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The BEST Computers For College Students: Which One Should You Buy For The New School Year?

PETER SVENSSON   08/11/10 11:46 AM ET   AP

Best Computers For College Students

NEW YORK — Looking at getting a new PC for the fall semester? Here's a jolt of cheer in these uncertain times: PCs are not only cheaper than ever, there's real innovation going on, yielding interesting new choices.

This is a rundown of options in a couple of price categories.

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$300 to $500

There used to be three main choices in this price range: netbooks, which are small laptops; heavy, frumpy laptops; and no-frills desktop computers.

To that we can now add laptops that are slightly bigger than netbooks, yet still light, and have enough processor power to play movies off YouTube and Hulu without stuttering, something netbooks can't do. The cheapest of these "thin-and-light" laptops use AMD's Neo chips. They're considerably more powerful than the Intel Atom chips that are used in most netbooks, but also drain batteries faster.

I tried the $450 Neo-powered Gateway LT32, which has a screen that is 11.6 inches diagonally. I found the LT32 a good choice for someone who needs a computer to carry outside the home but doesn't need all-day battery life or an optical drive.

Not much is new on the netbook front this year, except that most of them now come with Windows 7. That's a big improvement over Windows XP, but their Atom processors are still quite limiting and have seen only minor speed improvements over the last two years. Late this year we should see dual-core Atoms in netbooks, which should kick things up a notch.

From the conventional netbook camp, I tried the Toshiba NB255, which has a 10-inch screen. It's available for $300, and it's well built.

For a variation on the standard netbook formula, try the Samsung NB30. It's "ruggedized" to survive drops, so it's supposed to have a better chance of surviving the lifestyle of a teenager, or a klutz of any age. Available for about $340.

In desktops, a few systems with Intel and AMD quad-core processors are now available for less than $500 and will give plenty of power for video editing or gaming. The latest Core i3, i5 and i7 processors haven't trickled down to this price level yet.

In full-size laptops, be aware that the cheapest versions usually lack built-in webcams. However, accessory webcams are cheap and easy to install.

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$500 to $800

Windows laptops at this price level can be sleek, attractive and fast. If your priority is light weight and long battery life, the conventional wisdom is to go for a model with Intel's CULV (for Consumer Ultra-Low Voltage) processor and without a DVD drive. Acer's Timeline series is a good example.

I also checked out Sony's Vaio Y, which has a 13.3-inch screen and runs a CULV version of Intel's Core i3. It's slim and available in an array of colors for $770. Some earlier CULV chips struggled with playback of Flash-based video, but that's not an issue with a Core i3.

The Vaio Y weighs 3.9 pounds. But, surprise, surprise, similarly light laptops can now be had with full-power, non-CULV chips. Hewlett-Packard's dm4t has a bigger screen than the Vaio Y, a Core i5 chip and a DVD drive; it weighs just half a pound more, though it is considerably thicker. It starts at $700. One upgrade worth mentioning here is that you can get a separate graphics card for $100, if the PC will be used for gaming.

One note of caution: both the Vaio Y and dm4t have metal-clad covers. They look spiffy and expensive, but aluminum is, in my experience, more prone to scuffs, scratches and dents than plastic.

On the desktop side, you can gain entry to the Mac family for $699, the price of the Mac mini. That's excluding keyboard, mouse and monitor, but maybe you have those left over from another computer. The mini is about the size of a hardcover book and has about the same processing power as an entry-level MacBook. It's handsome and whisper-quiet and works well connected to an HDTV. The main reason to get it would be to get access to Mac software, particularly for video editing, where the Windows alternatives fall far behind.

If you're looking for a Windows desktop in this price range, good options should be legion. Look for something with a Core i5 processor, Windows 7 and at least 4 gigabytes of memory.

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$800 to $1,200

The high end of the PC price range is Apple's domain. The MacBook starts at $999. Its specs are roughly equivalent to the dm4t, so you're paying a lot for the Mac software.

The cheapest iMac, the desktop computer that's built into a monitor, starts at $1,199, with a 21.5-inch screen. That's not much more than you'd pay for an "all-in-one" Windows PC of comparable specs, but the Windows camp offers the intriguing option of touch-sensitive screens, as on the HP TouchSmart series.

It's tough to say whether you'll find a touch-sensitive screen a gimmick or a truly useful feature. I find it a very natural way to interact with the operating system, but most Windows programs aren't adapted for touch.

