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Laptop deals galore on Cyber Monday

By | November 29, 2009, 8:02 PM PST

Who’d have thunk it? Laptop computers are now cheaper than cell phones and much, much cheaper when you consider that laptops don’t tie you into an expensive two-year contract like cell phones.

If you were perusing Amazon and Best Buy online or the latter’s newspaper ads last week, you undoubtedly saw the $197 Celeron-based HP laptop at Best Buy ($198 at Amazon if I recall correctly). Those deals have vanished for the time being, but are a sign of things to come.

The new Droid smart phone from Verizon is $199.99 and including a two year service nets out to $2394.51, according to an analysis in PC World. At $199, it’s the same with the iPhone which adds up to $2394.76 over two years, according to PC World’s tally. Most laptops are far cheaper than so-called “discounted” cell phones.

Which brings us back to laptops (not netbooks, full laptops) as Cyber Monday looms. Now the $197 teaser to get you into the store is gone, but there’s still plenty of powerful laptops for around $300-$400. In fact, I am typing on one which I picked up last week for $415. It’s a Toshiba Satellite M505-S4945 with a 13.5×9.1 screen, Intel Core 2 Duo T6500 microprocessor, 160 GB hard disk (a tad small) and 3 GB of RAM.

The unit came with Microsoft Vista and there’s the hassle of sending into Toshiba for Window 7 and waiting two to three weeks to get it. Best Buy advertises free Windows 7 upgrade, but then charges $40 for Geek Squad to do it. No thanks. I’ll do it myself.

The Satellite was marked down 20 per cent from $589.99 to $415 so I grabbed one. The first one had been opened and all the docs as well as the Windows 7 coupon were missing so I trekked back to the store and got one that was unopened. Best Buy has great prices, but the quality of the shopping experience and help leave something to be desired.

Toshiba Satellite

Toshiba Satellite

It wasn’t the absolute rock bottom deal and I may have pulled the trigger too early because on Black Friday, Best Buy came out with a $400 Sony Vaio laptop with a slightly less speedy Core 2 Duo microprocessor, but with a 320 GB hard drive, 4 GB of RAM and Windows 7 already installed. In fact, Best Buy still has eight laptops under $400 including an eMachines unit for $297.97 although prices in its newspaper ads have ticked up since Black Friday.

I can take solace in the fact the cheapest of 33 Toshiba models on Amazon is $474.99.  Yes, I am the type of shopper that tries to come down with a case of buyer’s remorse!

Of course, you have to be satisfied with a laptop, but here’s the kicker for me: the Toshiba Satellite I bought oozes quality with terrific speakers (a rarity), a great display and decent performance. My wife needs a laptop and this may be the week we pick up another one.

But prices almost never go up on PCs so maybe we should wait. The higher price points just get occupied by more powerful or versatile units and knock older models down. It’s great for consumers, but a word of caution: laptop vendor advertise cheap laptops online, but when you click on it or ”show now” button, the click path usually leads to more expensive models so look around for the deal and product YOU want.    

A reporter friend who said he just wants to do e-mail, word processing and Facebook asked me this weekend to recommend a laptop. Take your pick.

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John Dodge

About John Dodge

John Dodge was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2009 to 2010.

John Dodge

John Dodge

Contributing Editor, Technology

John Dodge has written for the Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, PC Week (now eWeek), EDN, Design News, Electronic Business, Bio-IT World, Health-IT World, Lowell Sun, Haverhill Gazette and Newburyport Daily News. He is based in Massachusetts.

Follow him on Twitter.

John Dodge

John Dodge

John Dodge prides himself on completely independent journalism. His opinions, observations and reporting are not influenced by any financial holdings. He holds no shares in computer, electronics, software or Internet companies. He also has no business affiliations with organizations except with those for which he creates content as a freelancer.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Laptop deals galore on Cyber Monday
$2394.51 phone? Did the US military design this thing? I certainly
hope that somebody fat-fingered that one.
Posted by zysmith@...
30th Nov 2009
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RE: Laptop deals galore on Cyber Monday
No, man... It is $2394.51 is for phone (Android or IPhone) + 2 year contract (2 years monthly bill you have to pay by the contract you signed with your new phone purchase)... Yes - those are gems in your pocket, but I find laptops better to have. Netbooks now have longer battery life then "smart" phones happy Manufactures - please add gsm module and sim slot and we will have horse for competition too.
Posted by mincevv
30th Nov 2009
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RE: Laptop deals galore on Cyber Monday
You may find the prices of those laptops increasing suddenly. I bought
a digital photo frame from Amazon and two weeks later the rice had
doubled. This was Amazon.co.uk and I think they ran out of stock and
then restocked. With the pound at a low value against the Yuan
restocking of made in China goods could go up considerable. I sent 20
pounds to China a couple of years ago and it was converted to 300 Yuan;
today it's more like 220 Yuan. That is a big drop in value for the
pound and the dollar is dropping against the Japanese Yen, I see it
dropping against the Chinese Yuan if it's not already. Inflation will
come when stocks of cheap goods run out and it could cause cash flow
problems for many companies that are discounted them now and have to
find much larger sums of money to restock in 2010 and some are re-
stocking now.

Designs of laptops may change with less trial software, a stable and
cheap operating system in the form of Google Chrome, a nice browser
against Google Chrome. Maybe installed with Open Office. A open source
web design software suite pre-installed would be nice or an option to
download one. That combined with increased competition and cheaper
CPU's, memory and hard drives could give us decent specification
laptops at a competitive price. If designer innovate and make them more
like tablet PCs with a e-Book reader option. A colour detachable screen
that doubles as a tablet and an e-Book reader could make a laptop real
value for money. The new solid state hard drives could have an impact
on quality and price too. With so called "cloud" computing; large hard
drives may not be needed. Manufacturers and designers could innovate
themselves a profit and the world economy out of recession or they can
stay greedy and we won't buy their latest toys; we won't be able to
afford to.
Posted by Mike106132000@...
1st Dec 2009
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