Top features you need on your next laptop

If you’re looking to replace a laptop or desktop that’s several years old, you’re in for a treat. The intervening years have seen great advances in laptop features. Here’s what you should look for, whether you’re in the market for a general-purpose laptop or you have more-specific laptop uses in mind, such as for gaming, entertainment, or mobile work.

General features

The latest processors

The latest chips from Intel and AMD significantly boost system performance, improve graphics processing, and increase battery life. In our tests of Intel’s Sandy Bridge CPUs, the new processors demonstrated their blazing performance and low power consumption. Meanwhile, AMD has showcased its new chips’ ability to handle high-performance tasks smoothly. Look for a laptop with one of these latest CPUs.

Related stories

Complete guide to buying an Apple MacBook laptop

Ultimate guide to buying the perfect laptop for business

Laptops of the future – solar powered, dual-screen, and self-repairing

An easy way to identify Sandy Bridge processors is by their model number: Previous-generation Intel Core processors have three-digit model numbers (for instance, Intel Core i3-350M) while Sandy Bridge chips have four-digit model numbers (such as Intel Core i3-2310M). AMD’s Fusion chips will be dubbed AMD C-Series APU, AMD E-Series APU, and AMD A-Series APU
SSD or hybrid SSD

Laptop hard-drive storage capacity has grown dramatically in recent years. At minimum, if you expect to be wrangling lots of content, you should look for a 320GB drive that runs at 7200 rpm. If you don’t need acres of space for multimedia, huge databases, and massive files, however, consider opting for a solid-state drive.
SSDs have delivered significantly faster disk performance, in addition to having greater durability and lower power consumption. They also run cooler and more quietly.
You’ll pay more per GB for an SSD, but the payoff–a blazing, fast-booting laptop–may be worth the couple of hundred bucks extra.
Related story – How to swap your laptop’s hard drive for a fast solid state drive

Hybrid SSD drives, such as the Seagate Momentus XT, which my PCWorld colleague Tony Bradley has championed, may offer the best of both worlds, combining brisk speed and roomy capacity at a lower price than a pure SSD commands. Vendors have included hybrid SSD drives in laptops such as Best Buy’s exclusive Blue Label line.

High-definition screens

Most laptops today come with displays that have a maximum resolution of 1366 by 768 pixels–good enough for most users. For movie viewing or to see more on the screen, look for laptops with 1600-by-900-pixel or 1920-by-1080-pixel resolution.

Screen size is a matter of personal preference. Do you favour the netbook-like size and light weight of an 11.6-inch laptop like the MacBook Air, or is a massive 18.4-inch screen like the one Dell incorporated into the Alienware M18x more your style? For many users, the sweet spot seems to be the ultraportable 13.3-inch display size found in the Samsung Series 9, the MSI X-Slim X-370, and the Toshiba Portégé R830.
Long battery life

Unless you use your laptop primarily as a wall-plug-tethered desktop replacement, make sure that its battery life accommodates your mobile needs. You can find laptops both midsize and ultraportable laptops that last 6 hours or longer on a single charge.

Related story – How to keep your laptop battery running for years

Large memory capacity

Today’s laptops usually offer at least 2GB of RAM, but 4GB is better–and of course, the larger the memory capacity, the better.

Comfortable Keyboard and Responsive Trackpad

When you spend hours typing on your laptop, a comfortable keyboard is critical. Look for full-size frequently used keys that have a good spring to them, amd a long and comfortable palm rest to support your wrists.

Trackpads have evolved in the past few years to support multitouch gestures. For an optimal laptop user experience, look for a large, well-positioned trackpad that’s easy to interact with and has a smooth surface. The trackpad buttons should not be too tiny or excessively stiff.

Additional considerations for ultramobile workers

Laptops that target business users generally do more to accommodate high-mobility computing.

Durable design

If you spend a lot of time out and about with your laptop, look for features that promise great durability, such as a metal or carbon-fiber chassis in place of the more typical ABS plastic. Also look for models that take extra care to protect the hard drive against shocks or bumps (such as Sony’s G-Sensor shock protection in its VAIO S series or the “Active Protection” system in Lenovo’s IdeaPad and ThinkPad laptops).
Built-In security features

Hardware security modules, biometric (for instance, fingerprint scanning) log-ins, and other security components–such as Intel’s antitheft technology–will help you work on the road more safely.

USB Pass-Through charging

Uultramobile users tend to carry around a lot of gadgets and cords. A USB charge-through port functions the same way as a regular USB port, except that it can charge your portable devices even when the laptop is turned off. Though this isn’t an essential feature, it can come in handy when you’re on the road.

Built-In 3G or 4G mobile broadband

You have other options besides built-in 3G/4G mobile broadband for on-the-go Internet access–for instance, visiting Wi-Fi hotspots, using a mobile hotspot device or feature from your smartphone, or tethering), but none are as convenient or simple to use. Most modern laptops come with a mobile broadband option that permits you to select (or later switch) the wireless service provider for mobile data service on your laptop. Major wireless carriers worldwide and the biggest PC manufacturers support the Qualcomm Gobi modem, giving you wireless freedom and carrier choice.

Entertainment

Laptop entertainment features have greatly improved in the past few years. Most laptops now have an HDMI port for connecting via HDMI cable to an HDTV. Many entertainment-centric laptops also provide Intel Windows Display (WiDi), which can stream HD video wirelessly to TVs that have a WiDi adapter.

Blu-ray drives

Blu-ray drives are common options in entertainment-oriented midsize laptops, though they usually come as an extra-cost add-on rather than as part of the standard configuration. For a hefty premium, you can even get a Blu-ray drive that burns to 25GB-capacity Blu-ray discs. If you’re an entertainment junkie, you’ll almost certainly want a Blu-ray drive as well as full high-definition resolution (1920 by 1080 pixels) for the display.

Surround-sound speakers

Many laptops carry tinny integrated stereo speakers, but you can get great cinema-quality sound from a laptop with better speakers, such as those in the well-regarded HP Envy 17. Adding external speakers or other laptop sound-quality-boosters to your laptop setup is always an option if the stock speakers are puny, but one sign that a laptop was built for entertainment enthusiasts is the presence of HD audio.

Gaming

Sound and a stunning display are important for a gaming laptop, too. You’ll also probably want lots of RAM and the newest quad-core processors to make the system as speedy as possible.

Discrete graphics card

Perhaps most important extra feature for a gaming laptop is a graphics card. Recently introduced gaming laptops such as the Asus Lamborghini VX7 boast lots of dedicated video memory (the Lamborghini VX7 has 3GB of video memory).

Switchable graphics–for example, the Optimus technology Nvidia unveiled last year–make conserving battery life easier, even on notebooks made for gaming.

Follow Melanie Pinola (@melaniepinola) and Today@PCWorld on Twitter.

Would you recommend this article?

Share

Thanks for taking the time to let us know what you think of this article!
We'd love to hear your opinion about this or any other story you read in our publication.


Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

Featured Download

Featured Story

How the CTO can Maintain Cloud Momentum Across the Enterprise

Embracing cloud is easy for some individuals. But embedding widespread cloud adoption at the enterprise level is...

Related Tech News

Get ITBusiness Delivered

Our experienced team of journalists brings you engaging content targeted to IT professionals and line-of-business executives delivered directly to your inbox.

Featured Tech Jobs