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Special Mention

But wait, you say. What about the iPad, Apple's new tablet computer? Well, the iPad is a wonderful device, and it can be had for $500. In many ways, it's more useful than netbooks in the same price range, and far cooler. The catch is that while it's a great device for media consumption – reading, watching, browsing – it's not so great for media creation.

Typing long entries on the iPad is tough, unless you get a separate keyboard dock or wireless keyboard, but that's a semi-awkward solution. You can't trade files with collaborators via thumb drive, and you can't use wired Ethernet for Internet access. Then again, the iPad is by far the best device for reading electronic textbooks. It makes a fantastic complement to a PC.

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Mountain Momma
Seemed like a good idea at the time
03:52 AM on 08/14/2010
This article should have started by recommending students not buy anything until they see if they can get it at a better discount buying through their college. As a faculty member, I bought my MacBook just at $1,000 through the university, plus got steeply discounted software. Students should also ask how often they'll need to upgrade or replace. I'm going on 4 years with this laptop but I have colleagues who are on their second or third PC in the same time frame. University systems seem rampant with viruses, bugs, and other goodies that just eat up PCs and spit them out.
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Joseph VIII
Artist, Writer, Math Student
12:07 AM on 08/14/2010
Never buy new from the manufacturer! I bought my iMac used in pristine condition for less than $800 (eBay), and since I was just upgrading from my antique PowerBook Titanium, I already had the software I needed. That was last year. This year, I'm buying a used MacBook laptop the same way... Intel Core Duo 2GHz can be had for about $500! Since I'm a math major, I need the Unix compatibility, and Windows machines frankly just don't cut it for me. Software isn't a big deal, because for any expensive commercial product, there's a shareware/freeware product that does the same thing. Open Office (NeoOffice on Mac) is preferable to MS Office.
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skexie
My micro-bio is not empty
03:30 AM on 08/13/2010
Not so worried about the price of a computer as I am the software. Going back to school pretty soon, and for my state at least I can get software packages at a DEEPLY discounted price if I'm a student.
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JasonMcl
Hey a countdown clock. MannNnn that is trouble...
09:38 AM on 08/13/2010
You can replace all of Microsoft Office with a program called "Open Office" its totally free and supports reading and writing of all MS formats. I personally use it and will never pay 200 dollars for office again.
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DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
09:16 PM on 08/12/2010
Why do we think a college student should have a computer? Well, to do their schoolwork of course. But there is a second purpose. To learn how to do the work in their expected field of endeavor that will require using a computer. So, are we really doing them a favor by encouraging them to spend extra money to buy a Mac when the odds are overwhelming that, except in a few narrow fields, their jobs will never expect them to use a Mac. I can and have used a Mac and I can and have used a PC. Which do I consider an essential job skill? The PC, absolutely.
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12:38 AM on 08/13/2010
You comment was valid five years ago.

Try to keep up.
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DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
02:01 AM on 08/13/2010
While it may have improved slightly in recent years, the odds are still that the average college grad will go their entire working life without ever being expected to use a Mac by their employer.

Mac market penetration is primarily in the consumer market segment. SMB and enterprise markets care a lot about the cost premium, don't care about stylish designs, and like self-servicability. The fact that there is a genius bar somewhere is of no interest at all to a business IT staff.
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JasonMcl
Hey a countdown clock. MannNnn that is trouble...
09:39 AM on 08/13/2010
Are you saying that macs are somehow relevant to the workplace now and aren't just a toy used by 10% of the population?
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06:12 AM on 08/13/2010
My guess would be that graduates generally need to be proficient in the use of MS Office on a PC. Most Mac users work with this as well, so the transition shouldn't be a problem.
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11:09 AM on 08/13/2010
Exactly.
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DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
02:15 PM on 08/13/2010
Yes, in the real world I have seen Mac users who have suddenly had to transform to using a PC and PC users who have suddenly had to adjust to using a Mac. Eventually they both survive (though some act like they won't). In both cases there is a familiarity factor that has to be overcome and at least for a short while that will be frustrating. But in practice generally the Mac users have had a harder time adjusting.

The reason I think is Apple marketing. They have been told (and paid extra for) the idea that somehow PCs are more complicated and difficult. Therefore even the most simple and irrelevant of differences (like the size and location of the start button) are immediately regarded as complicated, difficult, and error inducing. They resent that they are being asked to use one of these inferior tools with such an unfriendly start button. Every mistake they make from then on somehow was caused by the unfriendly interface. They will be still whining years later about how come we just can't get Macs. PC users are more likely to regard the Mac differences with curiosity.

