
dxmnkd316 wrote:I don't know. The one kid plays his music loud enough to cause a glass of water in my kitchen to vibrate.
It might be cheaper than buying a snowblower or less time consuming than doing it myself. But I figure there's going to be that one time when we get just dumped on and now I have 18"+ and the neighborhood kid or the plow service will be a no show.
Dances With Gophers wrote:The wife's phone died yesterday, so I'm thinking of getting one of these from Sam's Club (does anybody have any experience/words of warning about any of these phone models and/or covereage with one of the service providers?)
4G Android Smartphones ($1 special, they get you with the 2-year data plan contract)
Samsung Galaxy S II (AT&T)
Motorola Photon 4G (Sprint)
Droid Charge by Samsung (Verizon)
She currently uses an HTC from T-Mobile, but it doesn't look like T-Mobile is one of the product offerings on special.

rowshkex wrote:Alright, everyone, now that my laptop... incident... has happened, I need to explore purchasing a laptop. I have never done this before, as I've only owned two laptops in the past 8 years or so (one for 6.5 years, this last one for 1.5 years), but I have a good idea of what I want. I just need some opinions from people who actually own laptops.
List of necessary features:
-Not a Mac
-Screen size: 13" or 14"
-Weight: 3-4 pounds (something just above four is okay, but it needs something to make that weight worth it to me)
-Processor: i5 or i7 (i5 is perfectly fine--I was using a Core 2 Duo previously)
-Good keyboard with solid stroke, response, and reach--that is, if the keyboard is mushy, it's out, period. The shining example of what I consider the best keyboard is the Dell Latitude E4300, though the old ThinkPad keyboards are also stellar. A bad example is my roommates laptop, on which I am currently typing--a Compaq Presario CQ60.
-Keyboard backlight is desirable, but not absolutely necessary.
-Less than $1100 (preferably $800-1000)
I've done a good amount of research, and the laptops that have stuck out to me were:
-HP ProBook 15.6" (unsure of model)
-Lenovo IdeaPad U260
My general experience with the Dell Latitude E4300 was incredible. It was pretty much everything I needed, and I am considering just buying the same one, though it is relatively expensive for the components. The keyboard was phenomenal, it was perfectly portable, and it was (generally) quick enough. The battery was relatively solid, giving me up to four hours in general, though I understand many laptops can outlast that these days. The viewing angles were awful, though I can look past that. It had integrated graphics, which is all I need, though I would not have complained if it had switchable integrated/discrete graphics.
Anyone care to share their experiences with their current 13.3-14" laptops, good or bad? Again, I'm curious particularly about responsiveness, portability, and keyboard response, and any other insight anyone can give. I really appreciate it!
cavedog wrote:I'm very happy with the HP 14 inch Elite Book 8440w I have for work.
http://h18000.www1.hp.com/products/quic ... 520_ca.PDF
http://www.laptopmag.com/review/laptops ... 8440w.aspx
rowshkex wrote:Orion wrote:This is what I would recommend
link
Why didn't you tell me this BEFORE I ran over my laptop???
Thanks for nothin'...
![]()
![]()
Orion wrote:rowshkex wrote:Orion wrote:This is what I would recommend
link
Why didn't you tell me this BEFORE I ran over my laptop???
Thanks for nothin'...
![]()
![]()
You gonna fill us in on the whole story?
dxmnkd316 wrote:I have an Elitebook 8440p for work. Love it to death.
dxmnkd316 wrote:I have an Elitebook 8440p for work. Love it to death.
Greyeagle wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:I have an Elitebook 8440p for work. Love it to death.
It's certainly better than POS HP I had previously.....and the HP before that.......and the HP before that......so based on history I don't hold out much hope for this one.
dxmnkd316 wrote:Greyeagle wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:I have an Elitebook 8440p for work. Love it to death.
It's certainly better than POS HP I had previously.....and the HP before that.......and the HP before that......so based on history I don't hold out much hope for this one.
Where are you on the three-year cycle?
cavedog wrote:Agree with DX, the keyboard is smooth. My only annoyance are the buttons below the trackpad. They sorta "rock" forward and back to click rather than pressing directly down. U get used to it...fast little machine!
A few companies are coming out with pc laptops that mimic the MacBook Air. I think Lenova and Samsung might have what you're after iirc
st8ofhockey wrote:I tend to stick with open source software, as to not run into the upgrading issues one would have with proprietary software. That being said, I wouldn't base a laptop purchase on what comes pre-installed on it; the majority of it is likely just taking up space.
I get ripped a lot here in grad school for using GIMP, InkScape, and OpenOffice; out of curiosity... do any of the working stiffs on GPL have any experience with open-source software in a professional setting?
st8ofhockey wrote:I tend to stick with open source software, as to not run into the upgrading issues one would have with proprietary software. That being said, I wouldn't base a laptop purchase on what comes pre-installed on it; the majority of it is likely just taking up space.
I get ripped a lot here in grad school for using GIMP, InkScape, and OpenOffice; out of curiosity... do any of the working stiffs on GPL have any experience with open-source software in a professional setting?
dxmnkd316 wrote:Amazon Prime. Worth it or waste? How often would I really need to order for this to make sense?
dxmnkd316 wrote:Amazon Prime. Worth it or waste? How often would I really need to order for this to make sense?
dxmnkd316 wrote:Amazon Prime. Worth it or waste? How often would I really need to order for this to make sense?
dxmnkd316 wrote:Amazon Prime. Worth it or waste? How often would I really need to order for this to make sense?
dxmnkd316 wrote:Amazon Prime. Worth it or waste? How often would I really need to order for this to make sense?
dxmnkd316 wrote:I think I found my snowblower:
http://www.hondapowerequipment.com/prod ... =HS1336IAS


