The Best Affordable Tech Products for Students


LAPTOPS

Sony VAIO VGN-C290 Graphic Splash Edition

Make a splash on campus with Sonys eye-catching VAIO VGN-C290. This $1,079 laptop has triple appeal, with its slick design, stellar performance, and down-to-earth price. Plus, it packs a solid set of components, including a peppy dual-core processor, a bright 13.3-inch display, a DVD±RW drive, and integrated 802.11a/b/g wireless. You can customize the totable 5-pound case with one of four fun patterns, along with free personal engraving.

Acer Aspire 9300-5005

Sometimes sacrificing mobility for usability isnt such a bad thing. Measuring nearly 16 inches wide and weighing a whopping 8.1 pounds, the $899.99 Aspire 9300-5005 wont be a joy to lug to class. But for all that heft, you get a spacious 17-inch LCD, a full-size keyboard with a dedicated number pad, and a bevy of quality components you dont usually find in a budget notebook.

Dell Inspiron 1420

Its all about choices with Dells brand-new Inspiron 1420 line, which starts at $849. Build the notebook you really want, starting with a 14.1-inch wide-screen display and a case that comes in eight cool colors. Then choose among several Intel processors, opt for up to 4GB of memory, select integrated or discrete graphics, pick one of three optical-drive types (including a high-definition Blu-ray model), and, if you like, add mobile broadband.

Toshiba Satellite A135-S4427

If youll be spending your days and nights staring at text on your laptop, consider the $899 Satellite A135-S4427. It has one of the sharpest, brightest displays (a 15.4-inch wide-screen) weve seen on a budget machine. Toshiba didnt skimp on components, either: The Satellite comes with plenty of power to run the included Windows Vista Home Premium operating system.

HP Pavilion TX1000z

If youre really serious about your note taking, consider the $1,149 Pavilion TX1000z. Powered by AMDs dual-core Turion X2 CPU, this versatile machine has a full-size keyboard, as well as a 12.1-inch touch-screen display that lets you jot notes on the screen. You also get a bundled software package for converting your notes into typed text, adding handwritten notes to documents, and drawing pictures. At 4 pounds, its light enough to tote from class to class.

Fujitsu LifeBook A6025

A well-priced, well-rounded mobile machine with some nice extras, the $799 LifeBook A6025 wont turn many heads on campus—but, more important, it wont leave you hanging at crunch time, either. The component choices are about average for an entry-level laptop, but its the extras that set this model apart from the competition: a spill-resistant keyboard, a hard drive motion-detection sensor that can activate password protection, and a unique touch pad that doubles as a tablet for jotting notes.
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The ultimate business tool lenovo thinkpad laptop








Lenovo thinkpad laptop best product


Promise of value
Our promise of value is to help every client succeed through technology innovation. A lot of thought goes into the design of our PC products. We focus our innovation on meeting key customer needs, and providing products and features that help you be more productive while reducing costs.

Built for the way you work
We design our PCs to deliver the best user experience. ThinkPad® notebooks are thin, light and have features that give employees the flexibility to work wherever and whenever they want. And weve got models and configurations equipped to meet the specific technology and cost-of-ownership needs of both large enterprise and small business.

Features like a magnesium-alloy roll cage (select models) and a shock-mounted hard drive (select models) protect your ThinkPad notebook and the data it contains from the rigors of working on the go. And ThinkVantage® design elements help increase productivity and reduce the cost of ownership.

Reliable notebooks
Company data is not just important. Its priceless. When viruses attack or systems fail, the cost in lost data and productivity can be immeasurable. Only Think brand PCs offer ThinkVantage® Technologies such as the Active Protection System™ and its "airbag-like" feature that can help protect your hard drive from falls on select ThinkPad models. Or Rescue and Recovery™: Just press the blue ThinkVantage button to get back lost data when you have operating system failure. Its your virus recovery button.

