Comments on: HP Pavilion dv3510nr: Best Buy's Blue Label laptop wins Editors' Choice award
HP Pavilion dv3510nr, the first of two Best Buy Blue Label laptops, wins an Editors' Choice award from CNET Reviews
HP Pavilion dv3510nr, the first of two Best Buy Blue Label laptops, wins an Editors' Choice award from CNET Reviews
The name says it all. Crave is our blog about gorgeous gadgets and other crushworthy stuff. If you would like to contact Crave with a tip or comment, please write to: crave@cnet.com
Add this feed to your online news reader
Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.
Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.
A better point would be HDMI/VGA native vs. mini displayport which requires an adapter and there is no adapter for HDMI.
*Shrugs* Just my 2 cents. Personally feel that Apple's laptops are priced higher so that they can make a profit vs. other PC manufacturers have razor thin margins. But if you like OSX, that's the make or break so yeah
4GB of ram at a slower speed will yield MUCH better results than 2GB of ram at a faster speed unless you are using 4 year old ram with crazy low speed. 4x 667 > 2 x 1033. Check out any benchmark for evidence.
Operating System should be a push.
I will take a back-lit keyboard and a fingerprint reader over a gimmicky multi-touch trackpad but I can understand why it is a push.
The Macbook has style points and that is about it. Put any other operating system on there and that laptop tanks.
Shame on CNET!
CNET, I think this site usually produces good news.
But as others have stated, that is extremely subjective.
Just becuase it has OSX doesnt make it better, I personally would rather have Windows Vista, and I am an advanced power-user with a computer-related job.
Is it because I claim a patent royality rights to this potentially hugely lucrative idea?
Just, "call my laptop" ! ..and thats it. WHY do we need a separate cellphone?
thanks.
Petr Buben
www.Petr.nexo.com
The downside to this - you're stuck with carrier X. It's not like you can easily swap the device out. If the laptop came linked to Sprint, you might possibly get it connected to Verizon, but that's pretty much as far as you can go. You'd need an Expresscard/PC Card or USB device if you aren't happy with a given carrier.
I have an HP pavilion dv2000
3GB ram
250GB hard drive
1.83GHZ intel processor
14.1" screen
roughly 2 hour battery life
runs Vista AND Ubuntu.
I paid about $600 for this. Can Apple offer me this? A comparable product for specs requires spending twice as much. And most people aren't capable of really pushing a Macbook to its full capacity as a editing computer. And it isn't as good as the Macbook Pro in terms of editing power. But that is for people who can actually use if effectively. If you are a normal user don't buy a Mac. Get an HP, Dell, or a Lenovo laptop. Easier on the wallet.
- by mattyfromma November 16, 2008 9:44 AM PST
- both laptops are good, but i would go with the HP because overall price is what i go for and i am sure same with many other people since the economy is in the tank and HP are decent machines as well
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
Showing 1 of 2 pages (28 Comments)