Compaq Presario M2000Z

Three buttons atop the keyboard next to the Wi-Fi switch do a nice job of controlling volume, which pours from speaker outlets that wrap around the front corners. The other features I liked most about this laptop are the battery life --almost 5 hours in our tests--and the comfortable typing slant, both of which owe thanks the extra-cost 12-cell rear battery (a $25 upgrade from the standard 6-cell unit).
On the performance bench, the 1.8-GHz AMD Turion 64 ML-34-equipped M2000Z pulled down a WorldBench 5 score of 73. That's more than adequate for general use, but it is slower than many of the Intel-equipped notebooks we've looked at recently. The M2000Z's light gray keyboard offers a top-shelf layout plus an extrawide touchpad. The notebook is user upgradable, with the hard drive and two memory slots residing beneath their own grooved bottom panels held in by a couple of small screws each.
Topping it all off is a nice Acrobat manual with an especially useful contents page that breaks out each view of the laptop (left side, right side, and so on). Too bad it's buried in the Windows Help and Support Center.
Upshot: At $1314, the DVD burner-equipped Compaq Presario M2000Z is a nicely priced home laptop with a bonus: very long battery life.
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