Security made simple
Protecting key company data can often be complex. But with our Integrated Fingerprint Reader and Password Manager, available on select models, users can replace hundreds of passwords with a swipe of their finger. Combined with our ThinkVantage Client Security Solution, our ThinkPad notebooks are the worlds most secure PCs available. No other PC manufacturer offers stronger security as a standard feature.

Low life cycle costs
Only about 20% of the cost of owning a PC is in the purchase price. The other 80% of the expense of PCs is in supporting them. ThinkPad notebooks can provide an end-to-end set of offerings to help reduce IT costs over the entire ownership cycle, thanks to our innovative ThinkVantage Technologies.


Unlock the Innovation in your ThinkPad notebook
Youve purchased the "ultimate business tool," unlock the technology and features of your ThinkPad notebook. With Lenovo Experts Live you have a trusted technical resource to help you setup and configure the technologies on your notebook, answer those "how-to" questions, and help solve any technical challenges that often come up. Lenovo Experts Live provides 24 by 7 by 365 on-demand, U.S. based technical assistance via phone or web-based chat. Act Now and save up to 45% as part of our Introductory Special.

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Speeding up the wifi on the notebook


Location, is a crucial factor to improve and gain speed Wi-Fi is strong. Put Wi-Fi router at the spot [where] that allows all the computers get a good signal. Wi-Fi Ideally placed in the highest center in the home / office, this is done so the network can be covered properly.

How to check: Wi-Fi router to place you near / the same room as your broadband modem, then connected using Wireless Notebook, once connected, street-walk with a notebook to all of the room and note the strength of the signal that was caught on the wireless adapter administration software , the farther the distance is usually the signal will dwindle.

Media that blocks Wi-Fi connection also influences, and media that most influence your Wi-Fi is Metal, Wall / Rock, Mankind, Cordless Phone and water. This media may cause signal reflections connection or absorb signals so that the signal connection to be caught or received by your wireless notebook is very small.

So ideal for placing Wi-Fi router at the highest place and as far as possible from a wall, do not place your Wi-Fi router near the window, because it will cause your Wi-Fi out / leaked so weakened connection .. unless you want to do Wi-Fi connection from outside the building ..

For 802.11g Wi-Fi networks have a range with a frequency of 2.4 GHz, almost the same frequency microwave / radio wave on the cordless phone. Activating WEP or WPA to improve data transfer speeds significantly


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The Lenovo ThinkPad X300 laptop


Screen Size: 13.3 inches
Weight: 3 lbs
Processor Options: Core 2 Duo
Graphics Options: Integrated
The Lenovo ThinkPad X300 is a rumored 13.3" widescreen ultra light laptop. The ThinkPad X300 will have an LV Core 2 Duo processor, SSD storage, LED backlit screen, WWAN, Wi-Fi 802.11n, WiMax, GPS and Wireless USB built-in.
The Lenovo ThinkPad X300, The Lenovo ThinkPad X300
The Lenovo ThinkPad X300, The Lenovo ThinkPad X300

Build and Design


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The ThinkPad X300 is as solid as you get in terms of build quality. The internal chassis and roll cage uses an advanced carbon-fiber / glass-fiber material that provides both strength and light weight. The case material is made of magnesium, you can press as hard as you want anywhere on the body of the notebook and it simply will not flex. Like any ThinkPad, the X300 is designed for (accidental) abuse and drops, and were guessing the X300 might be even more able than previous ThinkPads to take a beating and keep going. As with any ThinkPad, you of course get a double latch mechanism with button release to make sure the screen is held down when it is closed and being carried.


The ThinkPad X61 on top of the X300 size comparison (view large image)

The build quality leaves no doubts and shows improvement over previous ThinkPads, and the design also makes some significant strides as well. That said, theres nothing crazy going on here, the black boxy look of a ThinkPad is still very much so intact. However, the glossy bottom bezel area and the cool light illumination on the ThinkVantage button and power button add a nice touch, and add to the usability. The speakers located on the corners of the notebook also add a nice design accent. The heat vent grills are painted black to blend with the rest of the notebook design, you dont see any copper colored internals. The screen is centered for those hung up on symmetry. And last and probably most important, the X300 is thin, thin, thin making it cool looking by that fact alone.


