Notebooks
September 5, 2008
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Expert advice from our editors
Don't buy a new laptop just yet! Start by figuring out what you're going to do with it. For frequent flyers, ultraportables are key. Many weigh less than three pounds and can keep you productive for a whole cross-country flight (up to seven hours in one case).
Other models also offer a good deal of power, depending on how much you care to lug around. Want an elegant alternative to your clunky monitor and PC combo? Beefy desktop replacement machines pack 17-inch displays and sport slick entertainment features such as a TV tuner or Blu-ray Disc drive. Are you rough with your stuff? Consider a laptop with a solid-state drive. Just be prepared to pay a lot more ($1,000 more in most cases) for less storage space. Speaking of which, if price is really a sticking point, you can find good machines for around $1,500 at this point. Heck, if you just need to tap out a few emails and documents, a $500 mini-note could just as easily do the job. And for all you environmentalists out there: look for laptops with LED-backlit screens -- they save energy and are Mercury-free.
All-Purpose Laptops
The JFL9226 cuts most of the right corners to produce a budget-friendly road warrior. It just needs a facelift.
Well-built laptop provides middle of the road performance and a sizable hard disk for a good price.
Desktop Replacement
This heavy duty desktop replacement's performance wows, but falls a little short where you'd expect it to sing: multimedia.
As an affordable portable gaming box, the P-172 XFX gets a couple things right and a couple others painfully wrong.
Ultra Portable Laptops
The X200 is one super ultraportable with full-featured performance, battery life and a good keyboard to boot.
The optical drive is not integrated, but in all else--especially battery life--this business portable is top-notch.
Special Coverage
Reports and evaluations of latest models, from thin-and-light models to full-featured.
Mobile products for road warriors
Toshiba tells its HD DVD strategy, from technology advances to price drops.
Dell's newest Latitudes come with Seagate's auto-encryption hard drive.
Keep your laptop safe with our series of tips.
How PC World Tests Laptops











