I am using an HP DV5126 which I bought in 2007 (and it was a refurbished model even then). It is running Windows XP, and to be blunt, I am a bit scared of what is going to happen when Microsoft drops support for XP in April.
But just about everything seems to come with Windows 8.1 now. I have heard some criticisms. Is anyone using Windows 8.1 out there?
UPDATE: It does appear that HP has some quad core laptops with Windows 7 Home Premium still.
If I were going to get a new machine, I'd build it with Windows 7. Actually, I built a new machine in January and used Windows 7.
ReplyDeleteI have Win8.0 on a scratch box at home to test application compatibility. If you've got a Win8 box, the best thing to do is immediately download and install http://www.classicshell.net/ . 100% free, and gives you a start menu back. As a bonus, the start menu can be styled in XP, Vista, or Win7 look for whatever you want. Not what MS wants for you.
ReplyDeleteI've appreciated a number of under the hood performance enhancements and tweaks in Win8 -- process explorer is elegant *and* useful! -- but mixed in are a bunch of horrible UI designs. Making it difficult to shut down from the UI -- something people have been conditioned to do for 18+ years -- is just plain "we know better than you" arrogance.
Windows 8.1 has a number of improvements over 8.0 based on user feedback making it an excellent choice. Also runs better on lighter hardware than Windows 7.
ReplyDeleteWindows 8 might make sense if your laptop screen was tough sensitive. If not, I'd pass on windows 8 and stick with Windows 7.
ReplyDeletea computer store here in cincinnati is still offering their builds in desktops and laptops with Win7. it is Fuller Computers.
ReplyDeleteI would also imagine someCS students at Boise State could build a good machine.
Get yourself a modern PC that has a motherboard capable of running Mac OS X with not much in the way of hacking :)
ReplyDeleteI built a new desktop from components and I was able to buy Windows 7 on Amazon. Be very careful to NOT get the cheaper "System Builder Edition" because that's a one-shot install. When it registers, it ties itself to one computer only.
ReplyDeleteDell also offers Win7 on it's "work" desktops, the Optiplex's.
ReplyDelete