I am not trying to say anything about them as people. As people they are pretty much identical. It is an attitude that has been engendered by myths created by the way the systems are marketed, like the 'I'm a Mac. I'm a PC ads".
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lindaj3884
07:55 PM on 08/12/2010
It is time for the Obama administration to stand up and stop this travesty. This girl cadette was 4th in her class. Also a straight A student. I guess those aren't the qualifications the military is looking for. They would rather hold on to prejudices than deal with reality. Several highly decorated people and high ranking officers have been fired this week. The President should immediately reinstate them. We need good people and can't afford to throw well qualified people away.
01:41 PM on 08/12/2010
As a student studying IT I find Apple's to be a WASTE of money. You are running an proprietary form of the linux operating system on hardware that is meant to be flashy and can be found in a windows PC for less money. Also Apple computers are capapble of gettting viruses, the only reason they don't is because they have such a low market share that hackers don't bother with them. Why go for 10% of the population when you can go for 90%? Windows isn't what it used to be, I have found windows 7 to be a very sound operating system, and have never had any big issues that i have not caused deliberately. for students I recommend Lenovo ThinkPads, they are solid PC's that are built to be durable and they use high-end parts at a decent price. Yes they may look bland but they run like champs.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
02:56 PM on 08/12/2010
Nice post, esp. about the high priced cash-ay to carry an Apple. Going into an Apple Store is a proselytizing experience that Billy Graham and Aimee Semple McPherson would have been in awe of. Parents or students who are buying their own should understand that amortizing the cost of a good, dependable, fully configured, and waranteed PC, laptop or notebook will come out to less than 50 cents a day over a four or five year college program. This will be a lot less expensive in the long run than buying 2 or 3 pre-obsolescent clunkers that lack the power to accept repeated software upgrades, or tolerate some gaming.
04:56 PM on 08/12/2010
Looking for a job at Microsoft are we?
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Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
01:15 PM on 08/12/2010
One little warning.
After some very careful price comparisons for laptops, I found the "student portals" that offered discounts to be complete BS. either they do not update the base prices to make the "discounts" actual, or they are being straight-out dishonest - don't know which. Stay away from these offers, and buy directly from the vendors on-line.
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Anare
My aim is true.
10:57 AM on 08/12/2010
I have kids in a high school that has a laptop program and they use HP laptops. This year's freshman students got HP Elitebook8440p's. They are loaded with a bunch of neat academic softwear. The school is starting the fourth year of their laptop program and the senior student's HP laptops are going strong. Keep in mind these are rowdy highs school kids and they use the computers all day every day. I'd say that is fairly good endorsement of the durability of HP laptops.
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LisaCACO
someone ate my micro-bio!
10:25 AM on 08/12/2010
macs. those babies last a long time and withstand abuse. never had one break down on me and i've owned quite a few, desktops and laptops, since 1988. love them. wait, I take it back. my daughter, 1 year old at the time, broke my laptop's "neck". other than that, never had a repair, and I've had them dropped, pushed off tables, beds, sat on, had endless cat hair clog the computers, etc. oh and I make mine last 4 plus years before replacement. two thumbs up. oh and I love the genius bars.
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Genep34
stop the nightmare, end the GOP
09:21 AM on 08/12/2010
lame article
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
08:44 AM on 08/12/2010
The Information Technology Departments at almost any decent college or university will provide a list of specifications for computers that will used on campus. These will address memory, storage, core processor speed, and other specs which will assure optimal compatibility with the campus computing system, network, Wi-Fi, capability, and support of different media. Care should also be given to the battery, which becomes less able to hold a full charge, over time. An extended, comprehensive warranty can protect the student from loss if the unit is defective or dropped. While these may push the initial outlay for the computer toward $1000, the specifications are designed to describe a machine that will be serviceable and compatible for the four or five years that the freshman will be in college until graduation. Potential purchasers should also take advantage of special discounts provided to college students, which can save upwards of 10% and considerably more if needed application software, (e.g. Adobe Suite) is bundled.
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10:12 AM on 08/12/2010
"The Information Technology Departments at almost any decent college or university will provide a list of specifications for computers that will used on campus."

Yes! If you're off to college with a new notebook, check--the double check--the University's recommendations and support policies. Some places don't care what you bring, and will just issue minimum guidelines. Others (like the institution I provide support at), offer very comprehensive support--we do system restores, hardware replacement, and offer temporary loaner laptops if your computer will be out of commission for longer than a couple hours--but ONLY if you get one of the models we recommend, as we only keep restore disks and spare parts handy for those specific models. Drives me bananas when students come in with a machine they bought because they didn't like ours, and then get angry at us for not offering the same level of support as their classmate who did.

