7. Special Considerations When Buying Laptops
Up until about 1999 the laptop market was completely crazy. The
technology was in a state of violent flux, with "standards"
phasing in and out and prices dropping like rocks. Things are beginning to
settle out a bit more now.
One sign of this change is that there are now a couple of laptop lines
that are clear best-of-breeds for reasons having as much to do with
good industrial design and ergonomics as the technical details of the
processor and display.
In lightweight machines, I'm a big fan of the Sony VAIO line.
I owned one from early 1999 until it physically disintegrated under
the rigors of travel in late 2000, and could hardly imagine
switching. They weigh 3.5 pounds, give you an honest 3 hours of life
per detachable battery pack, have a very nice 1024x768 display, and
are just plain pretty. Their only serious
drawback is that they're not rugged, and often fall apart after
a year or so of use.
If you want a full-power laptop that can compete with or replace
your desktop machine, the IBM ThinkPad line is the bomb. Capable,
rugged, and nicely designed (though somewhat heavyweight for my
taste). I now use a ThinkPad X20, the lightest and smallest machine
in the line, and like it a lot.
These machines are not cheap, though. If you're trying to save
money by buying a no-name laptop, here are things to look for:
First: despite what you may believe, the most important aspect
of any laptop is not the CPU, or the disk, or the
memory, or the screen, or the battery capacity. It's the keyboard
feel, since unlike in a PC, you cannot throw the keyboard away and
replace it with another one unless you replace the whole computer.
Never buy any laptop that you have not typed on for a couple
hours. Trying a keyboard for a few minutes is not enough.
Keyboards have very subtle properties that can still affect whether
they mess up your wrists.
A standard desktop keyboard has keycaps 19mm across with 7.55mm
between them. If you plot frequency of typing errors against keycap size,
it turns out there's a sharp knee in the curve at 17.8 millimeters. Beware
of "kneetop" and "palmtop" machines, which
squeeze the keycaps a lot tighter and typically don't have enough oomph for
Unix anyway; you're best off with the "notebook" class machines that have
full-sized keys.
Second: with present flatscreens, 1024x768 color is the best you're
going to do (though that may change soon). If you want more than that
(for X, for example) you have to either fall back to a desktop or make
sure there's an external-monitor port on the laptop (and many laptops
won't support higher resolution than the flatscreen's).
Third: about those vendor-supplied time-between-recharge
figures; don't believe them. They collect those
from a totally quiescent machine, sometimes with the screen or hard
disk turned off. Under DOS, you'd be lucky to get half the endurance
they quote; under Unix, which hits the disk more often, it may be less
yet. Figures from magazine reviews are more reliable.
Fourth: get either a CD-ROM drive or an Ethernet card.
Otherwise initial load of your Unix could turn into a serious
problem...