Wednesday, January 18, 2012

$349.99 11.6-inch Dell Inspiron 11z laptop

Dell releases its 11.6-inch Dell Inspiron 11z laptop at the price of $349.99, and I think it is rather a reasonable price tag for a 11.6-inch notebook computer from Dell. Moreover, if you can find some coupon codes, you may save another several dollars.

Dell originally released the Inspiron 11z that’s available for purchase today in 2010, so the notebook you can get today is a bit old and outdated compared to today’s available ultraportable laptops. With the Inspiron 11z you’ll find a low-voltage Intel Core i3-330UM dual-core processor, Intel GMA graphics, a 11.6″ WLED lcd screen (1366×768), 2GB of DDR3 RAM, a 250GB HDD, no optical drive, a 1.3MP webcam, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth for wireless communications, WiMAX mobile broadband support is built-in, LAN 10/100 with an Ethernet RJ-45 jack built-in, HDMI output, three USB 2.0 ports, a 6-cell battery, and Windows 7 Home Premium.

For $349.99 the Dell Inspiron 11z laptop seems to be comparably equipped, right? As you consider buying a laptop things go deeper than just technical specifications, some notebooks that have really great tech specs. In the case of the Dell Inspiron 11z it’s got some pretty big faults that the specifications do a good job of concealing.

According to just about all owners of the Inspiron 11z the notebook has a rubbish touchpad/trackpad, the touchpad/trackpad is what you’ll be using to control the cursor for the laptop if you don’t use an external mouse. Most 11z owners recommend using an external mouse if you can’t stand the laptops multi-touch pad. Otherwise, the Dell notebook has good battery for laptop, so the user can surf online for about two hours without laptop adapter..

Monday, January 16, 2012

What Inside Our Laptops?

Of course, I use may laptop for almost 12 hours a day, but I still don’t know much things about it. And I even don’t know what inside my laptop and how it works? So I find an excellent article about laptops and I want to share with you all.

Computers can be complicated, delicate and even dangerous. But that doesn't stop us from wanting to know what's actually inside one. That's why we here at have taken it upon ourselves to dismantle a perfectly innocent computer in the name of science. We chose an IBM ­laptop computer, which not only has all the standard components you'd find in most computers, but also arranges them together into a very compact configuration.

Keep in mind that while desktop computers are larger than laptops, the actual components inside the computers are pretty much the same. The cheap laptop parts might look a bit different -- there's no need to pack them in so tightly -- but they fulfill the same functions as the parts in a laptop computer. One other big difference is that many desktop computers allow users to swap out cards and components through computer card slots while many laptop computers have integrated cards that users can't swap out.

We've divided up the components into two main categories: the brains and the guts. The brains of the computer include all the elements that allow the computer to process data. The guts include all the other elements, such as latpop screen repalcement, laptop battery, drivers etc. that make computers useful, but aren't directly involved in computing information.