Breene wrote:
Wow thank you both...this is helping alot. The only reason i wanted media center was because one of my buddies got it and ive seen it. Its pretty nice and i like how organized it all is. He has TV running while playing a game or something also looked pretty cool and since i have TV in my room i could probaby manage it. But now that I hear some second opinions ill look it over a bit more. Thanks for the advice but please keep it coming. Its realy helping.
EDIT:
A few questions...
What exactly does a 60 gig 7200rpm hard drive do? whats the difference compared to a normal one?
Also the media edition comes standard with the 9300 series so why not...
And as far as upgrading goes how easy is it with a laptop? Like in the future if i need to upgrade a vidieo card or something like that can i just pop it open and stick it in?
For it being out of date for collage i think ill be ok. My current computer has 3 regular users and weve had it for about 5 years. I take good care of it and know how to make it run fast so as long as I pump the vital stuff like ram it should be great. for example I have 256 ram on this and I can run PSP8 and guild wars without it freezing up too much.
7200RPM is what almost all desktop hard drives spin at (at least ones built in the last couple years), basically it allows the hard drive to find what it needs to a little bit faster. There isn't a huge difference between 5400RPM and 7200RPM, but it is noticable. Whether or not it is worth the price difference is another question.
As far as upgrading goes, it is usually pretty hard to upgrade anything besides the hard drive or RAM (I guess CPU is possible as well...) on a laptop. So don't expect to be able to upgrade your video card (I am sure it is possible, but the new video card would probably cost a lot, and would be hard to find a place to buy it...)
And since in this case there is no difference in price between Windows Media Center and normal Windows XP, there shouldn't be any harm in going for Media center, as is it is basically Windows XP with extra tools built in.
If you have worked with computers before, one way to save money (over $100 in this case) is to buy the 2GB of ram at a place like Newegg.com (for example,
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6820227110 ) for around $200 instead of getting it at dell for $360. It shouldn't be that hard to install RAM (usually just unscrewing a few screws, removing a panel, and swapping the RAM)
And while it is not certain that the RAM will work correctly (laptops are often more picky than desktops in that regard) it is still very likely that it will (and you can probably read up online to see what RAM does or doesn't work with the Dell 9300 laptop, just to make sure). Just make sure that you get the right kind of RAM, in this laptop it is DDR2 533MHz RAM but other laptops might take different types of RAM.