High-End Laptops
High-end computer components are typically a case of diminishing returns, and laptops are not different. You can get pretty much everything you need in a laptop for under $2000 with no difficulty; getting that last 20% performance boost - whether it be in CPU power, graphics power, battery life, or just plain style - can be expensive. Here is where you'll find such upgrades as the Core 2 Extreme X9000, 8800M GTX (perhaps two!), Blu-ray, and solid state hard drives.
For maximum battery life and improved performance, you'll want a smaller laptop with an SSD. A 32GB SSD on its own will set you back around $400, or $800 for the 64GB drives. You can purchase the SSD separately for a potential savings, though some vendors have close ties with memory companies that allow them to pre-install the drive at a discount. A quick survey of the online resellers leads us to the Samsung SSDs as some of the best price/performance/reliability options. The 32GB MCBQE32G5MPP-0VA00 and 64GB MCCOE64G5MPP-0VA00 both boast 100MB/s sequential read and 80MB/s sequential write speeds, with random read/write speeds of 80/30MBps. Take any of the 12.1" midrange notebooks, add a 64GB SSD, and you have a high-end laptop. Or you can grab something like the ASUS U2E-A2B for $2700 and get an even smaller laptop. Just be forewarned that many of these ultraportables sacrifice a lot of performance to extend battery life.
Gaming options for high-end notebooks come in a variety of flavors. Besides upgraded versions of midrange offerings, there are numerous companies selling systems based on the Clevo M570RU that comes with an 8800M GTX. We first saw this particular notebook early this year with the WidowPC Sting 517D2, and then we looked at a modified configuration a bit later with the AVADirect M570RU. Given they both use the same design, we're inclined to go with whoever offers the better price, and of all the Clevo M570RU options we've seen the least expensive happens to be AVADirect. The fact that they offer a ton of component choices doesn't hurt either.
One gaming option that we'd steer clear of in this price range is the 8700M GT SLI laptops. SLI might sound like a nice feature, but a single 8800M GTS will generally outperform 8700M SLI, and with the Gateway FX laptops costing far less there's no point in SLI unless you're going with dual 8800M. With prices starting at upwards of $3000, we'll save them for the Dream category.
If gaming isn't your major concern but you want a lot of number crunching power, you can go one of two ways. Option one is to get a notebook with an X9000 processor. The CPU alone will set you back over $1000 on its own, so take the midrange options from the last page and if they can support the X9000 you've got a powerful number cruncher. The other alternative that can get you even more processing power is to purchase a notebook that supports desktop processors and drop in a higher end dual-core or even a quad-core CPU. We're not aware of any laptops that will officially support anything above a Q9550, but at 2.83GHz that will already easily surpass the X9000. Desktop CPUs pretty much guarantee that you'll be lugging around a 17" or larger notebook, but the X9000 is still quite demanding and is not likely to be found in anything smaller than a 15.4" chassis. However, unless you demand every last ounce of performance, we'd recommend against either choice and instead stick with a T9500 (2.6GHz) or T9300 (2.5GHz) - which you can find in 14.1" laptops.
We've mentioned Apple several times already, but they always seem to cost a bit too much for the performance and features on tap. Sure, you get all the OSX goodness that so many seem to like, and you can run both OSX and Windows. Not that you can't do that with an appropriate hackintosh, but I digress…. The MacBook Pro has a lot of great features, like the LED backlighting on the LCD and keyboard. The base $2000 model also includes a T8300, 2GB RAM, 200GB HDD, and 8600M GT 256MB. An extra $500 will get you a T9300, 250GB HDD, and a 512MB 8600M GT, and there's also the 17" MacBook Pro, which gives you a larger 1680x1050 LCD for $300 more. Obviously, those are some very steep price hikes for a few minor upgrades, but there are lots of people that love the Apple "look". You could also opt for the MacBook Air, perhaps with an SSD; we have reservations about the Air, but the overall design makes for a great traveling companion.
28 Comments
View All Comments
strikeback03 - Friday, July 11, 2008 - link
He mentioned that warranty should be something to look into, but might not have gotten into it due to the large number of options depending on vendor and specific warranty. Also some aspects of the warranty vary by person. I like the Thinkpad depot warranty - you will have a prepaid box within a day of calling, and typically will get your system back a day or two after shipping it. My sister is looking for a new laptop, and after she was without her current one for 3-4 weeks a few different times while Best Buy was doing warranty work, I figured the option to get it back quickly would be nice. Apparently she can't have stuff shipped to work though, so would have trouble with packages requiring signatures.JarredWalton - Friday, July 11, 2008 - link
I thought I made enough mention of warranties to get the point across, but in retrospect a lot of it got buried in the various sections. I've added a paragraph to the conclusion to emphasize the point, as I do feel it often gets overlooked. That's why I wrote a blog on the subject http://www.anandtech.com/weblog/showpost.aspx?i=31...">last December.EvilBob - Friday, July 11, 2008 - link
Given NVIDIA's recent announcement of overheating mobile GPUs, I'm curious whether anyone knows which M-GPUs are affected. I would guess that some of these high end machines would be the most heat-susceptible, but does anyone have any more information?pepsimax2k - Friday, July 11, 2008 - link
GeForce 8 series issues!!!was gonna post this in it's own thread but anyways... all G84 plus G86 core based 8 series GPUs may (though very likely do) all have very high failure rates. Basically everything up to and including 8600 I think, notebook and desktop; all of them.
http://www.theinquirer.net/gb/inquirer/news/2008/0...">http://www.theinquirer.net/gb/inquirer/news/2008/0...
Nothing's been confirmed yet though, and inq are known to exagerate stuff, but I'd be wary of them until knowing better.
HP have also extended warranties for a number of affected laptops (although not all, as I just got a dv9702ea not on the list but with an 8400M GS).
http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/document?lc=en&...">http://h10025.www1.hp.com/ewfrf/wc/docu...cc=us&am...
sprockkets - Sunday, July 13, 2008 - link
Interesting, as a client's 8600 based laptop died just like all those people's did. HP fixed it for free though.toonces - Friday, July 11, 2008 - link
Nice to see an article delineated into how most people buy notebooks.Timing is a little off though with the NDA lifting and Nvidia's 9800-series about to be launched in the next week or so.
No mention of Puma either? HP just released a few models with the new HD3200 that put their integrated graphics slightly higher than an 8400GS/9300GS in performance.
JarredWalton - Friday, July 11, 2008 - link
Is the HD 3200 really that fast? I thought it was more in line with 780G desktop chipset, which while faster than the other IGPs still trails modern discrete solutions. Then again, the low-end discrete mobile solutions are pretty anemic.9800M parts will be faster, but most of what was said here applies after the updates. Availability of 9800M will be the question - if it's like 8800M it will be two or three months after the launch before we see it.
toonces - Friday, July 11, 2008 - link
3DMark06 @ 1280x768dv5z (2.1GHz Turion X2 Ultra ZM-80, ATI Radeon HD 3200) = 1,599
dv6500z (2.0GHz AMD Turion 64 X2 TL-60, NVIDIA 8400m GS = 1,551
M1330 (2.0GHz T7300, NVIDIA 8400M GS 128MB) = 1,408
I know, it's only 3DMark but users of the tx2500z have reported playing Source games (DX9) on 1280x800, high settings, with steady 30FPS. Not bad for integrated I'd say.