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- Path: sparky!uunet!news.tek.com!shaman!frip!andrew
- From: andrew@frip.WV.TEK.COM (Andrew Klossner)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.laptops
- Subject: Re: REQUEST - 1st PC - Notebook or desktop system for home?
- Message-ID: <2345@shaman.wv.tek.com>
- Date: 15 Dec 92 20:34:13 GMT
- References: <1992Dec12.014154.6286@sifon.cc.mcgill.ca>
- Sender: news@shaman.wv.tek.com
- Reply-To: andrew@frip.wv.tek.com
- Organization: Tektronix Color Printers, Wilsonville, Oregon
- Lines: 29
-
- I tried getting by with a single great notebook, then switched to a
- good desk system and a lesser notebook. A few considerations:
-
- Display size. Today's notebooks will drive an external monitor at
- 800x600, but I haven't yet seen one that goes higher. 1024x768 is
- awfully nice. A PC novice who's used to SGI workstations isn't going
- to be happy at 640x480.
-
- Display compatibility. If you do drive an external monitor at 800x600,
- then you have to reconfigure the video drivers for all your software
- everytime you switch from built-in to external monitor. (Either that
- or keep two copies of your aps, eating disk space.) Even if you run
- your external monitor at 640x480, you may still have to reconfigure if
- your built-in display is monochrome, just to be able to read the
- display.
-
- Software. If you buy the fancy notebook, you only need one copy of all
- the software you want. If you buy two systems, to be legit you'll need
- two copies of several of them. Kudos to Microsoft apps, whose licenses
- say you can purchase a single copy for both your desk system and your
- notebook so long as you're the dominant user of both.
-
- Expandability. If you want to add a sound board to play games, or you
- need more than two serial ports, then you'll have to shell out big
- bucks to add an expansion chassis to the notebook, and you'll have more
- configurations woes when you connect and disconnect.
-
- -=- Andrew Klossner (andrew@frip.wv.tek.com)
- (uunet!tektronix!frip.WV.TEK!andrew)
-