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Laptop gripes

Dennis just wrote about some laptop frustrations. I have to agree. I can't tell you how many times I've closed my laptop lid, placed it in my bag and opened it back up on the train a 30 minutes later to find the battery half drained. Since I refuse to install any of the Toshiba Power management software for my Tablet PC (because it locks it up from time to time) I get about 1.2 hours of juice as my tablet runs at full bore the whole time.

Today I flew up to Redmond and for the first time in my life forgot my power brick. What a disaster. This made me wonder why the world needs 25 different kinds of power tips and adapters. Can't the manufacturers just agree on one common plug and then design DC adapters that aren't ugly and huge but smart and small, include cable management and can dynamically adapt to charge any laptop? Then I could just borrow one from anyone with a laptop.

Apple has always made superior laptops. They just work, aren't ugly with dozens of panels, protruding pieces of plastic and boneheaded design placement like my microphone that is located right near my loud fan. Oh, and lets not even mention the 15 or so “stickers that come on the thing. That's just tacky. I'm not sure this will ever change. The business that OEMs are in require that they compete on price, so they'll never spend the kind of money Apple does to make their stuff sexy and functional. If you don't know what I'm talking about, go to an Apple store and play with a 15 or 12 inch PowerBook. Notice the clean design, smart placement of panels, lack of stickers and panels, fluid lines, pulsing LED lights, keyboard controls that have stunning On Screen UI, and ambient light detection for back lighting the keyboard etc.

Published Friday, April 02, 2004 7:58 AM by omars
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Comments

# I Agree

Friday, April 02, 2004 7:27 AM by M.Statton
I agree completely. I have a Powerbook 1GHz and love everything about it. No problems, no hangups. Excellent machine. Worth every penny, especially when compared to a Wintel / WinAMD laptop!

# re: Laptop gripes

Friday, April 02, 2004 7:30 AM by Fruity
PC laptops have to be some of the ugliest doorstops ever designed. The sticker! Insane! They're everywhere! It just goes to show, unfortunately, that most people are tacky and lemming-like. They get their PC laptops and then *never take off the stickers.* WTF!?

# re: Laptop gripes

Friday, April 02, 2004 7:31 AM by DD
You blog is interesting and yet you fail to take it to its logical conclusion. Why are you struggling with your PC notebook when you can get a powerbook? PBs with Panther work very nicely on their own or in the Windows world. They are priced competitively (for what you get) and are oh so sexy. Throw in better security and the conclusion is obvious.

What are you waiting for?

DD

# re: Laptop gripes

Friday, April 02, 2004 7:38 AM by dong lover 2003
i have a large dong. it has stickers on it as well

# WTF?

Friday, April 02, 2004 7:47 AM by M.Statton
Ummm...I don't know why the website posted three of my responses. Ya might wanna clean it up a bit. Oh! maybe because it's powered by ASP.NET!!!!!

# re: Laptop gripes

Friday, April 02, 2004 7:59 AM by Fred Barnes
Maybe if you only click submit once you would have only one entry. Maybe its that single button on the Apple mouse. Did you get trigger happy?

# re: Laptop gripes

Friday, April 02, 2004 7:58 AM by Dell Dude
I'm getting a Dell.... :0 Well I had one, years ago. The thing lasted exactly one year. I purchased a Pismo Powerbook G3... lasted until I sold to for a 667 Powerbook G4 in 2001. Well it's 2004 and I'm waiting for a Powerbook G5. These things are in best laptops. PERIOD...

Why asp.net? try using php for you blog.

# re: Laptop gripes

Friday, April 02, 2004 8:14 AM by filecat13
"# re: Laptop gripes 4/2/2004 7:38 AM dong lover 2003


i have a large dong. it has stickers on it as well"


Take the stickers off. It's not as large as you think.

# The problem is perception

Friday, April 02, 2004 8:54 AM by ArmchairPhilologist
The problem goes beyond what the OEM market needs or how "lemming-like" consumers are. The problem is that most people still perceive computers as tools, toys or just a pain in the ass. Very few people really look at information technology as a lifestyle changing device. Most people still "dial-in" or "connect" to the internet. Most people still buy "computer desks" to put their PCs on or purchase laptop-specific bags to carry them.

How often do you see someone change their PC to fit the layout of their home office? Most people change their office to fit the machine—it's big, ugly, noisy and they need a special desk for it. Laptops are the same for most people, totally utilitarian. Very few people have actually moved into the information age. They just use a few of the tools without really understanding what it all could be for them.

When people start looking at their laptops the way they look at their cellphones or their iPods (or better yet, their clothes), then PC makers will be forced to adapt to that market. The fact is, consumers don't want a new lifestyle. They just want the tools/toys to convince themselves that they're living in the future, when they're really all just comfortably sitting in the past.

Even Apple is doing pretty piss-poor in this regard IMHO (not that I still don't love my iBook, but that's mostly for the OS, not the design of the machine). Look at the laptops available in Japan (especially the ultra-portables) for some really cool ideas. Some of them make PowerBooks look like tinker toys, but the Japanese have largely accepted infotech as part of their lives and not just as an accessory.

# re: Laptop gripes

Friday, April 02, 2004 10:54 AM by Omar Shahine
I'm actually toting around a TiBook and a PC laptop with me this time... hence the frustration I am experiencing right now ;-).

