Recommend me an Apple.


Recommended Posts

Well if you want to save money you can get the 12" iBook. Get alot of RAM and you can do all those things you have suggested with ease. If you can afford that but may decide to spend a bit extra for the 2", forget it. The screen resolution is the same, the pixels are just a bit bigger.

Ofcourse if you are going for looks then the Powerbook will be a very very nice choice. They are costly when compared to the iBooks but look so much nicer - however getting a case asap would be a wise choice.

If you are one to take the laptop into classes then it would be a good idea to invest in a 12" laptop for the ease of portability!

Hope that helps!

Well if you want to save money you can get the 12" iBook. Get alot of RAM and you can do all those things you have suggested with ease. If you can afford that but may decide to spend a bit extra for the 2", forget it. The screen resolution is the same, the pixels are just a bit bigger.

Ofcourse if you are going for looks then the Powerbook will be a very very nice choice. They are costly when compared to the iBooks but look so much nicer - however getting a case asap would be a wise choice.

If you are one to take the laptop  into classes then it would be a good idea to invest in a 12" laptop for the ease of portability!

Hope that helps!

585171699[/snapback]

how much ram and harddrive room?

ah am sorry, I completely mis-read what you had written.

Well in the case of having a Macintosh for your reasons then for most bang for buck the eMac should be your choice. If you want a portable option then you should consider the iBook or the Powerbook range of laptops. :)

It will do the job?

585171995[/snapback]

absolutely not. besides the fact the emac is the bottom of the line apple (it even has a rather poor quality CRT monitor), you will quickly find being a college student that you want a laptop, esp if you want to take it to class. and assuming you live on campus, sometimes you'll just want to go out to the library or cafeteria and do some work there. if you're not living on campus, well it's nice to be able to bring it to work between classes and all that if you have any downtime.

heres your two most viable options:

ibook 12", pimp out the ram

powerbook 12", pimp out the ram

pimp out the ram from crucial, not from apple

What nuggetman said. :)

The iBook 12-inch model would probably be the wisest choice for you, considering you don't spend tons of thousands of dollars of money... on a computer for school. And it seems to be a nice laptop. I don't have one, though, yet...?  :shifty:

585172994[/snapback]

I got a 12" PowerBook with more RAM and it is now my primary PC. I can hook up an external monitor, keyboard and mouse and it's ultra-portable. Highly recommend either an iBook or PowerBook.

if you are not 2 picky about the screen on the ibook it is prefect for you as uni student i think you shoudl nt think about desktop , they are simply not portable and you need to move alot and work with ur computer in lots of places and ram as others say is really importany goood luck ( :p )

eMac - Cheapest (enough)

iBook - Better (more portablle, wayy more portable)

PowerBook - even better (but I'm sure a PowerBook is also wayy more than enough.)

Check the Apple Website, It'll help.

60GB is a LOT, go for it.

At least 512MB-2GB of RAM, RAM is cheap.

Might consider an Airport for the iBook/PowerBook, they are very light and portable.

^ Don't try and be funny :p But yeah, Fuji Apples are great :p

Back to the topic:

Get at least 512 MB RAM, but 1 GB be very nice and ensures smoothness of applications.

For HDD room, get at least 40GB.

585173300[/snapback]

The title of the thead is " Recommend me an Apple "

so i did. i wasnt trying to be funny :rofl:

The 12" iBook is probably what you want.

If I were in your position, I would get a iBook with minimum 512MB of ram (if you buy from Crucial or another RAM supplyer it's a LOT cheaper. ( Here is the link for Crucial's iBook memory page....It's 63$ cheaper to buy a 512 upgrade from them).....Only do this if you are sure you know how to replace the RAM in your iBook (not a terribly difficult thing once you have the instructions, but none the less)

As for the hard drive size, that's up to you. If I was in your situation, I would upgrade to the 60GB hard drive since you may accumulate a lot of data in college. As I said though, this is your choice.

The reason I reccomend the iBook is because of its durability and overal functionality/portability. As a college student, you'll probably find that there are many cafes around campus with open WiFi networks, and your iBook would be ready to use those networks. You can take the iBook to class if you need to, and it will last longer than a powerbook (and be cheaper) due to its rugged form factor.

I hope this helped :) Good luck with choosing a computer. I'm sure no matter what you get, it'll be right for you.

Oh yeah....If you're looking at the eMac as a possible solution, wait until January to make your choice. New eMacs are coming. :)

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Here is how I fixed Windows 11 not booting after clean installation by Taras Buria Story time. A couple of weeks ago, I experienced a very odd thing with my computers. I was trying to reinstall Windows 11 on my primary device, and everything was going smoothly until the installer performed the first restart. After that, my computer entered the boot disk selection screen instead of continuing the setup process. Huh, that's odd, said I, and selected Windows Boot Manager only to see it fall back into the same screen right away. Then I tried booting from the USB drive with the same result—the PC kept returning to the boot device selection screen, and removing the drive would send my PC to UEFI, again, with no way to launch Windows 11. I fired up my spare laptop, which has been sitting unused for quite a while, to see if I am dealing with a defective USB drive. Nope, Windows 11 installed and started without issues. After trying another drive and checking all the possible settings in UEFI, I decided to try disabling Secure Boot. Lo and behold, Windows 11 started as it should have been in the first place, continued the setup process, and reached the initial setup screen. Victory! After I finished the setup and applied all updates, I re-enabled Secure Boot, and Windows 11 started without issues. Some time later, I tried reinstalling Windows 11 on my laptop only to experience similar issues, with UEFI claiming a Secure Boot violation. I checked whether the drive works on my main PC, and yes, it installed Windows 11 without errors. I scratched my head, went to UEFI, turned off Secure Boot, and installed Windows 11 without issues. After that, I enabled Secure Boot. Note: I used the official Media Creation Tool app for my USB drive. Also, UEFI was properly configured for Windows 11, including no Legacy Mode, a GPT-partitioned drive, and TPM and Secure Boot enabled. From my experience, if you are dealing with similar symptoms, I recommend two things: If you use old Windows 11 install media, create a new one with the latest Windows 11 release, especially if you know your PC already has the latest Secure Boot certificates. If you cannot create a new one, turn off Secure Boot, complete the installation, download all available updates, and then re-enable Secure Boot in UEFI. Note that you need to turn off Secure Boot after installing Windows 11. Otherwise, the installer won't run, claiming a hardware requirements mismatch. I believe the problem hides in Secure Boot certificates that expire this month. Microsoft is currently rolling out new certificates, and maybe a mismatch was causing these issues for both of my systems. I am out of my depth to make a definitive statement; this article is flagged as "Opinion," as I only share my experience and some tips on how to fix the problem. If some of you possess deeper knowledge and understanding of the situation, please share it in the comments. As for everyone else struggling with computers not booting after a clean install, the two steps above should get you out of the pickle.
    • I gave the tool a chance the other day to make a USB. An hour later it was stuck at 0% downloaded. I downloaded the official ISO, downloaded Rufus, and made the USB myself in 15 min.
    • <Moved to software discussion and support> I've got fond memories of Winamp. Changing the skins, the different visualisations etc. But now I just need a simple music player. MSN messenger would be another one, MSN Messenger Plus (I think?) offered so many different plugins. But again, it probably wouldn't work for me these days. And then there is miRC. i think it's still going these days, but lord i had fun with that back in the day. Now it's mostly stuff like Discord, WhatsApp group chats, Signal, Telegram... /me is showing his age...
    • ive always been fascinated by old software this is an old video player for windows from apple
  • Recent Achievements

    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      agatameier earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      ssd21345 earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      518
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      198
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      94
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!