Vaughn Treude wrote: > The finalists: > Dell Inspiron 1520 - with all the options I want it's around $1500. (But > one of the reviewers claimed its physical construction was flimsy.) > Toshiba Tecra A9 - also around $1500 with options. > Lenovo ThinkPad R61 - the fully-loaded version is on sale for around $1200. > Mac Book Pro - the 2.4GHz 15" version, with the high-speed drive option, > is $2100, a bit out of my range. I _could_ set it up triple-boot with XP > (and Linux, of course) which would bring it up to $2200. But I've always > admired the Mac's design, the fact that OS X is based on Unix, and the > Mac's excellent video-editing software. (I've been unhappy with the > hassle of setting up this kind of stuff on Linux.) So I'm still > considering it, but don't know if it would be worthwhile. > > At the moment I'm leaning toward the Lenovo. As far as I can tell, its > primary drawbacks are relatively short battery life, and the fact that > it is (IMHO) one butt-ugly machine. The battery isn't that big of a > problem, as I have two externals I bought for my ailing Sony, and I can > live with ugly. > > Any comments or relevant experiences any of you could share? I've had a number of iBooks, Powerbooks, Thinkpads, and other laptops throughout the years. Right now, I have both a Powerbook and a Thinkpad which are used very regularly. Which do I think is better? Absolutely no question at all: the Powerbook. And this is an older Powerbook, even. A new MacBook or MacBook Pro is so much better that it's barely any comparison at all. At this point, I use my Thinkpad solely for development work. Mind you, it makes a great development laptop and if there was no Powerbook or MacBook, it would even be a great laptop overall... but since it doesn't exist in a vacuum, then I can't possibly recommend it. A lot of this has to do with just using a laptop as a laptop. You can get things like suspend and the like to work under Linux... but it doesn't work well. For instance, on my Thinkpad T43, I had suspend working when I closed the lid initially, but it stopped working a year ago and I haven't been able to fix it since. I can suspend directly through the openSUSE K-Menu, though, so no big deal. But even then, it takes a good 15 to 30 seconds to suspend and another 15 seconds or more to resume. I don't even have to *think* about suspending and resuming with my Powerbook. It just works and it works seemingly instantaneously. Oh, and my T43 also has some weird barely supported PATA-to-SATA bridge for the DVD drive. It works, but DMA doesn't. Which means that I can't watch DVDs on that drive and all disk access spikes the CPU. YMMV may vary. The ATI chipset on my T43 works well enough. I got one version of Beryl to work with 3d-goodness, even. Lately, though, compiz is far too slow to use on it. Dunno why. Heck, one version of the ATI driver even refused to work in anything higher than 1280x1024 (a non-supported resolution). And even when the driver does work, it's buggy and prone to crashing. It goes without saying that the Powerbook is rock-solid reliable and Leopard 3d-goodness works without any muss or fuss. I could go on and on... Linux works well for me as my primary desktop, as my development platform, and as my servers... but I will never use it willingly as a consumer laptop OS. It just has waaaay to much work needed to be done.