Apple MacBook Air on the left, ThinkPad X300 on the right (view large image)


ThinkPad X300 supporting the Apple MacBook Air (view large image)


Input and Output Ports

The number of ports the X300 has is fairly good, certainly much better than the Apple MacBook Air provides, but youre still left a bit wanting. Heres a run down of the ports:

  • 3 USB 2.0 ports
  • Gigabit Ethernet
  • Audio out, microphone in
  • Monitor out
  • Kensington lock slot

Key things missing are any type of expansion port, theres neither PCMCIA or ExpressCard. Theres no type of media card reader, something I sorely miss having on a notebook. Theres also no option for a docking station, you have to go with a USB based port replicator to get the additional ports you would want at a desk. Obviously engineers had to make design trade offs and you cant have it all. Personally I would really have preferred an SD card reader and lose a USB port, but when youre out of room youre out of room I guess.


Left view (view large image)

Right view (view large image)

Front view (view large image)

Back view (view large image)

Performance and Benchmarks

Lets get this straight, the ThinkPad X300 was not built to compete with your Quad Core processor loaded desktop. The name of the game with thin travel notebooks is using a low voltage processor to conserve power and reduce heat build-up. The ThinkPad X300 uses an Intel 1.20GHz Core 2 Duo L7100 processor thats quite capable of running office applications and performing any general web related tasks, but will not serve well for 3D graphics applications or any heavy duty rendering tasks. The Intel X3100 will allow you to play a few light games, maybe even Half Life 2 on low settings (see our Intel X3100 review for more details), but in general youll want to stick to e-mail, web browsing, Office and photo editing tasks. Thats enough for most, and certainly enough for on the go business travellers.

The SSD storage really goes a long way to improving certain aspects of performance, the all important boot-up time is a mere 27-seconds from the push of the power button to the Windows hourglass dissappearing. It only took 32 seconds to boot-up, have the wireless connection enabled, and a browser window open on my homepage. That is amazing, the ThinkPad X61 I use takes more than double that amount of time to boot.

Lets take a look at a few basic benchmarks so you can get an idea of how the X3100 stacks up.

wPrime is a program that forces the processor to do recursive mathematical calculations, this processor benchmark program is multi-threaded and can use both processor cores at once, it measures the amount of time to run a set amount of calculations.

wPrime comparison results (lower scores means better performance):

Notebook / CPUwPrime 32M time
Lenovo ThinkPad X300 (Intel Core 2 Duo L7100 @ 1.20GHz)118 seconds
Apple MacBook Air (Intel Core 2 Duo P7500 @ 1.6GHz)
68 seconds
Asus Eee PC 701 4G (Intel Celeron M ULV @ 900MHz)200 seconds
Sony VAIO TZ (Intel Core 2 Duo U7600 @ 1.20GHz)76 seconds
Dell XPS M1330 (Intel Core 2 Duo T7250 @ 2.20GHz)38 seconds


You can see from the results in WPrime the ThinkPad X300 L7100 processor is slower than the MacBook Air and Sony TZ, but its pretty hard to actually perceive this performance difference with everyday applications you would be using.

PCMark05 is a benchmark that measures the overall system performance, so it considers the processor, hard drive, memory and OS as part of the mix. Since the ThinkPad X300 has SSD on board it actually fairs pretty well with this benchmark:

PCMark05 benchmark results (higher scores are better)