Check the IT department's recommendations! You don't *have* to purchase one of the ones that are put forth, but realize that you'll often be left having to deal with support on your own.

Though, some institutions don't offer ANY hardware/software support beyond providing configurations settings, in which case go wild. :)
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red wolfe
My micro-bio is only half empty
10:18 AM on 08/12/2010
An additional note: many departments now offer configuration recommendations that reflect the needs for majors. There can be major differences between the needs for someone who grinds out statistics and someone in a media or graphics-intensive major. You'll make a mistake if you shop based on price point or your usual home computer uses.
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
02:50 PM on 08/12/2010
Thank you Red and Space for your additional comments, esp. about making certain that the campus will provide support for the machines the kid brings onto campus.
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CamBrown99
08:37 AM on 08/12/2010
One thing to keep in mind with Macs is that, while the entry price is higher, they also retain their resale value for much much longer than a PC.
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09:18 AM on 08/12/2010
And they last really, really long. At home we use two iBooks purchased in 2004. No issues. None. Ever. OK, the letters on the keys are slowly disappearing from heavy use, but ...

And when we installed OSX upgrades on our machines they actually got faster! How about that: not only no hardware upgrades required, it made better use of the existing hardware!
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hypnotoad72
Freedom = real democracy = living wages
08:39 PM on 08/12/2010
One reason is because Snow Leopard (10.6.0) no longer carried the code for their earlier G5-based systems. Intel-only. As such they could take out whole gobs of code also used with Rosetta (G5Intel translator so the non-Intel native code could be ran on an Intel system), and a smaller number of files on the hard drive means fewer files to index which means greater response time. (I don't disagree they made beneficial structural changes, though I would disagree with anybody claiming OS X is bug-free or "just works"...)

And given FreeBSD is indeed the core OS, which Apple modifies, how much of their work is a blind update?
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06:39 AM on 08/13/2010
Nobody ever claims that Macs never crash. But the occurrence is so rare that it hardly ever stops your work. With OS X as a unix based system a crashing program almost never impacts the rest of the processes. Your Mac keeps on running. You don't lose any of the work you've been doing in other applications.

Right now I have 16 different programs open at the same time, which is a bit above the average load. The machine has been up 10 days now (I had to do a restart then to install upgrades). The last time the machine crashed was on August 9, 2009 (via CrashReporter).
08:20 AM on 08/12/2010
thinkpad r/t series are the best laptops out there imho. my old t43 14" and slightly less older t60 15" are hanging in there like true champions. they are built like a brick and you know what, if any of you do graphics work i can even suggest buying a used t60 15" sxga+ off of ebay because it has an ips screen which means the colors don't change drastically like it's with a tn panel when one looks at the screen from different angles. all t and some r series support an ultrabay which naturally comes with an optical drive but can be used to add a secondary battery or hard drive.

i think most t and r series also support a dock called advanced dock which you can use to connect pci-express card solutions like graphics cards, video capture cards, sound cards that can all be useful to provide that desktop functionality you will need in certain courses. i appreciate having 3 screens made possible by the additional graphics card.
07:20 AM on 08/12/2010
The Dell outlet has some great deals. Full warranties, work like new.
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07:30 AM on 08/12/2010
Yeah, but a lot of times, the dell outlet is also more expensive than the same model new.
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Genep34
stop the nightmare, end the GOP
09:22 AM on 08/12/2010
exactly what does a lot of times mean - this is rare.
09:43 AM on 08/12/2010
That's true about the Dell outlet. And the prices on some models change from day to day. Sometimes a machine with identical specs will be a hundred dollars less than the previous day.

Apple's outlet is usually a pretty good deal too. The prices are consistent from day to day but everything comes with a one year warranty and the optional two year Applecare warranty is available for purchase.
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07:12 AM on 08/12/2010
Please give me an honest opinion, where should an entering freshman buy a computer? Best Buy? I feel like stuff is already old by the time it hits the shelf there. Let me know, thanks!
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
08:45 AM on 08/12/2010
See my post above. Best Buy usually isn't. It isn't just about price. It's about utility and life expectancy.
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09:00 AM on 08/12/2010
Check out whether your college offers special deals on computers. Also find out which ones they recommend or require.

The old conundrum: should I buy now knowing that the computer will be out of date in half a year and this model will cost 40% less? Or should I wait?

My solution: I try to figure out whether in the time up to the introduction of an upgraded model I have used the computer for this price difference. I usually do.

Also consider: the introduction of a new model doesn't mean that your computer suddenly stops working or works less well than when it was purchased.