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Functional, Fashionable Laptop Bags

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2:30 AM - 07/21/2008 by Rachel Rosmarin

By Rachel Rosmarin

For the Jock: Rawlings Soft Double Gusset Laptop Case

$367.50, available from Sportsaccessories.com

Touch and smell this tan leather laptop bag, and it might bring you back to your childhood — that is, if your childhood was spent playing Little League baseball or catch with your dad in the back yard. The bag is made from genuine Rawlings leather — the same stuff used in your baseball glove.

The laptop bag’s baseball heritage isn’t over the top — the biggest clue comes in the form of the handles, which feature the same familiar rough stitching as the gloves. Obviously, this bag doesn’t belong over the shoulder of a Little Leaguer; instead, we’re thinking it would be more appropriate on an MBA-er. After all, that’s the only kind of student we can think of that could afford the hefty price tag of this well-made satchel.

Getting a 15.4" notebook into this bag is a tight squeeze, but it can be done. The notebook compartment is actually removable, with canvas and nylon side-straps that don’t stretch very much. Other compartments include an expandable document pocket, a zippered inside pocket, and a zippered outside pocket. There’s also a front pouch that stays closed with magnets; inside that, you can find various other pockets for gadgets, pens, keys, glasses and business cards. The bag itself weighs six pounds, so make sure you’ve put in enough time at the gym before you decide to carry this bag for the long haul.

For the Fashionista: Knomo Siena Laptop Shoulder Bag

$275, available from Careerbags.com

There’s no reason that a stylish person’s laptop bag shouldn’t resemble a luxury handbag. Knomo’s Siena tote is made from the same grade of leather and fabric as designer goods. Available in three colors — black with fuchsia lining, red with pink lining, and plum with plum lining — the bag fits all 15.4" and smaller notebooks, though at 18" in width, we assume you could squeeze in a 17" notebook in there as well.

The eye-catching quilted pattern on the exterior serves as excellent padding, and a unique series of square-shaped raised bumps on the bottom of the laptop compartment cushions the shock of just about every major bump on the road. The shoulder straps drop a full 10.5" — longer than most handbags — which means you can distribute the weight of the bag on different parts of your arm. A leather flap keeps the bag closed with magnets, and inside you’ll find numerous zippered pouches and pockets. There are also pockets on each side of the bag, and a large one on the rear as well.

Such a precious bag implies valuable contents, which is why each Knomo bag comes with an “ID Tracker System”: a special leather-embossed tag on the interior of the bag that contains a unique code and a toll free number. The idea is that if a good Samaritan finds your bag, he or she can call the number to report its location. If you’ve registered your bag on the Knomo site, the company will contact you if your bag is found.

For the Tree-Hugger: HER Design Leaf Laptop Bag

$270, available from Careerbags.com

For students who must make every purchase count, environmentally speaking, there is the Leaf Laptop bag, an eco-friendly vertical shoulder bag designed to resemble an unfurling leaf.

In form and function, the Leaf bag treads lightly. It contains room for a 15" laptop (and a few 17" models) and not much else — perhaps a few paper notebooks, some gadgets and a keychain. The simple adjustable canvas strap isn’t especially long or padded; it provides the bare minimum of comfort.

But that simplicity is also part of the Leaf bag’s appeal; if it were loaded with ample cushions of ballistic nylon, it wouldn’t be as environmentally sensitive. The bag is made of recycled materials, including microsuede and PET lining — that’s the stuff you get after recycling your bottles and cans at the curb — and PVC-free faux leather trim. To the touch, however, the bag doesn’t feel as though it is composed of post-consumer refuse. Its smooth, velvety exterior and sturdy canvas-like interior feel more like cotton than plastic.

As if these recycled-material touches weren’t enough to impress the sustainability crowd, the bag’s maker — a small New England company called Helen E. Riegle — donates a proportion of each bag’s sales to local and global environmental and youth-oriented organizations.

For the Pack Rat: Slappa Ballistix Aura Messenger

$149, available from Slappa.com

Laptop, text books, iPod, cell phone, water bottle, sack lunch, change of clothes: some students insist upon jamming all of this and more into a messenger bag every day. While we can’t guarantee that this practice won’t damage a student’s posture, Slappa’s bag will cushion the student with ample padding, and provide as much space as possible for this big load of gear.

The Ballistix Aura Messenger has 1500 cubic inches of storage room. There are pockets everywhere, including a big one for the laptop, a large space for clothes, at least a dozen little ones for gadgets and other small items, a top-loading pocket, a coin pocket, and a pocket under the handle — this thing is composed entirely of pockets.

