September 11, 2006 4:00 AM PDT
Must-have college tech
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The other prominent handheld gadget at NYU is, predictably, Apple Computer's iPod. "I would die without my iPod," said American studies major Alice Davis, a sophomore from Oakland, Calif. She and her suitemates are all owners of iPod music players--and so is, they say, pretty much everyone else at NYU.
iPod accessories are consequently also big. Various third-party speaker sets, as well as Apple's own iPod Hi-Fi system, have begun to replace the bulky multidisk CD players that were once staples of dorm common rooms. Some students also go for more cosmetic add-ons, like Geneslaw, who showed off her "embarrassing" (yet still beloved) rhinestone-studded earbuds.
Indeed, despite doomsday predictions about sustaining enthusiasm for iPods, they still fly off the shelves of retail stores near college campuses. "There's really nothing that's come up against the iPod," said John Vittrauer, a sales associate at a Best Buy store close to NYU.
In fact, iPods are so prevalent among NYU's 19,500 undergraduates that a student who doesn't have one is making a statement. Case in point: Drew McIntyre, a drama major from Detroit who takes his music to go on a Sony Vaio player because he's proudly anti-Apple. "I'm kind of against iPods," he said, wrinkling his nose. "I like Sony, in general."
PCs and portability factor
Many collegiate budgets are already stretched thin by the priciest, and arguably the most necessary, of student gadgets: the personal computer. Laptop computers, according to students as well as retailers, are overwhelmingly preferable to desktops because of mobility issues. Falling prices, too, have made the traditionally costlier portable computers available to more students.
Among laptops, there's a good amount of diversity. Some students prefer the lightest laptops possible, others prefer the most functional. American studies major Davis observed that many students choose Apple's MacBooks, noting that the company's "creative" image is a big draw among NYU undergraduates, particularly those in the university's top-ranked Tisch School of the Arts.
The students who take desktop computers to college likewise do so for very specific reasons. Many, like Drew McIntyre, are gamers. McIntyre chose a Gateway all-in-one desktop--one without a separate tower--over a laptop because the improved performance is essential to online role-playing games. His roommates are equally into games, he said, but since their laptops aren't powerful enough to handle "Second Life" or "World of Warcraft," they've invested in other forms of recreational electronics. Their five-man suite is equipped with a Nintendo GameCube, and they're "very excited" about the upcoming Wii console.
College students headed back to school are a perennial target of computer and gadget manufacturers. But ultimately, it's a much more restricted market than Apple or Sony would have you think, according to Baker, the NPD Group analyst.
"(College students are) space-constrained. They have very specific needs," he said. And there's the budget issue to boot. "There's not a lot of creativity about what people buy when they get back to school," Baker added.
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