Wed Aug 9, 2006 1:58PM EDT
See Comments (261)
You want them to write a killer paper and email home; they'd like to take in an in-dorm movie, work on their Facebook pages, and listen to music. Here's a checklist for this year's back-to-dorm features that will bring inter-generational peace and harmony.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
I'm certain she's suggesting a 60 gigabyte hard drive. However, it will be more than worth while to look for an 80 or 100 gigabyte drive if they plan on downloading music or playing games.
Good catch on the 60GB-- not MB. The reason I don't think it's that important to get a large hard drive is because the schools give kids quite a bit of network storage space. That said, if you find yourself short on storage, external drives that you can add on are a great way to give your laptop more storage capacity and not have to get hit with the whole $$ at one time.
laptop and normal desktop price difference is massive especially considering in what you get performance and additional feature wise!!! what are they one about. And 99% of college student NEVER ever take their laptop around and it stays in their dorm room all year long. moreover are normal PC much quicker to fix and upgrade then a laptop.
Get a Mac, and you will never look back
Get a PC and life will be ez
a laptop is much better. while its true you will hardly ever take it out of your dorm, when you need to you can. and during vacation you can easily take it home.
I really must advise against a Macintosh. I know I will be flamed by adament Mac users, but unless the campus is a Mac-based network, or even a Mac-only network, Windows machines really will be more supported on campus. Like the one tip said, go with whatever brand is subtly biased towards by the school, as you will almost assuredly encounter more support for it there... and my experience has been that most campuses support Windows machines.
I'm thinking about getting a tablet pc. Any pros and cons?
You really do need a mouse. Preferrably a wireless one that has the USB adapter plug into the base when it's not in use. You will have serious problems with cramped hands and a lack of versatility if you stick only to the touch pad. Also, this complete eliminates the ability to play 98% of the games out there, as well as do work in the Adobe Suites, CAD, web design, or really anything other than internet surfing and word processing. Lastly, you need a flash drive (at least 512 MB). Very easy to swap files with friends or keep your data on hand... just in case.
1 Posted by blkdrednc on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:09PM EDT Report Abuse
#14. Backup and storage: 60 MB or 60 GB? Big difference there.