On Sun, 31 May 2015 17:12:19 -0400, Bill Ricker wrote: >>> Is it my imagination, or are 8 year old laptops much more physically >>> robust than their modern counterparts? > >> My ThinkPad T43 (IBM-logo'd, but references it was manufactured by Lenovo on >> the bottom) is still going. Its BIOS is from 2005 and is happily running >> Fedora today. > > Yeah. T61 here. Just bought a second cheap (no battery, honestly missing).
Can't speak for other brands, but I've owned a succession of Dell Inspiron (8000, 8200, 9400) and Precision (M6500) laptops, all of which feel solidly built. The M6500 probably feels the sturdiest (it's certainly the heaviest). Other than replacing the keyboard a few times, most likely because of my rather abusive habits of letting food crumbs too close to it, and the latch breaking (a known weak spot), I've had no trouble with it over the (almost) 4 years I've owned it (I bought it used). The lid has been fine, which wasn't the case with the 8000 and 8200 (had to replace various parts multiple times). Historically I've kept laptops an average of 3-4 years; I spent more on the M6500 with the intent of keeping it longer, and so far so good. I'm not sure what I'd replace it with, since the newer ones have HD screens rather than WUXGA, but hopefully that won't come up for a while. I haven't heard such good things about lower end Dells, but I've never owned one. -- Robert Krawitz <[email protected]> *** MIT Engineers A Proud Tradition http://mitathletics.com *** Member of the League for Programming Freedom -- http://ProgFree.org Project lead for Gutenprint -- http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net "Linux doesn't dictate how I work, I dictate how Linux works." --Eric Crampton _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
