alfreda89: 3 foot concrete Medieval style gargoyle with author's hand resting on its head. (USS Enterprise Lightning)
alfreda89 ([personal profile] alfreda89) wrote2012-08-25 10:10 am
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I hate shopping for laptops

It's been an interesting week, health-wise. Since not a lot else was getting done, other than a lovely dinner or two with friends I hadn't seen for a while, I started looking for computers again.

I started wobbling on purchasing a Mac. I am having trouble visualizing myself dropping that much money for a computer. Even if I buy an $800 PC laptop, a minimum Mac is $200+ more than that. So I returned to PCs, thinking that either a Dell or a Toshiba was what I wanted. I want reliability, and would like the computer to be upgradable and last at least five years.

It doesn't need a hot processor for games. It needs to handle text well. It needs a responsive keyboard for someone who types a lot (no Chiclets.) It needs a very good monitor, or an easy to see monitor that I can buy a TV to go with. It needs R-W drives, and to be able to read DVDs and CDs. I need USB ports for my Kindle, etc., an HDMI connection, and Ethernet. I'd prefer a hard drive in the computer, because I ideally will sometimes work where there is no cloud, and I can misplace a flash drive faster than you can blink.

Of course, it needs good speakers, wi-fi, a camera and mike. I'm not worried about software. I'm going to try Scrivner's, so if Office comes on the machine, great. If not, I'll try Open Office. And I'd like to get it for $800 or less.

A friend this week told me that unless I'm a business customer, Dell and Toshiba will probably give me lousy customer service. And a small biz customer will get no better service right now. He suggested Acer or ASUS.

http://www.laptopmag.com/mobile-life/best-brands-2012.aspx

But these articles, among others, say Acer and ASUS are extremely unreliable, and that all customer service varies by as little as a point overall, and I should either buy a lemon protection plan or expect to be ignored by the manufacturer of whatever computer I buy. Some say Lenovo, some say HP -- and I'm deeply suspicious of the HP quality.

Unless I buy an Apple, and spring for the extended warranty.

So, am I looking for a unicorn? I really don't want to spend three months shipping a laptop back and forth, trying to get a machine that actually works. Should I just buy the cheapest workhorse and expect crap service if I need it? If I'm playing that game, I'm buying from Costco, since I have a relationship with them.

[identity profile] alfreda89.livejournal.com 2012-08-25 05:55 pm (UTC)(link)
I have looked at refurbished ones, but when I see them listed at Apple, they are only 15% off retail. And a friend has offered me their employee discount this year, which is 15% off retail! I guess cheaper ones go faster at the re-manufactured shop. I could probably find one on Craig's List here (or could have, before school started up) but they aren't vetted. Local Mac repair places no longer sell them, they can't match Craig's list, but will vet them for a fee.

If it was just a casual machine, I could mess around with Craig's List, see if people were willing to take it to MacWorks and AppleHappy for a lemon check -- but I don't feel like I can buy a discounted Apple for $800 and find I got one of the few lemons out there. (They do exist!)

Phyl, thanks for your input on Toshiba! Kit, I will keep Frye's in mind -- I know it's just getting lucky with the sales, etc. Laura Anne, we might want to talk about it. I know you are swamped right now, though.

Hate.Buying.Computers.

I am an entwife. I want the computer to listen to me and do what I ask it to do All The Time.