Laptopcloseout.com has a store in Yorkville specializing in refurbished from factory notebooks. They stand behind their warranty.
cdog said:I am in the computer business and have had my retail store for over 20 years.
First Dell is crap and very expensive to get repaird. Stay away from used its mot very good value and a 3 year old notebook is almost useless. Both Acer and Toshiba have nice units under $1,000. Don't believe the line about the good graphics on the Toshiba. To my knowledge all units under 1K have integrated video. Usually you have to get to the $1500 range to get a good video card. All notebooks are very expensive to get serviced because they are all propritory. This is the big advantage of Acer. You can get a 3 year extended warranty for $100 to $125. Toshiba will cost you double that. DONT EVER buy the Futureshop CRAP extended warranty. I never push extended warranties except for notebooks. I own 3 acer and 1 toshiba for my family that are priced in your range and have been happy with all of them
Almost the same thing happened to me too. I ordered a Dell with 2GB of RAM and a deluxe extended warrantee. I got one with 1GB of RAM and a regular warrantee. Support was a nightmare. It took almost 2 years before I got a good explanation of the screwup.monkeychan said:That one too! They sent me the wrong laptop (I ordered one with 2 Gb RAM the sent it with 512 Mb RAM) and when I called in with the serial number, they told me the serial number doesn't exist.
I notice every Toshiba notebook has that shiny mirror like screen.is there still laptops out there that doesn't use the godawful shiny mirror-like screen?
It looks like glasss screens are the way to go for manufacturers.monkeychan said:it's cheaper to manufacture. The matte (non-shiny) finish is another coating that requires more powerful backlighting for the LCD.
It's great if you use your laptop exclusively in a completely dark situation, but try using it outdoors, it's completely useless (I usually use my laptop as a preview screen for my digital camera for my client to see the results instantly).
The problem now is that I no longer want to lug my 17" widescreen and 15.4" widescreen laptops anymore. I want to get something like 10" or 12" widescreen, but unless I'm willing to spend close to $3K, I can't find one without that godawful shiny screen.
Even the newer Apple notebooks uses that awful screen.
You're not bothered with the excessive reflection? I personally find it hard to show my clients my photos (during outdoor session) without using a hand-made visor for the screen.samcan said:MonkeyChan
I kind of like them, to me its like a cover easily cleaned when others put finger to screen. I'm typing this outdoors in bright sun, no prob.