Farewell to ThinkPad, hello to style?
Stylish gaming notebooks come packed with power but can't cut it for mobile workers
Follow @infoworldIt finally happened. All I did was politely ignore a few dozen e-mails, several phone calls, a couple of faxes, and have one replacement notebook stolen, and IBM suddenly had enough. Two burly gentlemen came to visit me at my office, and after suspending me by my nether regions for a few minutes, they got the point across that IBM would very much like its ThinkPad T40p review notebook returned. Now. So, after physical therapy, I started counting my shekels and looking around for the best new notebook.
Turns out, however, that CPU horsepower isn't the only thing power users are looking for in a business notebook these days. There’s a new factor: style. And it’s vexingly complex when you’re thinking of buying 30 of these for the new sales reps, for example. Until recently, style meant sleek, silver or black, and above all, small -- as small as possible while still being able to run Office, surf the Web, and run the local VPN client.
But a surprising thing happened on the way to smallest and prettiest: The users changed. Go figure. Now many of them want to do more than just office work. They like MP3s, DVDs, peeking in on the babysitter using a home Webcam, and of course, playing games. Lots of games. Normally, you can thumb your nose at that: They’re at work; they should be doing work, not playing games. Can’t really justify that, though, when you’re talking to a salesperson who works during the day and hops from city to city at night. They want more than style; they want some real power. So when I ask about cool notebooks, I’m suddenly hearing names like Alienware Area-51m, Acer Ferrari 3200, and something called an ABS Mayhem G3. They’re colorful, they’re more heavily muscled than an Austrian Conan, and they ain’t cheap. But can they play in the business world?
And once asked, the question had to be answered. Alienware, unfortunately, is too cool for school and didn’t play. I didn’t even see Falcon Northwest's new FragBook TL until early this morning, but ABS and Acer came across no trouble. Drop Windows XP Pro on them and there’s nothing these boxes can’t do when it comes to running business applications. So the question is, Do they fit in physically? Here, we’ve got some major issues.
Weight: The ABS Mayhem G3 arrived first, which was surprising because my UPS guy isn't as healthy as he used to be, and something this heavy really should have killed him. There’s a slew of Mayhem-like notebooks coming our right now from folks like ABS, Hyperion, and Voodoo. They’re around 10 pounds with battery, and they sport power bricks the size and weight of a regular construction brick. I checked. Regardless of stylish color, these machines simply weren’t meant to move.
Acer’s Ferrari and, apparently, Falcon's FragBook, have an edge. Neither could be considered light, but 6 pounds or so is still on the feasible side of mobility, provided you work out. Screen size isn’t the same as on the ABS crowd, but it’s still bigger than most. Amenities on the Acer were excellent, with a case designed with ergonomics in mind, including USB ports located together on the left side, a slot-loading DVD/CDR drive and a power brick that can’t be used to shore up my garage. And style is a given, combining a brilliant paint job with the Ferrari logo -- a weird combination, but definitely cool.









