Features in the absence of “Legendary Design”

First up, has it really been 6 months? Really??? WOW! Time sure fly’s!

Well anyway…

I’m in the market for a new laptop and as such I’ve been out on the interwebs diligently doing my research, trying to find that ideal (read: perfect) candidate. I have fairly simple criteria, needing a higher than average spec machine (cutting rather than bleeding edge), large fast hard drive, plenty of ram and a WSXGA screen… that’s 1680×1059, with a decent GFX card.

First up, you have no idea what a tough ask the screen seems to be! Most manufacturers, Apple included, seem to limit this resolution to the 17″ models which are, to put it mildly, rather less than portable and hardly “laptops”, anything in the 13″ – 15.4″ realm is generally limited to the lower 1280 x 800 WXGA resolution which just doesn’t cut it when you live in pallete intensive applications like Photoshop, Fireworks and Visual Studio. I would also like the exterior to be reasonably attractive… or at the very least not ugly!

With the above said I can already hear the cries of “Buy a Mac!” coming from every corner. It seems most of my colleagues are indeed using Macs when not at work but I have long since accepted my fate as a Windows user, and to my surprise, with a few glaring exceptions Vista really isn’t as bad as I imagined it would be (No really!).

The unfortunate downside to looking for a Windows based machine however is the total lack of focus on the hardware design. When compared to the latest Apple hardware, with it clean sleek lines, beautifully beveled edges and spectacular attention to detail I find even the nicest looking PC’s are left desperately wanting.

Compaq‘s have been trying to copy the Apple design formula for a while now with absolutly no success, the HP and Toshiba lineups are, well, neat and tidy (read: boring!). Acer and Asus have both tried branding partnership with Farrari and Lambourghini respectively, the results of which are amusing if nothing else. Sony seem to be trying with their Vaio’s and as for Dell… lets just say if you put lipstick on a pig… it’s still just a pig. Dell have made one move in the right direction however, with their new XPS1330 but they seriously need to start applying that design thinking across their mainstream laptops and not just the ultra portables.

So what did I settle on you ask? I caved and I’m going with a Dell Vostro 1500. It’s not pretty, even among some of it’s competitors, but the bang for buck ratio is good, it meets most if not all of my other requirements and it was a more favourable option than its ugly step-sister the Inspiron 1520 with it’s clown makeup… I mean “colour faceplates”.

Dell Vostro 1500

I’ll let you know how it works out!

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2 Comments so far

  1. isha September 11th, 2007 12:14 am

    I never completely understood the partnerships with car companies. Do laptops now run at 3GHz horsepower? Can I get custom low-ridin suspensions when I pimp my notebook? Compaq clearly missed an opportunity with the Camaro though and a certain robot-film tie in. Two words. Transforming laptop. I’m still opting for a macbook pro come mid-Oct. Here’s hoping they release a 15″ with 1920 x 1200 display!!

  2. Simon September 18th, 2007 11:37 pm

    The tie-in’s do seem rather lame, playing purely off combined brand recognition, with no real thought as to how to apply the second brand, just working to the “slap a fancy logo on it and change the colour” theory. I would love to see a well executed Aston Martin or Bugatti Veyron laptop though :-) The Veyron would have to be a something along the lines of a 10Ghz dual quad-core (yes, thats 8 cores!).

    I think you’ll be struggling with that WUXGA screen on the 15″ Macbook Pro. Your poor eyes!

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