| Depends on what you want to do. If all you want to do is write emails, listen to music, watch movies, write documents, and some basic stuff, then go for just about any laptop.
If you are interested in some very cool EECS stuff you might want to do on your own, then look a little more carefully into the exact technology you are investing in. Not all processors are built equal, and some of the newer ones are coming out with exciting new technology (specifically some of the new extended instruction sets, deeper pipelines, better caching, etc). Also look at what operating systems your notebook can run, whether you have programmable graphics cards (such as NVidia's CUDA framework), etc. Not that you need an awesome computer to do EECS at all. |