Wow, it’s been a while. I think this lack of activity on my part should bore away anyone that has been reading this blog. If such people actually exist. The truth is, the lack of posts on my part has mostly been with the fact that I’ve been feeling very anti-social lately. Perhaps since it’s a little more than a month till I have to go back to college and start interacting with people again, I decided (at least on a subconscious level) to make some strides to regain my more social form that I usually have in college.
The big reason why I’m making this post is an attempt to map out all the events and circumstances in hopes of coming to a conclusion, or at least give myself an idea of whether I should buy a new laptop or not. Right now, it’s August, so all the “back-to-school” deals are happening, but probably only until September or so.
Let’s give a background on my current one. It’s a Compaq Presario V2000, and in a couple of weeks it will be four years old. It came with about 512 megs of RAM, and within its first year, the RAM is somewhere around 720 megs, or was it 648? Sometime after additional RAM was added, it started to overheat, so one of the new sticks was replaced. It runs on a AMD Turion 64 ML-28. It runs at about 1.6-8ghz right now. It has a nice widescreen display, 15.4 inch I think.
Wow, I sound kind of like an idiot. I guess that’s what I get for having someone else order my laptop for me. But, while it’s not even an impressive laptop when I first got it, it still runs unexpectedly well. Lasted longer than my friend’s super-duper ultra-power Alienware laptop. His lasted for maybe two months before he had to send it in for repairs, mine lasted about four months before the constant overheats, but I never had to ship it off for repairs.
My laptop costed about 600 dollars back then. For rougly the same amount, I can get a new laptop with these specs: Intel Pentium dual-core T2390 or AMD Turion 64 x2 TL-56, 2GB DDR2 RAM with 1meg L2 cache, 15.4″ widescreen, 120GB hard drive. Give or take one notch. Those are the specs I’m looking at the most, there’s other things too, like a network interface card that can support wireless N, built-in microphone, and video card. But, unless if it’s a gaming laptop, the video card is going to suck anyway.
Anyway, the extent of gaming in the near future I plan on doing goes as far as Wrath of the Lich King (and that can change for the lower end), with StarCraft II somewhere in the farther horizon (could be time for an upgrade when that happens anyway). Want this new computer to be able to play videos in high-definition. Lastly, I also do a lot of heavy browsing, with stuff like Office, and Photoshop running in the background at the same time. I don’t think my requirements are anything top of the line, and finding something under a 1000 should be really easy. But under a 1000 isn’t necessarily in my budget.
In the past month, I’ve spent about 300-400 dollars on a vacation to Las Vegas, about a 130 dollars on a DS Lite, plus rougly 40 dollars on a Japanese dictionary, which was the reason why I got the DS Lite in the first place. For me, it’s a lot of money, luckily I can be a bit of a compulsive saver at times. I saved a lot of money during my first two years of college, but when I transferred to Western, it seems as if a lot of those savings went away. Even after all of that, looking at just the amount of money left in my bank account, I can buy a new laptop.
But with every new academic year comes with new costs. The only thing I can think of right now are textbooks, but that’s because I haven’t moved in yet and figured out what things I need to for my dorm.
I also feel very bad, like I said, I also recently went on a vacation to Las Vegas. The people I traveled with paid for most of the meals, and didn’t expect anything back. I spent about 200 there, and another 250 on the tickets+room. Then, I bought a DS Lite shortly after coming back.
I mean… there are people out there who never even been on vacation, much less even own an electronic device. Also, the US economy hasn’t been all that great lately, people are cutting back on spending. But here I am, writing a whole post on whether I should get a laptop that I can probably afford. In the past twelve months, I bought an iPod Classic, a 500GB external hard drive, a Nintendo Wii, 5 games (2 at retail price, the rest used copies) for the Wii, a DS Lite, a Japanese Dictionary for the DS Lite, and a vacation to Las Vegas. I am also suffering from Guitar Hero withdrawal, and want to purchase either the new Guitar Hero or Rock Band coming out later this year. After a quick and dirty sum operation, all of those amount to about 1300 dollars. That total easily overs over 2000 after you add in all the school expenses (cough, textbooks) that financial aid didn’t cover. I never spent this much in a 12 month span ever in my life.
I’m still new to this whole “living away from parents” thing, but is it normal for people to spend this much at my age? Something just doesn’t seem right. I recall my freshmen orientation at Central, saying it’s good to be unique and all, but I don’t think this is what they had in mind.
A new laptop is inevitable. The upgrade to a new machine from the one I’m using is like upgrading from an Outland green to a welfare PvP epic in WoW (ie, very big). But the laptop I’m using, while it’s not even close to meeting today’s standards, it still works. Just for the reliability I can count of my notebook computer, I grew particularly fond of it.
Or I could wait. It’s ridiculous how fast technology advances, even for the casual shmoes like myself. By next summer, for the same prices, I can get a computer that’s even better than the ones being offered right now.