Wed Jun 13, 2007 11:48PM EDT
See Comments (6)
Dells are cheap and Macs are expensive... right? The perceived cost of certain brands over others is one of computing's most enduring notions. But how true are they? I thought it was time to take a hard look at computer pricing (in this case, laptops, as they're easier to compare, features-wise) and see who really are the most and least expensive brands on the market, by comparing as closely as possible an almost-identical laptop from various "top tier" (and close second-tier) vendors.
Some ground rules: The machines were all priced on June 13, 2007. Obviously, prices change all the time, and won't be accurate for long after this post goes live. I will not be updating it every week!
All machines were configured as closely as possible to these specs, which make up a solidly-configured laptop that should suffice for any buyer: 15.4-inch widescreen display (default resolution and type), 2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo CPU, 2GB RAM in 2 DIMMs, 120GB hard drive, dual-layer DVD writer, discrete graphics card (preferably a 256MB card from ATI or Nvidia), Windows Vista Home Premium, no software bundle, no warranty, no mobile broadband, default battery, 802.11a/b/g/n wireless. Where the machine I was able to configure varied from these specs (Dell offers no 2.2GHz CPU in the E1505, for example), I've noted the primary differences next to the price. All prices are direct from the manufacturer's website.
Here they are:
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch - $1,999 - Obviously includes MacOS, not Vista. Has Firewire 800 port.
Dell Inspiron E1505 - $1,299 - Only offers a 2GHz CPU but has a 160GB hard drive.
Fujitsu LifeBook A6030 - $1,449 - 2GHz CPU.
Gateway NX570X -$1,608 - 2.16GHz CPU and 128MB of video RAM. (And that includes a $200 "instant discount" which I'm not really clear on.)
HP Pavilion dv6500tse - $1,522 - Only 2GHz CPU but a GPU with 383MB(!) of RAM.
Lenovo ThinkPad T61 - $1,379 - Integrated graphics.
Sony Vaio VGN-FE890 CTO - $1,760 - No 802.11n. Nvidia graphics but RAM isn't specified on the site. I had to add the price up myself because the Sony website didn't work.
Toshiba Satellite A200 - $1,318 - GPU has only 128MB of RAM.
Some interesting surprises here, and some not so interesting: Turns out the Apple was indeed the most expensive and the Dell the cheapest by a small margin. That actually shocked me, as Dell's have been quietly increasing in price over the years. Another big surprise: The Gateway was crazy overpriced and the Fujitsu, normally a budget brand, was also on the expensive side. A final, major surprise: A ThinkPad for only $80 more than a Dell? Yeah, the integrated graphics are lame, but that's still a heck of a deal.
Remember that you can save a lot of cash by shopping around. A different model machine from the same company may have only slightly fewer features but could cost hundreds less. This is just one look at the market at one point in time, and sliced a different way (say, for 14-inch screens or lower-speed CPUs) the results could have been much different.
Meanwhile, discuss amongst yourselves.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Yeah, big HP fan here too, but was an IBM ThinkPad lover before that (Have 2 of them still). Bought an HP Pavillion about six months ago and just had the machine in for a RAM upgrade, I thought 1 gig was good, lol. Well I really needed a better video card too, but alas, it's intergrated. (I was blinded by the bling, and I KNEW better too, darn shame on me, lol) Yeah, I am a gamer, and a heavy graphics user, but oh well, the extra gig will hold me for now. so now I am up to about $1,600 with extended warranty, and I don't care what anyone says, I have used mine more than once and it saved me lots of times (on other pc's). I shoulda bought the Alienware like I really wanted to, since now I have spent the same amount, only for a lesser video card, dang!
Great article!!! Really made me think, I have a Dell Inspiron 2200 now and will look at other models when I buy another Laptop. Paul
If you're looking to compare laptops you can't go far wrong by going to Kelkoo or another laptop review site and comparing laptops there, it saves a lot of clicking.
i am a fan too
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1 Posted by rfaronesr@ameritech.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:38PM EDT Report Abuse
Systemax PC's, which are assembled in Fletcher, Ohio, are not bad machines and can be customized. I'm not so sure that having a processor faster than 2Ghz is a necessity due to the CentrinoDuo2 out now, but this is again a personal opinion. I just recently bought a Systemax laptop with a 2ghz Centrino T7200, 256mb dedicated video, 120gb hdd, 2gb of 533 of RAM, DVD dual layer burner, Bluetooth capable, 802.a,b,g wireless, 15.4" monitor, 3yr warranty and a Logitech Alto for a little under $1700 including shipping. Purchase the guts and forget the name on the outside. A huge HP fan here, but HP couldn't touch similar characteristics at the price! About $700 more!