hp in pcworld 450 /or 404 online / or 399 from staples but a slightly lesser spec..doubt if its noticable for kids use?
dell 368
Are all the guts the same more or less ? Dont bombard me with tech..I'm just a blacksmith


 
 

 and found this morning! I'm thinking its a better bet too . Buy it in argos, and its 450 and only 500gb ,quiet a bit cheaper direct
 and found this morning! I'm thinking its a better bet too . Buy it in argos, and its 450 and only 500gb ,quiet a bit cheaper direct  


 
 An Asda one, they're only a fiver!zipgun wrote:Thanks very much , much stress over . The tesco 5.99 "Value" Kettle's busted now..What should replace it wit......


 dreadful battery/charger combination? Check before you buy- we have a dell latitude at home with a battery which won't charge........the 'fix' is to flash the bios from the dell website, which it won't do because it needs at least 10% of battery, which of course it hasn't got
  dreadful battery/charger combination? Check before you buy- we have a dell latitude at home with a battery which won't charge........the 'fix' is to flash the bios from the dell website, which it won't do because it needs at least 10% of battery, which of course it hasn't got  and it won't recognise a fully charged spare because the bios won't flash...grrrrrrrr. This was a free ex work machine so it's just run on the mains all the time now but had I paid money for it I'd have been most unhappy! Check on the web-it's a common dell curse, expensive to fix, ok if it happens within warranty but if its out of warranty you're on your own.
  and it won't recognise a fully charged spare because the bios won't flash...grrrrrrrr. This was a free ex work machine so it's just run on the mains all the time now but had I paid money for it I'd have been most unhappy! Check on the web-it's a common dell curse, expensive to fix, ok if it happens within warranty but if its out of warranty you're on your own.mr rusty wrote:Do dells still come with that 'smart'dreadful battery/charger combination? Check before you buy- we have a dell latitude at home with a battery which won't charge........the 'fix' is to flash the bios from the dell website, which it won't do because it needs at least 10% of battery, which of course it hasn't got
and it won't recognise a fully charged spare because the bios won't flash...grrrrrrrr. This was a free ex work machine so it's just run on the mains all the time now but had I paid money for it I'd have been most unhappy! Check on the web-it's a common dell curse, expensive to fix, ok if it happens within warranty but if its out of warranty you're on your own.
 That's one of the other problems with the internet! We never get to hear about the vast majority of machines that don't do this since that's not newsworthy. Between three sites and over 2,800 students we've only had that happen twice and these were both machines in use by dpeartments whose tech buyer believed that the cheap battery from the China-based eBay seller was the best buy! This machine is on its original battery and that still has between 80 and 90+ percent of its capacity at 100% charge after its years of mixed use around six hours per day on average. The battery specified is a reasonable £40 to replace so how they thought that it was worth buying a machine sensed one without the ath alf the pruice is beyond me. One of the other great advantages of Dells from the introduction of the A05 firmware (current is A06 since late 2010) is that the bios has a full GUI with mouse and USB being available to use and is a doddle for even newcomers to flash from a pendrive during boot, though I'd be thefi rst to admit that flashing the firmware isn't always a good plan if there's nothing wrong with the stock setup, the exception there being unrelated to the OP's search for a conventional laptop.
 That's one of the other problems with the internet! We never get to hear about the vast majority of machines that don't do this since that's not newsworthy. Between three sites and over 2,800 students we've only had that happen twice and these were both machines in use by dpeartments whose tech buyer believed that the cheap battery from the China-based eBay seller was the best buy! This machine is on its original battery and that still has between 80 and 90+ percent of its capacity at 100% charge after its years of mixed use around six hours per day on average. The battery specified is a reasonable £40 to replace so how they thought that it was worth buying a machine sensed one without the ath alf the pruice is beyond me. One of the other great advantages of Dells from the introduction of the A05 firmware (current is A06 since late 2010) is that the bios has a full GUI with mouse and USB being available to use and is a doddle for even newcomers to flash from a pendrive during boot, though I'd be thefi rst to admit that flashing the firmware isn't always a good plan if there's nothing wrong with the stock setup, the exception there being unrelated to the OP's search for a conventional laptop.

