Is this laptop unacceptably unprofessional-looking?

Looks fine to me.

But it’s not “a work computer”. It’s a case where you are required to provide your own computer to be used at work: unlike a work-provided computer, it is not limited to work uses. My current client demands Windows XP Pro, and the IT dude was totally freaked out about my having it on dual boot (with its original XP Home) until I explained that, if they forced me to have only one OS and only one account on what is, after all, my personal property, then that single account would have Skype, IM… would they want that? No? Then dual boot it is! I didn’t even need to mention Civil and WoW :stuck_out_tongue:

I have a ten inch eee netbook and it runs office.

Go for it. Worst case scenario is that people think you’re a geek. I bet you can live with that.

I’m just confused that a (mildly) blinged-out computer is really the best deal. You can’t find the same specs (to within what would actually be noticeable in use), without the blinkenlighten for cheaper, really?

If I saw someone with one, I’d tend to think not so much ‘unprofessional’ as ‘victim of marketing’. But I haven’t specced out laptops recently, so, hey, I could be wrong.

The problem, as far as I could tell when I was looking at computers last year, is that companies selling that kind of specs do “blinkenlighten” them. You want a laptop with a decent graphic card, the assumption is not that you need to edit graphics on the run (think photographer on the field, for example), it’s that you’re a gamer and want to impress your gamer friends, and they insist in selling you bling with that. The places I knew which used to sell “made to order” computers with those specs that weren’t blingy have either gone blingy or lost the “to order” line.

Computer with some style? Why not?

We can’t all walk around as minimalists. Well we could, but it doesn’t appear most would want to.

In a corporate job, you might want to come off as progressive to some people, and sensible to the others. Little things, such as style, really matter. A gamer laptop with mild bling is just fine.

Alienware probably benefits (price-wise) from being owned by Dell. There are many other gaming laptops that are cheaper or more powerful, but not at that size (that I could find).

Photographers don’t necessarily need a decent graphics card; the cards mainly provide a boost to 3D rendering performance. Photoshop can be graphics-card accelerated to some extent, but doesn’t need to be… its core functions work fine with any standard recent CPU.

There are still a few customizable laptop outfits around: Falcon Northwest, Sager, iBuyPower, etc. And Asus makes so many different models they might as well be custom. None of these guys bling out their laptops as much as Alienware (unless you pay them extra to), but none of them offer things in the same size-performance-price combination as the M11x either.