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Solve : alienware computers?

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Quote from: fairyboi88 on January 28, 2009, 07:03:11 AM

Quote from: BC_Programmer on January 28, 2009, 06:47:43 AM
I looked it up when you said it, didn't read any of the GOOGLE results, though- just confirming that it was a expensive laptop

LOL you should take a look at it

err- Why? Quote from: BC_Programmer on January 28, 2009, 07:13:58 AM
Quote from: fairyboi88 on January 28, 2009, 07:03:11 AM
Quote from: BC_Programmer on January 28, 2009, 06:47:43 AM
I looked it up when you said it, didn't read any of the google results, though- just confirming that it was a expensive laptop

LOL you should take a look at it

err- Why?

it sounds really nice, lol.......it's very expensive, but there are a lot of NEAT features in it Quote
Theres another gaming computer company called IBuyPower that has some pretty good pc's. You can find them here- http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&DEPA=0&Order=BESTMATCH&Description=ibuypower&x=0&y=0

I would recommend what Zylstra already told you and thats if you can i would build your own.
 
 
 
 

i think im getting that one thats like the best i could get right thereLaptops arent meant for gaming.

Yes, there are gaming laptops, but, the problem you will ultimately run into that you will regret:
In a year, its going to be outdated. You can upgrade the video card about once, and then they change the card interface again.

With a desktop PC, you can almost always continue to upgrade. Not to mention, PC's will always have more hard drive and memory support than laptops.

I paid $1024 (including Tax) for my laptop... 1.73GHz processor, 120GB HDD, Vista Home Premium, 1GB RAM (now 2GB), and a 128MB nVidia GeForce GO 7300 video card... point is, its now highly outdated, and worth only about $500-600.

The PC version of this would probably have been around $700, and at the very least, I could upgrade the hard drive to 500GB for a relatively cheap price, the RAM up to 4GB, and a new video card... and I could keep UPGRADING every two years or so for about $100 for at least four years before it would be pointless to continue where I might as well buy a new PC due to un-upgradable parts such as the front side bus.

Look into what you are investing in. I got a laptop for visual studio 2008 and vista... but what do ya know it runs games faster then my other PC. probably on account of being a dualcore that's almost twice the speed in each core and quadruple the RAM.but then again who cares if a computer is oudated if you an do what you want to do on it and be happy?

My computer is probably outdated, it's got a single core AthloAMD athlon64 3500+ processor, 2.75gb memory, a 9500GT 512mb graphics card and and a 200 gb hard drive.

Well as long as you're not breaking the BANK to play Crysis, then that's good


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