes, locks up.
Windows 7 seems to be solid. I have only seen 8 and it seems clunky but it seems to be following its predecessors — vista, ME — as a beta OS for following versions.
Good advice.
Stay away from even numbered Windows releases. And the ones after those too.
Rush Limbaugh likes Apple products, too.
All I did was google my wife's Asus laptop model and added the words replace screen. I found a very easy-to-follow Youtube video that showed exactly how to remove and replace the screen. I watched the video a few times while looking at her laptop. I decided I could probably handle the job and ordered the screen. Once it came in, I think it took all of half an hour to get it installed and running. Ditto the keyboard. Before doing it, I didn't even know those things could be repaired.
Toshiba’s are built to be very hard to open up and fix.
I have a desktop - Windows 7; a regular laptop - Windows 7 - and a combination laptop/tablet - Windows 8. I used the combo with Windows 8 as shipped for three months and then spent $3.00 on “StartIsBack” menu. That has been a very satisfactory solution for the combo machine. I’m happy with the combo, don’t use the laptop or desktop unless I need the real estate on the monitor.
Microsoft has always been evil, but for general purpose home computing Windows is the best deal. For a live CD rescue disk, or for some specialized machines Linux can work. Macs are for Pajama Guy.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.