Mobile Buyer's Guide

by Jarred Walton on July 11, 2008 12:00 AM EST

Midrange Laptops

Depending on what you want out of a laptop, the midrange category is where all the options really become available. It's possible to get a 12.1" laptop for around $1000, but if you'd like to upgrade some of the areas - i.e. get a high capacity battery and an extended warranty with accident protection - and you'll definitely be closer to $1500. Getting a truly capable gaming platform also becomes possible when you spend $1500, and several brands that tend to be a bit more expensive become viable without cutting important features.

Extended battery life (i.e. five hours or more) is one feature that you might want to consider in a $1500 laptop. You can get there in one of two ways: either get a 14.1" (or larger) laptop and a 9-cell or 12-cell battery, or else pick up one of many 12.1" laptops that come with a 6-cell battery and LED backlighting. Keep in mind that integrated graphics tend to go hand in hand with longer battery life, although the lower end discrete graphics options (HD 2300 and GeForce 8400M) aren't that power hungry. Also remember that larger displays inherently consume more power because of the bigger backlights they include.


The net result is that while it's possible to get reasonable battery life out of a 15.4" or 17" notebook, you end up with something very heavy and bulky. A 12-cell 130 WHr battery can provide four hours of mobility on a 17" notebook that uses ~33W of power; you can get the same four hours of battery life with a 14.1" notebook and a 9-cell 77 WHr battery if the laptop uses ~20W, or a 12.1" laptop with a 6-cell 50 WHr battery if the laptop uses ~13W. So your choices might be a 10 pound 17", a 7 pound 14.1", or a 4 pound 12.1". Those aren't just random numbers we're putting up; all of these options exist if you look around a bit (give or take); if you're serious about mobility and battery life, it's a safe bet that toting a 12.1" laptop is a lot more attractive than lugging around a 17" brick.

While we're on the subject of 12.1" laptops, small tablet PCs also fall into the $1500~$1800 price range. Some people really like the tablet interface and others don't; we think it's more of a convenience feature rather than a required option. Regardless, there are a lot of tablet laptops to choose from: Toshiba's Portege line, the Lenovo ThinkPad X61 Tablet, HP Compaq 2710p (we'd stick with the HP tx2500z, honestly), and the AVADirect Clevo TN121R to name a few. Most ship with a 6-cell battery that should provide at least four hours of freedom from wires.


Mobile workstations are another category of laptop where prices start in the $1400 range. Let's be clear on this: no laptop out right now is going to match the performance of a top-end desktop workstation; in fact, it won't even come close, as it's relatively easy to get a quad-core 3.0GHz desktop and difficult to impossible to get a laptop up to that level. However, higher-end dual-core mobile CPUs are plenty fast these days, and the T9300 isn't all that expensive. Dell's Precision M2300 as an example with a T9300, WXGA+ LCD, 160GB 7200RPM HDD, 2GB RAM, and NVIDIA Quadro FX 360M will run about $1500 - including a 3-year warranty.

Given what we said on the previous page about graphics, we're now in a position to discuss gaming laptops. While it's certainly possible to run games on an 8600M GT/9500M GS or HD 2600, we can't stress enough how much better the experience will be with an 8800M GTS or GTX. Most of these gaming laptops will be out of reach of a midrange budget, but there's one major exception: Gateway's P-6831 FX priced at $1300. The price and performance offered by this Gateway was so much better than anything else that we couldn't help but give it our Gold Editors' Choice award. There's only one small problem: the P-6831 has been discontinued. The good news is that the replacement is the P-6860, which is the same as the P-6831 with a few minor upgrades. Memory has been increased to 4GB, the OS is now Vista Home Premium 64-bit, the CPU is the T5550 instead of the T5450, and the hard drive is a 320GB 5400 RPM model. The only trick now is actually finding one in stock, and we understand the P-6860 is scheduled to be replaced in the future by another slightly upgraded model. Alternately, grab the P-173FX from the Gateway site for $1500; it the same as the P-6860 but with a T7500 CPU and a 200GB 7200RPM drive. Battery life is a weak point, but then that's practically a give with gaming notebooks.


The upgraded Acer Aspire 6920 is another larger midrange offering, but where the Gateway we just discussed focuses on gaming, Acer clearly targets the multimedia enthusiast. The 6920 (model 6920-6422) includes a 9500M GS graphics for reasonable gaming, but the real highlight is the Blu-ray drive and 16" 1920x1080 (1080p) display. The chassis also includes integrated 5.1 audio. Pricing starts at around $1800, but it's difficult to find any other laptops in this price range that include such a full-featured multimedia experience. We'll have a full review of the 6920 in an upcoming roundup. If you like the idea of the Acer 6920 as a portable multimedia center, but you want even more, its big brother 8920 bumps the screen size up to 18.4" while maintaining all of the other features we like on the 6920.

Most of the remaining midrange options once again fall into the realm of upgraded entry-level options. Dell's XPS M1330 and M1530 both start at $999, but we really want a few upgrades. The $1500 M1330 gives us pretty much all of the upgrades we'd like (T8300, 3GB RAM, 320GB HDD, 8400M GS, LED backlighting, and a 3-year warranty), and all we need is 802.11N WiFi and a larger battery. The $1600 M1530 is similar, but with a T9300 and 4GB RAM; 8600M GT and a 1920x1200 LCD are potential upgrades to consider. Note that starting at a higher spec laptop often results in a lower price than if you were to begin with the $1000 model and select the same upgrades - a benefit of mass production. Virtually every vendor will offer similar laptops to these two, with minor differences. Apple users will point out the availability of the MacBook, but you still get stuck with integrated graphics unless you opt for the $2000 MacBook Pro.


