LAPTOP

Top 10 Laptops – Jan 2013

1/19/2013 9:18:29 AM

Price: $1,225

Verdict: Tiny it may be, but the stunning MacBook Air, running the best OS out there, won't shirk big jobs

Ratings: 5/5

Apple MacBook Air 13in

Apple MacBook Air 13in

If you're an Apple fan deciding which MacBook to buy just got a lot harder. The 2011 Air has long been our No.1, and the 2012 models now have new Intel Core i5 or i7 Ivy Bridge processors, improved Intel HD 4000 graphics and two USB3.0 ports. So the best just got better simple. Except it's not that simple, because the new MacBook Pro with Retina Display (below) is now more portable and more powerful than any previous Pro. It's also loads more expensive, though, and while our hearts might say ‘Pro', our minds (and bank managers) are saying ‘Air'. That's why it keeps the coveted top spot. Just.

Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display

Price: From $2,450

Ratings: 5/5

Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display

It's the most powerful MacBook ever, the most portable MacBook Pro ever, and it's got the best screen of any laptop ever. Simply put, this is the best laptop (ever). So why not the top spot? because it's also rather pricey and in real life we'd have to go for the Air.

Asus Zenbook UX31

Price: $1,300

Ratings: 5/5

Asus Zenbook UX31

All metal design, a hi-res 13.3in screen and dual-core Core i7 innards: Asus' Ultrabook has brains and beauty; enough of both, in fact, to make it the most covetable Windows laptop in the world. The Ivy Bridge-powered UX31A, launching soon, may be better still.

Lenovo IdeaPad U300s

Price: $850

Ratings: 5/5

Lenovo IdeaPad U300s

At just 15mm, this 1.6GHz Core i5 aluminium beauty is right there among the very thinnest ultrabooks. A perfect compromise between power and size gives a clear 1366x768 display, 4GB memory and 128GB SSD and it's still falling in price. Bargain.

Dell XPS13

Price: $2,000

Ratings: 4/5

Dell XPS13

The XPS 13 forges its own path through the Air-aping Ultrabook masses, with a metal carbon-fibre base and rubberised backlit keyboard. Just as importantly, it’s kitted out with a 256GB SSD, 1.7GHz Core i7 processor, 8hr battery life and excellent keyboard.

HP Envy 14 Spectre

Price: From $1,870

Ratings: 4/5

HP Envy 14 Spectre

The Spectre stands out from the aluminium-clad Ultrabook crowd with a glass back, trackpad and wrist rest. Yes, that adds a few grams to its frame, but it’s a price worth paying. Also wins points for its stunning 1600x900, 14in screen. Can we call it a glass act?

Toshiba Z930-10X

Price: $1,200

Ratings: 5/5

Toshiba Z930-10X

At just 16mm, this 1.12kg, Ivy Bridge Core i5 Ultrabook is so thin you'll have to watch you don't cut yourself. A 128GB SSD (admittedly stuffed full of bloatware) and a glare-free matte screen are handy, while 6GB of RAM and a 6-hour-ish battery tickle us too.

Samsung 900X4C

Price: From $2,055

Ratings: 4/5

Samsung 900X4C

Cramming a 15in screen into a 14.9mm slim body is impressive, the quality of said screen slightly less so. But with a 7hr battery, 8GB RAM, a 1.9GHz Intel Core i7 Ivy Bridge processor and 256GB SSD, it's still an impressive, if pricey, Air alternative.

Acer Aspire S3

Price: From $980

Ratings: 4/5

Acer Aspire S3

There's no denying that Acer's first Ultrabook, the 13.3in Aspire S3, is invading the MacBook Air's territory: it comes with an Intel Core i5,4GB RAM, 320GB HDD/SSD hybrid drive and HDMI. The Air is pricier, but has a sharper screen and better build.

Alienware M17x

Price: From $2,450

Ratings: 4/5

Alienware M17x

At 4.26kg the M17x is only really portable in theory, but it's carrying the good kind of weight - the kind that includes Radeon HD7970M graphics, an Intel Core i7 Ivy Bridge chip, and a precise 17in 1080p screen. The kind of weight that crushes modern games.

Instant expert

If everything in our Top 10 has you raving at the skies crying, “I need more power!”, then we have the answer. Eurocom has you covered, with what it claims is the world's most powerful Ivy Bridge Notebook the P370EM Scorpius (from US$2,200, eurocom.com). At top spec this 17.3in beast has a quad-core Intel i7 3920XM Extreme Edition chip and a blistering 32GB of DDR3 RAM not to mention three 1TB hard drives (and an SSD, if you feel like it). And if that didn't impress your brain the graphics will, thanks to two eye-meltingly good 4GB GeForce GTX 680M graphics cards. The only downside is lugging all 3.5kg of it around. Oh, and the price: fully specced-up you're be looking at the best part of US$6,350. Gulp.

What to look for

Connections

You can't have too many USB ports, and ideally at least one of them should be USB3.0. Insist on HDMI, and view VGA as a useful back-up. FireWire, Thunderbolt (Intel's 10Gbps superfast I/O) and eSATA will expand your power­user options.

Interface

Keyboards and trackpads are often taken for granted, but their quality and design really matter. Some keyboards play rotten tricks by swapping critical keys around, or omitting others altogether. If it's possible, get hands-on with the device before buying.

Operating system

If you're already on board with Mac OS X it's unlikely you'll entertain the idea of switching to the more complex (but more customisable) Windows 7. However, Apple doesn't do cheap laptops, so if your budget is tight it'll be Windows for you. Google's browser-based Chrome OS is another option.

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