If you're taking a machine to college, think--are my classrooms conducive to laptop use for notes and things? Do I want a big, heavy laptop to lug aground (I went with the 13" MB because they weigh the least)? Or, will my machine live mostly in my dorm room/apartment? If that's the case, I'd go with a MacBook Pro, incidentally. I had the aluminum PowerBook for years, and the metal case is more durable but also weighs a small ton.
Well, I am going to University of Minnesota. The entire campus has WiFi (except the brick dorms where the reception was about 10 feet from the router when they tried it
😉 Although it doesn't matter to me because I won't be staying in the dorms) and the classrooms seem to be fairly set up for computer use (lots of outlets & ethernet jacks just in case). I want something lightweight because the campus is HUGE and I don't want to be lugging around an 8-pound 17-inch PC gaming laptop
😛. For that reason, I like the MBA, but I can't afford the price tag. If you've read my signature, you would see that I currently have an iBook. It even seems kinda heavy at 5.75 pounds (that's what my scale said, not what the specs said). I know that I rarely use the optical drive because I usually rip movies to the hard drive (for better battery life - playing a DVD sucks power more than Photoshop sucks RAM
😱).
Anyway, what I am looking for in a laptop is an improvement on my iBook. I would like something lighter-weight and more powerful (stupid G3 can't even play YouTube videos - not to mention that most websites render slowly). I'd also like the new laptop to have a battery life that's similar to what I get with my iBook (3.5-4 hours). (Although I think I could get along with less if I could use the laptop while plugged in (if you plug it in, it will shut down hard if you press below the trackpad where the latch is). And yes, I have tried repairing it to no avail - it's not the DC-IN board, but the connector on the logic board.)
So, after noting what has been said so far, it seems that most people use "the basics" - internet, mail, instant-messaging, some sort of office productivity suite, iTunes, and some
light gaming. It also seems that other engineering students need Windows for assorted circuit design/programming software. In other words, what I'd want from Apple would be a MacBook with Boot Camp/Windows.
And I've really seen very little on the PC side that would make me leave Apple, but that's just my two cents.
I have been eyeing the EeePC from Asus. I don't need the optical drive as stated before, the small internal flash-based drive would be fine for nearly everything (aside from movies, which I intend to put on my external USB 2.0 hard drive) and is not susceptible to shock, and most importantly (to me) IT WEIGHS TWO POUNDS!!! I like the price too - $399 for the one I'd get, which is the 4G with webcam and extended battery. I wouldn't mind the small keyboard - I have tried it out on a friend's and I was still able to type 50 words per minute accurately. The small screen wasn't really a bother either (for me). I like Ubuntu's user interface, so I would probably install that instead of Windows (for my primary OS). Windows could go on my 8GB flash drive or that portable hard drive...
Is there a reason that I'm missing as to why I wouldn't want an EeePC? I'm open to suggestions because if it turns out that the Eee is not for me, I'll get a MacBook. (But $600 isn't anything to scoff at either...)