Not too sure what specs I need to scan for when starting my shopping spree. I need something fast, powerful, good for rapid and lengthy viewing of detailed photography. The more resolution, the better, and I need to be able to switch between photos without lag time in front of clients. I also need something that I can put a heckuva lot of data on, 120 gigs or more I do back up, but I don't want to sort through and load sections from my archive for a small file retrieval - my info is backed up on CD-R at the moment as I am in the market for another hard drive. I'm looking for a good price of course.I am very particular about not purchasing a unit with Vista. I prefer Windows XP. I already own Windows XP so if I can legally (key word, here, I'm running my own business and need to be straight up) transfer the OS from one computer to the other, please let me know?
7/21/2008 2:32:13 AM
Particularly for your backup purposes (Apple's Time Machine software included with OS X is excellent), I think a Macbook or Macbook Pro with a 7200RPM drive would be perfect.But if you really can't use Mac OS, the main things you're looking for is a fast hard drive, lots of RAM, and a higher-quality screen (the screen is what's going to cost you in a good laptop though).[Edited on July 21, 2008 at 3:39 AM. Reason : ]
7/21/2008 3:38:50 AM
How would a fast hard drive translate in specs? Gigahertz? I might need more than 2 gig ram, 1 gig is not cutting it at the moment.
7/21/2008 6:19:07 AM
fast hard drive = RPM's. 5400 is standard, 7200 is fast
7/21/2008 7:01:24 AM
Why don't you go with a desktop. You can get an incredibly good system for a much better price. Also it would have a good graphics card in it.[Edited on July 21, 2008 at 8:46 AM. Reason : ]
7/21/2008 8:46:18 AM
7/21/2008 10:41:59 AM
Get a Dell Precision M4300 laptop.High end processor, high end graphics card, comes with XP as a downgrade option, WUXGA (1920x1200) screen availablesame size as any other commercial laptop you'll get out there (15.4", ~6lbs)if you want to be able to show your clients full resolution images (or close to full resolution), you're going to be hard-pressed to find a better screen to do it on, even with a 17" consumer grade lappy
7/21/2008 10:47:06 AM