Who makes the most reliable laptops?


Recommended Posts

One question we get pretty frequently is some variation on "Which laptop brand is most reliable?" It's an important question, as laptops can be tough to fix, with pretty much no user-serviceable parts inside (yes, I'm sure you're all clever enough to pop open your laptop chassis and tinker around; I'm talking about all the other laptop owners out there). That means if something goes wrong with your laptop, it's a pretty much guaranteed trip to a repair center.

c-reports_270x239.jpg

Most people rely on anecdotal evidence to pick a laptop they think won't break down--relying on horror stories from friends or the Internet. Of course, every manufacturer has a mile-long list of angry customers who have not gotten satisfaction from indifferent tech support telephone drones, fine-print-filled warranties, or shady third-party repair services.

(Credit: Consumer Reports)

The detail-minded folks at Consumer Reports have just put out their annual look at the computer industry, and while our colleague Tom Krazit has already pointed out that Apple ranks at the top of the list for laptop tech support, (with HP in last place), we're more interested in the brand repair history chart from the same issue.

The chart shows data from about 75,000 laptops purchased between 2003 and 2007, recording how many have had a serious problem requiring repair. The companies listed are Lenovo, Compaq, Sony, Toshiba, Dell, HP, Gateway, and Apple, and all scored between 20 percent and 23 percent. Consumer Reports says a difference of less than three points is statistically "not meaningful."

So, there you have it--no major laptop brand is really much more likely to break down than any other. Why? Because most laptops are essentially commodity products, made from the exact same components, and differentiated only by their outer shells and extra features. So, next time someone says not to buy a laptop from a certain vendor because they "break down all the time," you can assure them that there's about a 1-in-5 chance their laptop will develop a major problem, no matter where it came from.

Via: Crave

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/635710-who-makes-the-most-reliable-laptops/
Share on other sites

in my view, they are all more or less the same...

the difference between the "first" and the "last" are like 3 repairs, big deal.

and thats a very good thing. they are all more or less reliable so its up to your personal taste. =)

the difference between the "first" and the "last" are like 3 repairs, big deal.

and thats a very good thing. they are all more or less reliable so its up to your personal taste. =)

A good thing? I do not think that 25% of laptops damaged is a major statistical to be proud.

It's one thing to favourite brand x breaks down less than favourite brand y, but when they do break down, how much hassle are they to get them fixed?

Not that I am an Apple fan, but from what I hear, they are very good about getting things fixed.

I'm surprised Apple was ranked at the bottom on this survey, especially since I only had my iBook repaired once since I bought it in 2005 and it was because of something stupid I did, not because of a hardware defect. But software-wise, I find Dells are the worst, as they get cluttered with spyware more than any of the other PC manufacturers.

I'm surprised Apple was ranked at the bottom on this survey, especially since I only had my iBook repaired once since I bought it in 2005 and it was because of something stupid I did, not because of a hardware defect. But software-wise, I find Dells are the worst, as they get cluttered with spyware more than any of the other PC manufacturers.

Either you have no idea what spyware is or you actually think a PCs vulnerability to spyware has anything to do with the manufacturer. Spyware is something that gets installed usually without the user's consent and monitors and/or annoys the user, or hinders the PCs performance. When a user goes to some website and blindly installs crap or just selects default options in any install and ends up with spyware, that is not the manufacturer's fault.

What you probably mean to say is Dell installs "bloatware" such as Google Desktop and their stupid Quickset and Dell Support applications. And quite honestly, even though these apps are annoying to some people, they do help others.

Avoid dell, I hate my Inspiron 1520, I've had 3 repairs, got the laptop replaced and just recently had another repair. I got the error message

*** Hardware Malfunction

Call your hardware vendor for support

NMI: Parity Check/Memory Parity Error

*** The system has halted ***

They replaced the motherboard and memory. Everyday I use this laptop, it ticks me off.

I news articles such as these funny. The amount of factual information is very limited, they list the total number of equipment sales but not numbers for individual resellers.

For example, what was the ratio of Apples versus Dell sold there, that will directly impact the rating. Or Lenovo/IBM to HP?

I will personally stand behind the information put out by publications such as Consumer Reports...

