- 5,481
- Seattle, WA
- RykonZero
I am the IT manger and controller for a small $20 million company. In the past 5 years, I have put 17 different Lenovo Thinkpad's into operations. The battery has been the only part that has been replaced on any of them. The ones that have had their batteries replaced also use docking stations so their battery is constantly on charge all day which I attribute to the short life of those batteries. The other laptops are in the field. We are an agriculture company so the laptops are being subject to some pretty harsh environments.
It's not like the Panasonic Tuff Books, but they are, as I said, a commercial grade product even if they aren't as pretty as the HP's or some of the other glossy consumer lines of laptops out there.
Anyways, good luck on your purchase. It is always exciting and somewhat tiring looking for a new machine.
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My other half got a Lenovo E450 laptop, and it's built like a brick s:censored:house. Not that heavy, but it doesn't creak or squeak like other laptops. I've actually managed to get 6.5 hours out of a single charge. Deeply impressive, very well specced for the price, I'd happily them and in fact I have reccomended to three other people who are more than happy with theirs.
Well, that's quite a few people there. I'll definitely consider it, in fact, I'm going to say that when I get a laptop, Lenovo's on the top of my list. Though I think that when I overhaul my desktop, I'll be going for ASUS bits.
This laptop has an i5 and an GeForce GT 540M graphics with 1GB of dedicated memory.This laptop has an i7 and GeForce GT 550M graphics with 2GB of dedicated memory. The last laptop is a little above your $800 budget but the performance is possible for a little bit more money.
Hmm, really depends. The world's not over if I can't play the stated video games, it'd just be a really big plus. I'm not sure just how good those are, I think my desktop right now has a worse graphics card, but it comes down to how much money I can save.