The Good Life
Even a Laptop Hater Would Like This Machine
12/11/07 - 01:22 PM EST
The holiday travel season is upon us, and that often means dragging the dreaded laptop computer to the relatives' house, the mountains or the beach. I am not a laptop fan. Although laptops are positioned in the market as the ultimate do-everything computer, I've found portable units by the usual suspects -- DellDELL, HPHPQ, Lenovo, Toshiba, SonySNE and the rest -- to be the exact opposite. They are prohibitively expensive -- at least double the cost of a desktop computer. They come with limited flexibility: Some new memory, and maybe a slide-in card or a hard drive, are about it when it comes to add-on features. Laptops require pricey, ugly docking stations and other peripherals such as keyboards to make them comfortable for extended use. And when in mobile mode -- for those of us battling repetitive stress and blurring vision -- the ergonomics promote simply awful posture, and the keyboards are cramped to boot. Yet people still clamor for them. Portable computers are the dominant computer type on the market, by far. In 2003, laptops overtook desktops in terms of market share, grabbing 54% of sales, according to the NPD Group, a Port Washington, N.Y.-based research firm. And more importantly, NPD says, tech bellwether AppleAAPL is seeing fresh interest in its laptops. Apple's share of the market grew to about 17% in November. "People want the instant gratification and total access that a laptop provides," says Craig Marking, senior product manager, who handles part of the laptop line for Toshiba America. "If consumers are willing to pay for it, laptops can offer, feature for feature, the performance of a desktop." Vendors are delighted to cater to the laptop lust. Innovation continues at a brisk pace. The latest generation of ultra portables -- that is, units that weigh less than 3 pounds -- are getting powerful enough, tough enough and long-lasting enough to travel essentially anywhere and run almost any application, including processing-intensive environments such as Windows Vista and Apple's Leopard operating system. I have spent the last few months testing one ultraportable, the Toshiba Portege R500 ($2,149 as tested). And basically, the unit works as advertised.
| Toshiba Portege R500 | |
| Photo: Toshiba |
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