NotebookPCMark05 Score
Lenovo ThinkPad X300 (Intel Core 2 Duo L7100 @ 1.20GHz, Intel X3100)3,467 PCMarks
Apple MacBook Air (1.6GHz Intel Core 2 Duo P7500, Intel X3100)
2,478 PCMarks
Sony VAIO NR (1.5GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T5250, Intel X3100)3,283 PCMarks
Sony VAIO TZ (1.20GHz Core 2 Duo U7600, Intel GMA 950) 2,446 PCMarks
Lenovo ThinkPad X61 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100)4,153 PCMarks
Lenovo 3000 V200 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100)3,987 PCMarks
Lenovo T60 Widescreen (2.0GHz Intel T7200, ATI X1400 128MB)4,189 PCMarks
HP dv6000t (2.16GHz Intel T7400, NVIDA GeForce Go 7400)4,234 PCMarks
Fujitsu N6410 (1.66GHz Core Duo, ATI X1400)3,487 PCMarks
Alienware M7700 (AMD Athlon FX-60, Nvidia Go 7800GTX)5,597 PCMarks
Sony VAIO SZ-110B in Speed Mode (Using Nvidia GeForce Go 7400)3,637 PCMarks
Asus V6J (1.86GHz Core Duo T2400, Nvidia Go 7400)3,646 PCMarks


The MacBook Air we reviewed did not have SSD, which would explain why the MacBook Air beat the X300 in WPrime with its faster processor, but lost in the PCMark05 match.

HDTune measures the storage performance of a PC, the numbers from the SSD are most impressive, certainly better than your average 5400 RPM hard drive and this benchmark goes to show why the ThinkPad X300 performs well in overall tests:


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Screen

The 13.3" WXGA+ screen on the X300 is nice and bright, with its 300 nit LED backlit spec. The screen real estate you get with WXGA+ on the 13.3" form factor is actually more than youd expect, you can quite comfortably fit a couple of web browser or spreadsheet windows open next to each other and compare and contrast things. The viewing angles are decent, although as with any non-IPS notebook LCD screen, once you get to a certain viewing angle the colors do start to invert.

Keyboard and Touchpad


Keyboard by day... (view large image)

and in the dark(view large image)

The full-sized keyboard on the ThinkPad X300 has zero flex, its as good as every previous ThinkPads keyboard (fantastic) and then some. Lenovo has added a matte finish to the keys so that they dont wear and get all shiny over time. Those that are ThinkPad veterans will appreciate the fact the blue enter key remains and the red striped mouse buttons are back. People that like a touchpad and complained about it being missing on the ThinkPad X-series now have nothing to complain about, a generous sized touchpad with scrolling areas is in place on the X300.


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The palm rest area is pretty neat, it has a rubberized paint finish so it both feels and looks nice. Its very smooth, almost satin in feel. A fingerprint reader

Audio

How about this, the X300 actually has good sound and speakers that are well positioned! For an ultra thin notebook, thats astounding. The ThinkPad X61 I have contains a puny speaker on the bottom of the notebook, so this is something of a quantum leap for audio quality on the X-series. ThinkPad X300 equipped executives will never have to tote their external speakers to watch DVDs by night in their hotel rooms again. I like the new style

Battery

Lenovo offers the choice of either a 3-cell or 6-cell Lithium-Polymer battery that rests at the front of the notebook. The 3-cell is lighter and has a quoted life of up to 4.3 hours while the 6-cell is heavier and has a quoted life of up to 6.5 hours. You can also get a Lithium-Polymer option bay battery if you yank out the DVD Burner and put that in instead. That gives you an exta 3 hours of quoted battery life.

Well have more detailed battery life tests in our final review, but for now well assume these battery life quotes are probably a bit high for real world usage.

More to Come

Weve only had the ThinkPad X300 for a few hours now so once the honeymoon is over were sure there will be more to complain about, but right now its a big thumbs up on this piece of engineering from the ThinkPad labs. Key things well want to find out is how the battery life holds up, how the heat is when under stress, whether installing a bunch of applications slows the performance down and how such extra features as the camera and GPS work out. Stay tuned for the full review next week. Well also do a comparison of the X300 to another notebook you may have heard of called the MacBook Air from Apple.

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ThinkPad X300 compared to ThinkPad T61



( From http://www.notebookreview.com )
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