On Wed, 13 Nov 2002, [iso-8859-1] I?aki Mart?nez wrote: > Hi!!! > I want to buy a laptop and i do not know which...... [snip]
Hello, and glad to hear - laptops are mighty handy to[y|ol]s > Requirements (in order of importance): > > * Weight (as less as possible) > * RAM 256 (128 Minimum) > * Video if posible **NOT** SHARED memory > * Linux well supported, PCMCIA, NET, so on. > * I can buy in Europe if possible in Spain > > I have seen this models... > > Sony Vaio PictureBook > Fujitsu P2000 Series > Asus M2000 Series > and several others.... From the models you list, it seems like size and weight are of most importance, not just weight. There are many laptops that are quite light, but still full sized - just very thin. Personally I never found these to be "my style" either. I currently own a Sony Picturebook (rather old model, p266 64MB ram) and I can say that it is a wonderful model. I must also admit that I've got two dead batteries and two withered keyboards. The batteries are due to the memory effect - they're not actually dead, and that is not an issue in newer models. The keyboard(s), however, I fear *are* a quality concern. When I first got it (used) the keyboard lasted 14 months - of fairly heavy usage - before keys started popping off. When that got to be too much, and after a very unsuccessful attempt with epoxy trying to make them not pop off, I bought a replacement keyboard. It lasted 4 months. Warranty was 90 days. I was not pleased. Now it works as a nice always on low-power desktop hooked up to my kvm. The shame of this is that I don't get to tote it around, or look at it's beautiful little display. It also (naturally) swaps when I'm browsing the web with Opera (quick browser, but a bit of a memory hog) as I run some services and other things that quickly fill the 64MB ram - definately get enough ram, I can't stress that enough. If I were buying today, I would go with the Fujitsu P2XXX series... I think they recently upped the processor to 933. I would also max out the ram, though not through fujitsu, I would make sure the minidimm or whatever it takes was really the largest available. Remember - laptops don't have much of an upgrade path, but a maxxed out machine still has plenty of life to it. *AND* while a laptop battery may eventually become useless, it's still a low power machine [though becoming less and less so as they continue using desktop processors, that's not an option in B5 notebooks], and while it's not universally the case, more RAM can often be more beneficial than more processor [swapping is evil!]. -Martin N. ----- This email has been sent as a single line of query, and in no way indicates the senders interest in or acceptance of any promotions or "opt-in"'s unless otherwise EXPRESSLY noted.

