Notebook Computers
Desktop computers
are amazing devices. They allow us to access the internet
and all of the information linked up throughout the world, they
let us play interactive video games and type up letters to
friends and balance our checkbooks. With them we can
watch movies or download music or make our own compact
disks. They’re becoming less expensive and more powerful
every day.
However, if you
want to check your email over a cup of coffee at your local
Starbucks or type up a memo while you’re riding the bus you’re
pretty much out of luck. Desktop computers are a lot of
things, but with their bulk and masses of cables they’re not
very portable.
Fortunately, it’s
occurred to computer manufacturers that some of us would like
to take our computers with us, and thus, the notebook
computer. Notebook computers, like their desktop
relatives, have also become much cheaper and more powerful in
the past few years, and they’ve also gotten a lot
smaller. Six or eight years ago, a notebook computer was
closer to the size of an encyclopedia than a notebook, and it
weighed about as much.
Today’s notebook
computers, however, are much closer to the size and shape of
actual notebooks (though maybe three-subject notebooks; most
aren’t to one-subject size quite yet). Leaps and bounds
have also been made in the amount of power that manufacturers
can pack into notebook computers. A few years ago it
simply wasn’t possible to pack the power of a desktop computer
into a notebook. Today, high-powered notebook computers
are plentiful, though they’ll cost about twice as much as their
desktop twins.
So who needs a
notebook computer? The most obvious candidates are
students and those who travel a lot when they work; since
notebook computers let you get so much more done when you’re on
the go. Students usually find themselves studying and
writing in libraries, coffee shops, restaurants, and sometimes
even at their desks, so having a portable workstation is a huge
boon.
The same goes for
anyone who gets a lot of their work done while away from their
desks, or at least anyone who would like to. Those who
usually work either at their desks or at home probably can’t
justify the added cost of a notebook computer, since they won’t
get much added convenience out of the purchase. For
anyone on the move, however, a notebook computer will let you
get a lot of work (and play) taken care of while away from your
desk and out in the world.
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