133293-laptopscores.jpg133293-desktopscores.jpg

They tend to hold a bit more weight with me. :)

The full report, which also includes buying advice for desktops, laptops, and all-in-ones, appears in the June issue of Consumer Reports; that publication?s subscribers can also get it online at the Consumer Reports Web site.

^^^ Cara, the percentage of failures (or in this case "repairs") doesn't depend on the number of units sold. It is just a percentage. 20% of Lenovos ended up needing "repair" and 23% of Apples needed "repair". Not a huge difference.

Your charts seemed to be more of "customer satisfaction" survey, not rating the percentage of units sent in for repair.

^^^ Cara, the percentage of failures (or in this case "repairs") doesn't depend on the number of units sold. It is just a percentage. 20% of Lenovos ended up needing "repair" and 23% of Apples needed "repair". Not a huge difference.

Your charts seemed to be more of "customer satisfaction" survey, not rating the percentage of units sent in for repair.

Wouldn't it mean Apples fail more if they sell less and fail at the same percentage a lenovo does?

^^^ Cara, the percentage of failures (or in this case "repairs") doesn't depend on the number of units sold. It is just a percentage. 20% of Lenovos ended up needing "repair" and 23% of Apples needed "repair". Not a huge difference.

Your charts seemed to be more of "customer satisfaction" survey, not rating the percentage of units sent in for repair.

Consumer Reports ranked them by the customer's satisfaction on the repair or work completed, which to me leads directly into the fact that if the machine was being serviced frequently it would lead to a lower customer satisfaction level.

I am assuming that they rated each brand individually but they didn't say if they did or not therefore it could be relative. No base numbers are given so it is impossible to judge this. Either way I find these numbers to be slightly hard to believe given what we see and hear from our support services. :)

Dazzy - They are nice aren't they? I just got an X61 Tablet to play with, I won't say why.

Thinkpads are really nice laptops....

but since Lenovo has taken over the Thinkpad design has remained true to it's original idea...Pretty much all that was changed is the name of the Manufacturer...it's still run by the original IBM design team and service centers...... but their tech support has gone south....but tell me what company hasn't these days. seems to be the norm.

I still like them though.

The thing about finding out info like this is that it changes every year...or every 2 quarters i think. One minute Dell is making solid laptops and then months later they may release something new that has a design flaw or hardware issues...what can you do? nothing, unless you can see the future.

so it's a fluctuating result.

I've had several brands over the years.. a small PERSONAL list: (from great to not so crap to utter crap)

- HP (Simply the best .. right up there .. IBM/Lenovo is also great, haven't used them)

- Toshiba (durable but slow by default, fat and IMHO ugly)

- Sony (but clunky and slow)

- Apple (tend to have funky problems .. noone can really tell what to expect .. overall the quality is great but needs repairs from time to time)

- ASUS (good value for money and fast systems but keep on dying...)

- MSI (overpriced, cracks and replacementparts are way too expensive)

- Acer (cracks like hell, poor poor quality)

- OEM notebooks (tend to behave like Acer and ASUS)

I'm loving my 8510p from HP. It may not be the pretiest thing on the block but it's chassis is kick ass, performance is right up there and the batterylife is just awesome...

Over the years I've had several ASUS notebooks .. they look great, perform great .. however after 8 months they just keep on dying / crapping out.

The V6 serie of ASUS was one of the best .. more durable yet. Too bad they canceled the entire serie (too expensive for users).

^^^ Cara, the percentage of failures (or in this case "repairs") doesn't depend on the number of units sold. It is just a percentage. 20% of Lenovos ended up needing "repair" and 23% of Apples needed "repair". Not a huge difference.

Your charts seemed to be more of "customer satisfaction" survey, not rating the percentage of units sent in for repair.