dxmnkd316 wrote:I think I found my snowblower:
http://www.hondapowerequipment.com/prod ... =HS1336IAS
!Dances With Gophers wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:I think I found my snowblower:
http://www.hondapowerequipment.com/prod ... =HS1336IAS
I think I found your skirt.
dxmnkd316 wrote:Dances With Gophers wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:I think I found my snowblower:
http://www.hondapowerequipment.com/prod ... =HS1336IAS
I think I found your skirt.
Huh?

The Rube wrote:You fail at the internet, first of all. Nice codes. Edit: boo, you edited it. I should've quoted that post.
And I haven't shoveled in years. I live in an apt.![]()
But I have never used a snowblower. Ever.
dxmnkd316 wrote:The Rube wrote:You fail at the internet, first of all. Nice codes. Edit: boo, you edited it. I should've quoted that post.
And I haven't shoveled in years. I live in an apt.![]()
But I have never used a snowblower. Ever.
The fact that you're proud of never using a snowblower is sad.
The Rube wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:The Rube wrote:You fail at the internet, first of all. Nice codes. Edit: boo, you edited it. I should've quoted that post.
And I haven't shoveled in years. I live in an apt.![]()
But I have never used a snowblower. Ever.
The fact that you're proud of never using a snowblower is sad.
Why? Because I man up and put a little elbow grease into clearing the driveway? Get a little workout? Do you put on your pretty little prissy pants to snowblow?![]()
![]()
And before you ask...Halloween storm? Yup, shovelled it. Then drove to work.

dxmnkd316 wrote:Amazon Prime. Worth it or waste? How often would I really need to order for this to make sense?
george wrote:The Rube wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:The Rube wrote:You fail at the internet, first of all. Nice codes. Edit: boo, you edited it. I should've quoted that post.
And I haven't shoveled in years. I live in an apt.![]()
But I have never used a snowblower. Ever.
The fact that you're proud of never using a snowblower is sad.
Why? Because I man up and put a little elbow grease into clearing the driveway? Get a little workout? Do you put on your pretty little prissy pants to snowblow?![]()
![]()
And before you ask...Halloween storm? Yup, shovelled it. Then drove to work.
This from the guy who can't walk 1.5 blocks to the gas station for his morning caffine fix?![]()
dxmnkd316 wrote:Let me guess, because it's easier than grilling, you think microwaving is more manly?

