milohimself
RIP CITY
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2004
- Messages
- 48,889
- Likes
- 34
This whole $200 per year thing is silly. A $600 computer can last 6 years with very little maintenance. Jut don't download a bunch of stupid ****, and it'll be fine.
When it comes to surfing the web and watching video the Asus Transformer TF300 T smokes the new Ipad, I have both and it is like night to day difference. Add the docking station to the Asus and it is very nice.
It may sound silly, but when you see $600 computers fail just over a year of normal or little use, you tend to understand how the parts manufactures want things to work. There isn't a $600 computer out there that they want to last more than 3 years. I've had this conversation with several parts suppliers.
What world do you live in where people intentionally make less reliable products and stay in business? Laptops have progressively gotten more reliable, as most technology would. And a lot of the companies that made unreliable products have taken serious hits (HP, Gateway, etc.). But even those companies make laptops now that really last.
Right now, just about any laptop you buy for +$400 should last you +5 years given that you don't bog it down with programs you don't need, or download stupid ****. But that goes with most anything. If you misuse it, you can't expect it to last long.
Using windows at work for at least 8 hours a day, it seems natural to have that same operating system on the PC at home. It's interesting though, when I was going to graduate school at night, most of the grad students preferred Mac's, even the professor.
I don't think Mac's are going to make a big dent until their prices come down. I just don't see most businesses who weigh the bottom line, paying more for the same hardware you get with a DELL, IBM, etc for about 1/3 less.
Not unless Apple starts selling $500 computers. I love my iPad, but I don't see tablets displacing computers at this point.
If you go paid, get ESET NOD32 5, it's the best in the business.
Free, I'd go MSE + Spybot + Malwarebytes. Regular scans with those 3, and the host file protection of Spybot, and you should be fine.
AVG and avast free can both get the job done
Paid anti virus have some stuff that can make them worth it like if it's a work computer or if you have kids but if it's just a personal/homework deal then free is okay
Also get ccleaner and malwarebytes
