Baker wrote:
Does anyone know of a laptop/notebook computer model that they just fell in love with? In particular, that you also liked the built-in pointing device and felt very comfortable with it?
I love my PowerBook G4 667/DVI with Mac OS X Jaguar. I don't like to use the trackpad it slows me down.
I use a Kensington Wireless Studio Mouse
http://www.kensington.com/html/1510.html (Home) and a Kensington Pocket Mouse Pro
http://www.kensington.com/html/1211.html (Work). Both are optical and are better than the one button crap from Apple.
Baker wrote:
The reason I ask is that I am considering get a couple of notebook computers and the ones I really liked in the past are discontinued.
Have you considered Apple's new PowerBook Models?
Baker wrote:
In the past I've had several different models. The Thinkpads and Toshibas with the trackpoint make my finger sore after a while and my personal experience with touchpads is that I despise them because if your palm touches it while typing it moves the cursor.
My co-worker uses a ThinkPad with what I call the "Pencil Eraser" she has gotten used to it. And she is less productive. I still like my wireless though.
Baker wrote:
I've had 2 pointing devices that I thought ruled ... I had a Fujitsu C370 notebook with something called the Ergotrak, which was a inch wide "button" that served as the pointing device and it was great (but not perfect) and the awesome front mounted rollball on a NEC Versa I had long ago which was located not on the keyboard panel but the front right where your thumb rests and it ruled.
I have never used these laptops. Was the thickness of these laptops any different from what is shipping now?
Baker wrote:
Anyway, there must be someone out there with a laptop that they love including the pointing device.
Like I said, I love my PBG4, but I can't live without my Studio mouse.
Baker wrote:
Or am I wrong and all laptops suck?
Only PC laptops suck
J/K
Before I purchased my PBG4 I was looking at Dell's Inspirion 8200.
When I looked at the price differences between what is standard on Apple's Powerbooks and what I needed to add to Dell's Laptops. I found that the Powerbook was the right decision for me.
I can still run/share/and exchange my PC files and apps on my PBG4 with Virtual PC 6 and Windows XP Pro.
http://www.connectix.com/index_mac.html. Mac OS X has true Mulittasking, Protected Memory, Apache, PHP, CGI, MySQL, X11, Free-BSD and GCC, Samba, Python, RTP/RSTP, AES-128 Encription, Quartz Extreme, Firewire port, DVI port (Handy Dandy), Super Drive. It's a very powerful, thin, laptop.
Sorry about the Pro-Apple post Baker. I'm not trying to start a Mac/PC war here.
Just throwing in my 2ยข