Back to Newsletter Archive page
CNET Community help and how-to weekly newsletter
May 23, 2008
Dear CNET members,
Happy Friday everyone! Just a friendly reminder to new subscribers to this newsletter: We have an archive of our past Community newsletters, which cover many technical and hot topics. So check it out, because I see a lot of questions e-mailed to me that have been covered by our community members. Also, if you are in dire need of help with technical issues, you can always find help in the CNET forums, where many wonderful members and moderators are always willing to give you great advice. So give the forums a try and post your questions there. Now let's get started addressing Bob's question. Bob is seeking some recommendations. He needs some laptop recommendations for his sons, Christopher and Willam.

As always, there was no shortage of great suggestions this week. While it is sometimes difficult to provide a solution that fits all, I hope that the answers from all our members help Bob make a decision without going in blindly. We received a great deal of responses, some ranging from parenting advice (which I think is fine, but I'll leave the parenting to the parents) to some great suggestions on specific models that may just work--both members ralphclark and sircanegiem recommended Lenovo Thinkpad T-series and a few others recommended ASUS Eee PC. While each week I do my best to round up a list of a few great recommendations, this week I found myself finding so much great advice that I will let you folks go through them to see for yourselves. My advice for any fragile and costly electronic equipment at this scale is to get some sort of no fault warranty in case of damage. Children are unpredictable and it's better to be covered. So to start this topic off I give you member waytron's contribution, which goes through a list of recommendations and a broad overview of how and what affects the price of a laptop. So folks, dig on in and if you have more to add to this discussion, be my guest. Thanks everyone and have a great weekend!

(Note: As with every community help and how-to newsletter each week, occasionally the topics that are presented don't always apply to everyone. As a perfect example, this week's question from Bob. But what I love is that, no matter what the question may be--people like you are always willing to help out and give their advice and recommendations. Even if the topics don't apply to you or me, there is always still a great deal of shared knowledge that is helpful in one shape or another. I learn new things from all of you each week and I hope you do too! So thank you all for sharing your time and knowledge for the better of the community. You folks rock!)

Cheers!
Lee Koo
Manager, CNET community


Got suggestions? Send me an e-mail:
messageboards@cnet.com
Member Question of the Week
Q I am the father of two sons, ages 9 and 11, in search of advice in regards to the "right sizing" of laptops for them.

I have tried getting advice from the forums, but the feedback I have received has been questions on why I want to purchase laptops, mostly from nonparents. Sure, it might sound like a large investment for their age, but mobility is the driver behind the decision as we travel a lot.


Given their age, you would think that the requirements would be easy to spec, the primary applications being Internet research, e-mail, light doc processing, and of course gaming both online (Runescape) and off. I'm looking for something that can survive the treatment from their age, have enough horsepower for gaming, and yet still be "reasonable" price-wise. (Maybe I am being delusional.) Any advice you could offer would defiantly be appreciated. Thanks!

--Submitted by: Bob (Christopher and Willam's Dad)

Q  Just some member contributions to get you started, but please read through the all answers!

Thinkpad T-series is kid-proof; get a hi-spec used model
--Submitted by: ralphclark

I'd get something sturdy with a strong battery
--Submitted by:by sircanegiem

Laptops for children
--Submitted by: waytron

Read all member contributions

Thanks to all who participated!


Most helpfulPrevious week's Q&A
Q Three times--once each with three different flash drives, and on six different PCs--I've had the experience of finding that the computer won't recognize the drive, and the data on the drive has become inaccessible. I see this is a common problem. Other users ask for advice on the Web, and nobody seems able to offer any solid information on this occurrence. In none of my incidents has the flash drive been dropped, heated, frozen, dropped into a liquid, or run through a strong magnetic field. One day they work; next day they don't. Anybody know why or what could be causing this issue? And whether my data is permanently lost in such cases? Three times, three different flash drives can't be a coincidence! Please help! Thank you.
    Thanks to all who contributed!
Check out next week's question:
Q Hi, I recently bought a new laptop with Windows Vista and I would like to improve the speed of it. Some one mentioned to me that using Windows ReadyBoost using a USB flash drive to boost performance. But left with many questions unanswered in hopes that you can help me. What exactly is ReadyBoost and what does it do exactly to help boost performance? Does it really work that well? I know it requires a USB flash drive or card, but does it make a difference what kind of drive I should use or does it require something that is fast? How much memory should I consider for the flash drive? I've gone through the Internet and read a few articles that mentioned that ReadyBoost does initially help performance in the beginning, but over time the performance gains starts to deteriorate. Is this true? If that's the case, is it even worth getting into? Any help and explanations will be helpful. Thank you in advance.
--Submitted by: Garrett G.
Check out our previous Community newsletters here.
Have a question?
E-mail us on one of our upcoming topics:
• Multimedia
• Internet Security
• Digital Cameras
• Home Audio & Video
• PC Upgrading
• PC Troubleshooting
• Digital Music
• Consumer electronics
Need help right away? Don't wait for us, come and join our lively community forums for all the tech help and how-tos.
Simple question, simple answer
Help your fellow members

Ask the editor Live! 
Every Thursday!
Got a burning tech question? Each Thursday from 11 a.m. to noon Pacific Time, we'll give you the chance to chat live with a CNET editor. We'll cover a new topic each week, from cell phones to TVs. Get those burning tech questions ready! Check out the event calendar!


Copyright © 2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved.
CNET Networks, Inc.
235 Second Street
San Francisco, CA 94105
U.S.A.

 Back to Newsletter Archive page