One other interesting option is HP's HDX, with a starting price of $1600 using the current $200 instant rebate. What makes the HDX interesting? Well, to call this thing a laptop requires a serious stretch of the imagination. Forget about 17" desktop replacements; HP goes all out with a 20.1" behemoth! The extra size is put to good use, however, as you get a 1680x1050 LCD, T8100, and a GeForce 8800M GTS. The base HDX also includes 2GB RAM, Vista 64-bit, two hard drives in RAID 0 (though the base model uses 120GB drives - boo!), and a TV tuner and remote. It checks in at a hefty 15.3 pounds, and that's likely not including the power brick. Still, if you want a decent gaming rig that can easily be transported to LAN parties, and you don't want to settle for a "small" 17" display, the HDX will work nicely.

A Few Words about Graphics High-End Laptops
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  • theoflow - Wednesday, August 20, 2008 - link

    I know this is pretty much covered in the first line of this article, but I'm dying to see the new desktop system build guides.

    I've been out of system building for about 3 years and I'm somewhat clueless as to what direction I should go.

    ARG!!!

    LOL
  • Rekonn - Sunday, July 27, 2008 - link

    "we understand the P-6860 is scheduled to be replaced in the future by another slightly upgraded model"

    Anybody know details on this?
  • JarredWalton - Sunday, July 27, 2008 - link

    Yes but it's under NDA. I can tell you next month, and trust me you'll be impressed (again).
  • Rekonn - Tuesday, July 29, 2008 - link

    Sweet, looking forward to it.
  • Rekonn - Monday, August 4, 2008 - link

    Think I found it, the Gateway P-7811 FX. Available on August 14th for $1500.
    http://laptopcom.blogspot.com/2008/08/gateway-p-78...">http://laptopcom.blogspot.com/2008/08/g...y-p-7811...

    Now, how much better is a 9800GTS vs an 8800 GTS?
  • JonnyDough - Saturday, July 12, 2008 - link

    I have a hard time with believing that the "mid-ranged" notebooks are between $1500 and $1750. It's like you pulled these numbers out of thin air and you neglected the $1K-1.5K segment altogether. $1K is where a decent modern laptop starts. Anything pushing $1500 is too much for many people to bother spending, while $1K is about right. I just got a Dell flier, the multi-page one with desktops in it too. The majority or main line notebooks start at $999, like the Inspiron. Granted, you can add options for a hundred here or there, but the starting price is $999 on a few different lines of their notebooks. I would have to say that this is the "mid-range" as they show a $999er right on the front page. You can shop NewEgg and find decent laptops that are older processors and so on for $500ish. So saying that $1500-$1750 is "mid-range" is complete bullocks. Mid-range is the budget minded market segment that wants something just a bit better than the bare minimum and it's what Dell caters to and always has. The mass market. Mid-range = mass market. Period. There's no argument against it. Budget does not = mass market. Budget = budget = those that have to watch every dollar. Remember mainstream America? Remember those that pinch pennies but still go to the fair? Yeah, us. The middle income folks. The majority of America does not live in poverty, yet. Thanks.
  • JonnyDough - Saturday, July 12, 2008 - link

    Eek! They edited the article right after I posted. LOL
  • JarredWalton - Sunday, July 13, 2008 - link

    Um... no, we didn't. I had budget, then Entry-level, then Midrange, then High-end, then Dream since the beginning. As I mention in the intro, the price brackets are indeed somewhat arbitrary with plenty of overlap. I may call $1000 "entry" and $1500 "midrange", but regardless of the name I did my best to cover all bases from $300 up through $5000. As I mention on the Entry-Level page, $1000 will get you a LOT of laptop, and unless you want gaming (i.e. Gateway P-6860) a lot of people can stop right there - give or take $250.
  • Jjoshua2 - Saturday, July 12, 2008 - link

    I think the 6-cell Wind is pretty cool. I pre-ordered one from buy.com and I was able to use a coupon that got me $15 off. Now I just hope it will get in-stock soon.
  • fabarati - Saturday, July 12, 2008 - link

    Besides warranties, this article lacked Two major points that are often overlooked - and one not quite as oftenly overlooked -when shopping for laptops: Build, Screen and Battery.

    Build quality is very different from laptop to laptop. Generally business lines are better built than consumer lines, which are better build than budget lines. There are laptops that are built better than consumer laptops, but worse than business ones, etc. That's why a same specced Thinkpad T61 is more expensive than a HP DV6700 (typical consumer build quality) or any acer (crappy budget build). Or why a an XPS m1530 is a better buy than an Asus M50/51

    Screen is also overlooked. Nearly all laptop screens are horrible compared to desktops. They're all TN screens. The very, very best are at about desktop mid-range TN's level.

    Batterylife depends on more than just what specifications a computer and the battery has. It also depends on ACPI and bios coding, and what and how good the batterysaving applications that come with are. Almost ny new Asus (Santa Rosa or newer), with a few exceptions like the U2e, has horrible batterylife. Some have a hard time reaching 2 hours under normal usage.

    Then there are some small stuff that nagged me about this article, mainly performance things. Whilst the HD3650/9500m GS/8600m GT/HD2600 are not really powerful, even when not compared to desktop midrange alternatives, they are possible to game on. In fact, you'll get a pretty decent gaming experience, and it'll be portable. They are just usually run on lower resolutions (because many laptops they're in have lower resolutions) and lower (medium) settings. The fact that they can't run a game on all high does not make it un-gameable.

    Anywho, you guys didn't do too many mistakes, and had some Ok recomendations. Pretty good for beginners.

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