[Cross-posting to osol-discuss and indiana-discuss. Followups to
  laptop-discuss please. I've set the reply-to header accordingly.]

Prompted partly by anticipation (and delight) of the distro constructor
project being discussed on indiana-discuss recently, I bought an
"economy model" laptop over the weekend. The point was to find a
barebones (cheap), 32bit laptop to serve a an install/packaging/etc
sandbox, and since I researched quite a few models, I thought I'd post
a write-up of some of the component specs I uncovered (in this
price-class) and related thoughts/guidance in hopes that it'll maybe
start a useful laptop-bargain-shopping thread (wiki page?).

My bargain-hunting method was the weekly-ad, loss-leader,
in-store-purchase routine. The retail price (MSR) range turned out to
be roughly $550-$700 USD. The price range after discount and mail-in
rebate (though some were available w/out rebate) was roughly $400 - $450.

So without further ado, and with corrections and other
improvements highly encouraged...

(courier font recommended)

Key:
   PDC = Pentium Dual Core
   AMD = AMD Sempron 3500+
   PCM = Pentium Celeron M

   GMA = Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950
   VIA = VIA Chrome9 HC IGP
   ATI = ATI Radeon
   Y/N = Does the optical drive write DVDs

Models:
   Compaq Presario, C502US: PCM, GMA, N?
   Acer Aspire 3680:        PCM, GMA, N?
   Compaq Presario T2080:   PDC, GMA, Y
   Everex StepNote VA2000T: PDC, VIA, Y?
* Toshiba Sat. A135-S2326: PDC, ATI, Y?
   Acer Aspire 3100:        AMD, ATI, ?


I wound up getting the Compaq Presario T2080 at Best Buy.

The asterisk on the Toshiba means it is purported to have Atheros
wireless. Most, or all of the rest have Broadcom. (I think that means
the NDIS driver is required?). To narrow things down, first I decided
to stick with GMA graphics based on something I read in
laptop-discuss. Unfortunately that ruled out getting Atheros wireless.
That left the 2 Presarios and the Aspire 3680, and I figured the Dual
Core Pentium would be better than the Celeron M.

The Sunday ads I perused for this were Best Buy, Walmart, Circuit City,
Office Depot, Staples, and CompUSA. Here are the stores that I know
currently carry each brand. This is way incomplete though...  IOW, no
doubt each brand is carried at more than the stores listed here...

Aspire:    Walmart, Staples ...
Presario:  CompUSA, Best Buy ...
StepNote:  Walmart, Circuit City ...
Satellite: Office Depot ...


Some more caveats off the top of my head...

- Advertised specs are often wrong.
- Cheap laptops are big and clunky.
- Installed RAM was either .5 or 1GB, but I didn't keep track of which.
- I think the HDD was 80 GB in all of them, but I'm not sure.
- Some of these might be available for on-line purchase only. 
- I think one or two of them has a 14.x-inch screen.
- Loss-leader shoppers are frowned upon by electronics stores,
   be prepared to be treated that way.

Model names/codes can get really tricky (e.g. "Toshiba Satellite
A135-S2326") and are probably not valid outside the U.S. So it
might be helpful here if anybody has knowledge of equivalent
model names in other countries.

So now I have my nifty new cheapo... er... economy lappy but I haven't
had time to do much with it yet! What I did get a chance to do though
was download and fire up Nevada b67 via the BeleniX 0.6.1 LiveCD (also,
I stuck with Xfce and the Realtek ethernet NIC for now) and everything,
including LAN/WAN/DHCP discovery worked great!

Eric
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