# re: Laptop gripes

Friday, April 02, 2004 2:03 PM by Kennedy Brandt
Omar, we never met, but until January, we worked on the same campus. A former mutual co-worker (Dan McG.) told me you were a very sharp guy, and again you've hit the nail on the head.

I now carry my work laptop and my new 15" PowerBook with me on my daily commute because after five years of frustration with various failing Dells, and having only those systems available to me on trip after trip for work, trying to get a positive computing experience out of my PC laptop just stopped being worth the effort.

And while working from home yesterday, the PowerBook saved me when the Dell refused to connect to my home network, then couldn't connect with our Excahnge server... and the PowerBook simply got right in, accessed all my mail, let me run the PPT for a critical conference call... and proved itself to be a more capable, more reliable system for work as well as pleasure.

# re: Laptop gripes

Friday, April 02, 2004 5:13 PM by Me
IBM Laptops are great

# re: Laptop gripes

Saturday, April 03, 2004 6:44 AM by Jeffrey McPheeters
Whoa; some of you are carrying TWO laptops around! Just shows that with the price reductions, and reduced size, the techno-geek can justify having a Windows laptop and an Apple laptop in the same bag!

As someone who uses Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows XP on a daily basis, with 3 kids that have both iBooks and ShuttlePCs on their desks, I can attest to the need for a well designed laptop that could conceivable run more than one operating system (not emulated; rather running concurrently).

Indeed, my family experience proves that, while we all prefer to use Macs for the bulk of our day to day data-functions, we still need another OS or two for some things. Wouldn't it be great if Apple/IBM (The Power5 can run multiple OSes simultaneously) could one day come up with a superior laptop that could run other OSes much like Panther handles switching between users?! It wouldn't be cheap, but then it would be wonderfully useful for the professional users. Perhaps with future memory controllers and multiple core-processors, such a thing might become a reality.

# re: Laptop gripes

Saturday, April 03, 2004 4:25 PM by billyO
Honestly, I couldn't live without my iBook. Yeah, it's gettin' old (almost 2 years) and still stuck in G3 world (slow for cpu-eating tasks) but without it, I'd be stuck. I work as a freelance php/flash programmer, and often have to work "onsite" to make my client more comfortable with me working for them. I've *always* connected to their various networks without ever having to dig around in my preferences. It just finds it and I'm on.

And, for the people who mentioned it, yes, until people see their laptop or their computer as something other than a high-powered tool, they will always by cheap. And then suffer, and it *still* won't occur to them why.

As for running various OSs on one machine? That would be excellent. And hey, if you haven't heard, there's a group working on a non-MS windows environment to run on the Mac, called darwine. They've got space on sourceforge. Check it out!

# re: Laptop gripes

Saturday, April 03, 2004 4:26 PM by billyO
Oh, and for the smart-ass commenting about a one-button Apple mouse: get a clue, those of us that have used the mac for years know the first thing out the door is the mouse; we then have a pre-bought, ready-to-plug-n-play (no extra drivers needed) mouse from kensington, or logitech, or Macally.

Wake up. :p

# re: Laptop gripes

Saturday, April 03, 2004 8:07 PM by mikhail
Why indeed can't we have a common standard for power input sockets? Not only on laptops but mobile phones, digital cameras etc ? Think of the literally hundreds of millions of wall warts and battery chargers that go into landfill every year, not to mention the dollars that go down the drain with them.
When is someone going to come up with a system where a wall wart/battery charger, with a universal standard connector, queries each battery or device as it's plugged in, determines the appropriate voltage and/or charging program. and provides it? This is far from rocket science, all the technology is available now, and you'd only need one or two, and they would last you a very long time. This business of having a new power supply bundled with every device is economic and ecological lunacy.

# More PC Laptop Issues

Sunday, April 04, 2004 12:51 AM by Scooblog

# More PC Laptop Issues

Sunday, April 04, 2004 12:52 AM by Scooblog

# Microsoft laptop gripes - and why we still have to recondition batteries

Monday, April 05, 2004 1:44 AM by Jonathan Hardwick

# I have no idea what you are talking about.

Saturday, April 10, 2004 1:16 PM by IBM Thinkpad user
Typing this on my IBM X22, I'm afraid I can't identify with any of your gripes about PC laptops. My laptop is sleek, light, reliable, sturdy, and just reeks quality.
The truth is that you get what you pay for. Dell, Toshiba, and others market to the lowest common denominator and sell on price and slickly marketed features whereas IBM and Apple pretty much ignore the mass market and continue to refine their products.
I have had no trouble with my laptop, even after dropping it to the floor on a corner (save for a snapped lid catch) and other lesser mistreatments. I suggest that if you do invest in another PC laptop that you buy a real one.

# Microsoft laptop gripes - and why we still have to recondition batteries

Saturday, May 01, 2004 12:19 PM by Jonathan Hardwick

# Microsoft laptop gripes - and why we still have to recondition batteries

Wednesday, September 14, 2005 11:59 PM by Jonathan Hardwick
These have been hard days for Microsoft laptops. First Dennis Cheung's Acer doesn't autosuspend, then...

# Microsoft laptop gripes - and why we still have to recondition batteries

Sunday, August 19, 2007 9:33 PM by Jonathan Hardwick

These have been hard days for Microsoft laptops. First Dennis Cheung's Acer doesn't autosuspend , then

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