The bag is made from water resistant 1680-D ballistic nylon, so should that water bottle spill, as long as it is in its own pocket, it shouldn’t harm anything else in the bag.

To enhance comfort, the bag features a fat “Slappa” hand-shaped imprint on the back of the bag. This hand is placed exactly where the bag would bump against your thigh or hip, providing a bit of a buffer. The rest of the bag is quilted in Slappa’s proprietary “super-cush” padding. The bag’s handle prevents klutzy accidents by retracting tightly into the bag. To keep your laptop comfortable, though — the bag holds up to 17" models — be sure to keep it in a sleeve, as the Slappa bag is especially roomy, and the laptop will move around inside it.

Talkback
Anonymous 07/21/2008 9:30 AM
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Is the title image taken in Singapore?

cangelini 07/21/2008 11:01 AM
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grantyale :
Is the title image taken in Singapore?



Couldn't tell ya =)

njalterio 07/21/2008 3:12 PM
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Haha.....as a university student who will be heading back to school for my final year this August I must say so much of this is unnecessary.

First off, if you are living at home and/or still in high school absolutely none of this is necessary. Use the home PC.

Second, If you are going away to college, then get either a cheap laptop or desktop and one ethernet cable. End of story. You will be able to print through your university's printers, and most likely you will be able to get very cheap software from the university. I can buy Vista Ultimate for $15. Norton Antivirus is free.

Third, do not buy Apple as it is way to expensive. As a college student your money would be much better used elsewhere. This article did not do justice to Lenovo at all. I highly recommend a ThinkPad T61. (I priced a 2.4 GHz dual core and 4 GB of RAM and 100 GB hard drive for around $1100). The same hardware configuration would cost over $3000 in a Mac.

4) DO NOT SPEND MONEY IN WARRANTY/REPAIR/TROUBLESHOOTING SOFTWARE OR SERVICES! At your university there will be many smart and intelligent people who will be able to help you out for free. Depending on the size of your university, there will probably be a free tech support service somewhere on campus.

Anonymous 07/21/2008 4:06 PM
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What about those of students who are in engineering and need laptops that can handle lots of CAD, a simple budget laptop will not do. Look at Mississippi State's requirements in the engineering dept for entering freshman, a required 256 bit gpu and they recommend 512 bit. Just wondering if we could see something more high end for the technical fields, this is a great read though

njalterio 07/21/2008 4:31 PM
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I am also a student in engineering and I am quite familiar with the computer hardware required. If you are an engineering major, then you should invest $200 more to get a laptop or desktop with discrete graphics.

I was pointing out that a getting a $3000 laptop is ridiculous, and definitely should not be considered "vital" for back to school.

mitch074 07/21/2008 4:48 PM
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Overall quite nice, but:

- getting a Thinkpad may be more expensive, but it has two enormous advantages: it's extremely sturdy, and it is easily serviceable; if you want to keep your laptop for 3 years, you'll have a better time with it than any other laptop series

- Google Docs is nice, but it requires an always-on Internet connection. I can't, for the life of me, understand why there's no OpenOffice.org mentioned anywhere: it's free, it's powerful, it's stable, and it's available for all systems cited (yes, even MacOS X - Aqua version will be out in september).

- if all you do is type notes and browse the Web, a netbook may just be what you need: lighter, smaller, cuter, faster to boot. It is also far less expensive. The MSI Wind and it's rather large screen and keyboard are a good thing, you can still get an USB keyboard and connect it to a flat screen TV to turn it into a more comfortable workstation in your dorm room.

For those of you telling me that 'Vista is required', bull: the Apple one runs OS X, you can run Linux or XP without trouble in such a context (yes, there is Java and Flash support under Linux; even Google Earth runs very well).

gaiden 07/21/2008 5:04 PM
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I hope you chain that 24" LCD to an iron desk in your drom room. Best things for college are FREE or Second hand, no need to pay premium $$$ for new stuffs. I pay for my own tuition and all my other expense, so there is no way a 'regular' student or their parent will consider buying something this big and pricy. PC component side are decent however.

