Version: 2008
  • On mySimon: Bacon Soap
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CNET'S QUICK GUIDE: Paths to power: how to configure a laptop

Suggested configurations
Testing components individually can show you how each affects performance and battery life, but it's really how they work together that counts. After evaluating eight different configurations, we settled on the optimal configuration for three types of users.

Budget configuration
Basic performance and superior battery life 
CPU: 1.73GHz Pentium M
Hard drive: 60GB 4,200rpm
Memory: 512MB of RAM 
We recommend this configuration if cash is tight or you're interested only in basic computing tasks, such as e-mailing, surfing the Web, and word processing. A system configured this way may drag if you edit video, have too many windows open at once, or work on a particularly complex spreadsheet. Still, this is the least-expensive setup, and you'll get maximum battery life.



Business configuration
A smart compromise between performance and battery life 
CPU: 1.73GHz Pentium M
Hard drive: 60GB 5,400rpm
Memory: 1GB of RAM 
By doubling the amount of RAM and opting for a faster hard drive, your system will be able to handle more multitasking and the CPU-intensive tasks that business requires. And you'll still get decent battery life.

Power configuration
Top-shelf performance, inferior battery life 
CPU: 2.13GHz Pentium M
Hard drive: 60GB 5,400rpm
Memory: 1GB of RAM 
This power user's configuration is good for working with multimedia and virtually any other demanding application. Take note, though: you'll pay a premium and sacrifice battery life.