Not to be an ass or anything but I don't believe what you're saying makes sense. The report is of laptops sent in for repair... It's a PERCENTAGE of laptops that have to be sent in for repair. By that definition alone it means that it's a PERCENTAGE of laptops SOLD which are sent back for repair... Your statement "the percentage of failures (or in this case "repairs") doesn't depend on the number of units sold. It is just a percentage." Well you say "it's just a percentage" it's a percentage of what though? Of the number of laptops in the warehouse that haven't even gone out to customers yet? No, of course not... They would only be talking about the percentage of laptops that were sent out to customers (sold). Laptops that haven't been sold wouldn't need to come back for service... You can't have a percentage without first having a starting number. You can't just take a percentage out of thin air or have a percentage of nothing... Nothing from nothing equals nothing... It would have to be a percentage of an actual number... in this case the only logical thing would be the percentage of laptops sold seeing as the stats listed were for laptops sent back for repair... Percentage of failures DOES depend on the number of units sold in this case because if the unit hasn't been sold then it hasn't been used and thus wouldn't need to be repaired. Please don't take this post as a flame or anything it's not meant to be sarcastic or condescending...

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • If you look around on Amazon, some of these are available for $9
    • I’m still using an Xbox One S, so time for an upgrade to play this but as much as I hate Sony, I think I’ll get the ps5 pro
    • I bought this game. Played it for an hour, and then got a refund from Steam. Not a fun game at all.
    • Nothing Ear buds with active noise cancellation are at their lowest price ever with 51% off by Fiza Ali Amazon is currently offering the Nothing Ear wireless earbuds at their lowest price ever with 51% off limited prime deal. The earbuds feature an 11mm dynamic drivers with a ceramic diaphragm, and support high-resolution audio codecs including AAC, SBC, LDAC, and LHDC 5.0. They support active noise cancellation of up to 45dB across a frequency range of up to 5000Hz, and include a smart ANC algorithm, adaptive noise cancellation, and a transparency mode that allows surrounding sounds to be heard when needed. Connectivity is provided via Bluetooth 5.3, with support for multiple profiles including HFP, A2DP, AVRCP, and others. The earbuds also support dual connection, allowing them to be paired with two devices at the same time. Additional features include IP54 water and dust resistance for the earbuds and IP55 for the charging case, in-ear detection, pinch controls, low-latency mode, Google Fast Pair, Microsoft Swift Pair, and a three-microphone system per earbud for clearer voice calls. The Nothing X app, available on Android and iOS, provides access to custom EQ settings, bass enhancement, personal sound profiles, ear tip fit testing, firmware updates, customisable controls, dual-device management, and a find-my-earbuds feature. In terms of battery performance, each earbud has a 46mAh battery and the charging case has a 500mAh capacity. With active noise cancellation (ANC) turned off, the earbuds should offer up to 8.5 hours of playback on a single charge and up to 40.5 hours in total with the charging case. With ANC enabled, playback should last up to 5.2 hours on the earbuds and up to 24 hours with the case. For calls, talk time should reach up to 5 hours on the earbuds and 23 hours with the case when ANC is off, while ANC on should provide up to 4 hours on the earbuds and 18 hours with the case. Finally, fast charging should deliver up to 10 hours of playback from 10 minutes of charging when ANC is disabled. Nothing Ear Wireless Earbuds Bluetooth: $73.15 (Amazon US) - 51% off Good to know This Amazon deal is U.S. specific, and not available in other regions unless specified. We only use first-party seller links (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you purchase from a first-party seller link only. Check out Today's Deals on Amazon | or our recent tech deals. Become a Prime member (for Students or SNAP) via Neowin Get Prime Access - Prime for half price (for qualifying Medicaid, EBT, SNAP) Subscribe to Prime Video, Audible Plus, Music Unlimited or Kindle Unlimited via Neowin As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    • Microsoft officially launched its Copilot Cowork enterprise AI agent on June 16, 2026, switching to usage-based pricing on the same day it disclosed it is considering a Microsoft-hosted version of China's DeepSeek V4 as a lower-cost engine for the platform — a pairing that puts the company on a collision course with both its enterprise customers' security teams and a White House that has spent months trying to wall off Chinese AI from American infrastructure.................... https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318647/20260618/microsoft-eyes-deepseek-v4-copilot-cowork-what-azure-hosting-cannot-fix.htm  
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      AndreaB earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      Huge Trailer earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      eurospharma62 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      With What earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      590
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      173
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      75
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      68
    5. 5
      neufuse
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!