The dude above who asks for a Laptop/notebook to work on CAD, maybe a Dell Vostro 1500 and possibly runs in XP. CAD doesn't have all the support from Vista yet...i don't think. Basically if you are all work and no play just make sure you get a Core 2 Duo CPU with a Quadro card and 3-4gb of RAM. If you play some games get a C2D/3-4gb RAM and a Nvidia 8600 and up instead of a Quadro

gl

cangelini 07/21/2008 5:53 PM
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gaiden :
I hope you chain that 24" LCD to an iron desk in your drom room. Best things for college are FREE or Second hand, no need to pay premium $$$ for new stuffs. I pay for my own tuition and all my other expense, so there is no way a 'regular' student or their parent will consider buying something this big and pricy. PC component side are decent however. The dude above who asks for a Laptop/notebook to work on CAD, maybe a Dell Vostro 1500 and possibly runs in XP. CAD doesn't have all the support from Vista yet...i don't think. Basically if you are all work and no play just make sure you get a Core 2 Duo CPU with a Quadro card and 3-4gb of RAM. If you play some games get a C2D/3-4gb RAM and a Nvidia 8600 and up instead of a Quadrogl



Ain't it the truth. Nothing tweaked me more than when I had an old-school HP notebook nabbed from my office on-campus during a two minute bathroom break. A shame you have to lock everything down just to let it out of your sight for a second.

Anonymous 07/21/2008 6:24 PM
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In my opinion, if you don't play or make games, do scripting or anything else that may take lots of processing power you dont need to spend more than like... 300$ on a computer. To cut down on the price I would get 1gb 667 mhz (15$) of RAM, a Pentium Dual-Core (about 60$) and a PCI video card for about 50$. It would no doubt be more than enough for surfing the internet, watching movies, and using MS Word.

mbmcavoy 07/21/2008 7:52 PM
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For students in a technical field, (engineering, computer science, etc), a Windows laptop probably is best due to specialty software/hardware needs. But for the majority of students in non-technical fields, I'd highly recommend the MacBook.

Sure it seems more expensive if you compare hardware spec sheets, but the OS and included Apps make it a worthwhile package. Plus, iWork is much cheaper than MS Office. (Oh, and currently a free $300 iPod Touch for students and teachers sweetens the pot!)

General setup and maintenance issues are much less, so you'll have more time for actual studying - especially important for the non-techie! And while Windows has "sleep" features, I've never had consistent success with it. The sleep on my MacBook is bulletproof, and it wakes up in about 1 second. Perfect for the mad dash between classes!

Of course, if you are a non-techie, you probably aren't reading THG... :)

njalterio 07/22/2008 3:37 AM
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@ mbmcavaoy: There is a about a $2000 price difference (including Windows OS) between a MacBook Pro and a decent Lenovo, Acer, Dell, etc. The price of Microsoft Office comes no where near to cover that price gap. Besides, if you are going to college chances are you will have access to Microsoft software for free.

smlong 07/22/2008 3:38 AM
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Gee ... Imagine that... Mitch074 is here to tell us how great Linux and (now) Apple OSX is.

As a former engineering graduate (BSEE, 2002), I got by without a notebook as I did not live in a dorm.

I would not recommend a non-Windows based computer, personally. Windows has advantages over every other OS in terms of software available. Everything is available for Windows. Trying to run Linux, FreeBSD, or OSX as a primary OS just introduces the frustation factor as well as wasting a lot of time trying to find software alternatives.

If I were to use Linux (openSUSE preferably), I would definitely at least dual-boot to WinXp/Vista. As for OSX, I wouldn't touch it with a 10ft pole.

mbmcavoy 07/22/2008 4:58 AM
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njalterio :
@ mbmcavaoy: There is a about a $2000 price difference (including Windows OS) between a MacBook Pro and a decent Lenovo, Acer, Dell, etc.



WOW!!! All those other computers are free??? A MacBook Pro starts at $2000. However, I was talking about the basic MacBook, $1099 as mentioned in the article. College students (and all teachers) get a $100 discount, so $999. That's only $250 more than the cheapest laptop in the article.

Consider that the MacBook-buying student (or teacher) also currently gets a free iPod Touch. Assuming the PC-buying student also wants one, he's now paid $50 more than the MacBook customer.

Even assuming MS Office is free, vs. the $71 student price on iWork, it's only $21 difference.

So, again for the non-techie college student, I believe the MacBook is an excellent choice.

Haiku214 07/22/2008 6:16 AM
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First year University students are actually the only ones excited to buy a new laptop :)

njalterio 07/22/2008 2:31 PM
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mbmcavoy :
WOW!!! All those other computers are free??? A MacBook Pro starts at $2000. However, I was talking about the basic MacBook, $1099 as mentioned in the article. College students (and all teachers) get a $100 discount, so $999. That's only $250 more than the cheapest laptop in the article.Consider that the MacBook-buying student (or teacher) also currently gets a free iPod Touch. Assuming the PC-buying student also wants one, he's now paid $50 more than the MacBook customer.Even assuming MS Office is free, vs. the $71 student price on iWork, it's only $21 difference. So, again for the non-techie college student, I believe the MacBook is an excellent choice.