Dances With Gophers wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:Let me guess, because it's easier than grilling, you think microwaving is more manly?
I think you're getting your analogies mixed up? Buying a microwave is akin to buying a snowblower when you're <30y.o. and in good health = billows up your skirt.
Because it's easier than microwaving, grilling is more manly. That's what he's saying in your analogy.
The Rube wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:The Rube wrote:You fail at the internet, first of all. Nice codes. Edit: boo, you edited it. I should've quoted that post.
And I haven't shoveled in years. I live in an apt.![]()
But I have never used a snowblower. Ever.
The fact that you're proud of never using a snowblower is sad.
Why? Because I man up and put a little elbow grease into clearing the driveway? Get a little workout? Do you put on your pretty little prissy pants to snowblow?![]()
![]()
And before you ask...Halloween storm? Yup, shovelled it. Then drove to work.
Bertogliat wrote:The Rube wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:The Rube wrote:You fail at the internet, first of all. Nice codes. Edit: boo, you edited it. I should've quoted that post.
And I haven't shoveled in years. I live in an apt.![]()
But I have never used a snowblower. Ever.
The fact that you're proud of never using a snowblower is sad.
Why? Because I man up and put a little elbow grease into clearing the driveway? Get a little workout? Do you put on your pretty little prissy pants to snowblow?![]()
![]()
And before you ask...Halloween storm? Yup, shovelled it. Then drove to work.
You can't live in a maintenance free home and tease someone for making their projects go quicker. That's just insane.
dxmnkd316 wrote:Dances With Gophers wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:Let me guess, because it's easier than grilling, you think microwaving is more manly?
I think you're getting your analogies mixed up? Buying a microwave is akin to buying a snowblower when you're <30y.o. and in good health = billows up your skirt.
Because it's easier than microwaving, grilling is more manly. That's what he's saying in your analogy.
Ok, so you don't use any power tools do you?
dxmnkd316 wrote:Bertogliat wrote:You can't live in a maintenance free home and tease someone for making their projects go quicker. That's just insane.
Amen. When my dad was explaining about the not-so-fun parts about owning a home, he said, "You're going to start a list the day you move in. You'll go your entire life without crossing everything off that list."
Bertogliat wrote:The Rube wrote:dxmnkd316 wrote:The Rube wrote:You fail at the internet, first of all. Nice codes. Edit: boo, you edited it. I should've quoted that post.
And I haven't shoveled in years. I live in an apt.![]()
But I have never used a snowblower. Ever.
The fact that you're proud of never using a snowblower is sad.
Why? Because I man up and put a little elbow grease into clearing the driveway? Get a little workout? Do you put on your pretty little prissy pants to snowblow?![]()
![]()
And before you ask...Halloween storm? Yup, shovelled it. Then drove to work.
You can't live in a maintenance free home and tease someone for making their projects go quicker. That's just insane.

gopherguy13 wrote:My view on the snowblower debate-
Q: What gets me inside, and back to watching sports/playing video games faster?
A: Snowblower.
Sure, if there is <4 inches on the driveway and it is a nice, calm, sunny day, I will shovel. But if it's freezing cold with a bunch of snow on the driveway? Eff that! I'm firing up the snowblower 100 times out of 100!
dxmnkd316 wrote:gopherguy13 wrote:My view on the snowblower debate-
Q: What gets me inside, and back to watching sports/playing video games faster?
A: Snowblower.
Sure, if there is <4 inches on the driveway and it is a nice, calm, sunny day, I will shovel. But if it's freezing cold with a bunch of snow on the driveway? Eff that! I'm firing up the snowblower 100 times out of 100!
Ding ding. And it's not like a snowblower is as light as a feather. You still have to work, it's just quicker.
dxmnkd316 wrote:All-Clad. Worth the price?
gopherguy13 wrote:My view on the snowblower debate-
Q: What keeps me outside longer, away from having to change diapers and attacking a growing honeydo list?
A: Shovel.

Dances With Gophers wrote:gopherguy13 wrote:My view on the snowblower debate-
Q: What keeps me outside longer, away from having to change diapers and attacking a growing honeydo list?
A: Shovel.
FYP
Bertogliat wrote:I have a confession to make. I will turn 37 in a little more than a month and I like the look of the new Buicks.![]()
First off does this mean I am over the hill? Second, do any of you have any feedback on the Lacrosse or Regal?
I am having a hard time deciding if my next vehicle will be a truck, an SUV or a car. We already have a Honda Pilot which we like very much. I do like driving sporty 4 door sedans. Lately I am looking at the Accord, Cadillac CTS, etc. I really like the looks of the Infinity G37 sedan and the Acura TL, although they are a little beyond my price range.
I want a sedan that is reliable, safe, comfortable (probably leather), something that still looks somewhat cool and has decent fuel economy (probably in this order). Usually the Buicks would not be an option, but the new models are sportier than the past.
Greyeagle wrote:My '97 TL is awesome.
Wish I could afford a newer one.
Bertogliat wrote:Greyeagle wrote:My '97 TL is awesome.
Wish I could afford a newer one.
Whichever vehicle I buy will likely be used. I prefer to buy cars with 15-20k miles. The drop in price is worth it to me. Used car prices are not dropping as much as they once did and the supply of low mileage used cars is more limited than ever so I am not sure if I want to just buy new. I don't think I could afford a new TL. I would probably have to shoot for something in the 35k miles range to swing it. It would be nice.
dxmnkd316 wrote:I drove a Buick as a rental down in OK a few years ago. Loved the car. I can't remember if it was a Lucerne or Lacrosse (leaning towards Lucerne though).
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