That is the absolute cheapest Mac you can get. The hardware you get from that laptop at it's base price is terrible. I really don't see why you would get that laptop when you can spend the same amount of money and get much better hardware. The upgrades are way over priced too.

$1099 for that laptop? Are you kidding me? You can get an alienware desktop for that much money, which before Apple got big I thought was the biggest overhyped, over priced excuse for a computer you could buy.

If you want to go buy a macbook be my guest, but please stop making the argument that it is a value purchase. The real reason is because it is hip and trendy. And that iPod touch deal is nonsense. When I want to spend money on a computer, it goes toward a computer, not some over rated hard drive that plays mp3s.

Anonymous 07/22/2008 5:24 PM
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Most of the things in the articles, though very nice, are way over budget for a typical college student. I wouldnt pay over $600 for a new laptop. If I was just using it to surf the web, watch videos, and do work, having a laptop with a decent CPU, plenty of RAM (at least 2GB, 4GB preferable) is pretty much all I would need in that case. And of course, running Windows XP or Vista. I wouldnt get any Mac just because it's costs way too much. If you don't want to buy MS Office, OpenOffice is absolutely wonderful and free, or Google Docs.

I often hear about people's laptops getting stolen. Another reason why you shouldnt buy a really expensive laptop to bring to your dorm.

I really like the 24" LCD displays in the article, though I wouldn't bring it to the dorm, I don't want that stolen either.

mbmcavoy 07/22/2008 8:37 PM
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njalterio :
That is the absolute cheapest Mac you can get.



Except for the $600 Mac Mini.

Did you read the article? Page 5 is "Budget Laptops", that is what I'm posting in response to. That means cheap laptops, and not mid-range desktops.

[citation]The hardware you get from that laptop at it's base price is terrible.[/citation]

Compare the MacBook specs with the others listed in the article. It holds its own, matching or exceeding most of them. OS X isn't as resource-intensive as Windows, so it's OK with less memory. And for most uses, the smaller hard drive is adequate.

Sure the screen is smaller than the others, but it's the same resolution, and crisp. The keyboard and partially multi-touch trackpad are by far the best of any laptop I have ever used. (My work laptop feels crippled!)

Compared with the other budget laptops in this article, the hardware is solid. But of course, I didn't buy my MacBook for the hardware, and that's not why I recommend it. I bought it for OS X, Time Machine, and the iLife suite, and it hasn't disappointed. That is well-worth the premium - especially for a student who isn't inclined to be their own IT department.

I'm even thinking about replacing another Windows desktop with that Mini. If it had a good discrete video card, I'd Boot Camp/VM Windows (for occasional games/CAD) on it and dump my other boxes completely. :)

rievax 07/22/2008 10:58 PM
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" Students who don’t want to spend hundreds of dollars on an Office suite have a slew of alternatives available to them. And although not all are created equal — and there really isn’t any true replacement for Microsoft Excel — Google Docs is a fine alternative that comes with an attractive price "

Why not using OpenOffice.Org (www.openoffice.org). It is free. It is MUCH more powerfull than the Online Google Docs and it is really a good replacement for MS Office for Students (and even professionals).

njalterio 07/24/2008 6:51 AM
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@ mbmcavoy: Well we seem to have reached an agreement that there is less value in Mac hardware for the price compared to other laptops (less RAM, smaller hard drive, etc.)

I guess we will have to agree to disagree regarding the usefulness of OS X.

I'll admit that iLife is cool, but I don't see why a student would need to spend more money for software such as that. Students are generally very strapped for cash (I can vouch), and the software that comes with the Mac just doesn't seem like a reason to spring for the extra cash. Time Machine is alright, but Windows also has it's own built in back up utility in addition to support for an array of third party programs.

Rest assured, you do not need to be your own IT department to use Windows XP or Vista. The only people I know who have that level of difficulty using computers are in the 60+ age group. If a student is experiencing difficulty using a Windows OS, well then they should re-evaluate if college is for them. lol.

Good luck with putting a discrete card in the Mini. I doubt you will find one that even fits, and I do not see any expansion slots in that mini case. Plus you are going to have some serious over heating issues if you put any capable card in such a small insulated space.

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