<p>I got the kid a laptop she loves. Took advantage of SonyStyle's big sale and got her a pink one with an upgraded CPU, 4 GB of RAM, a 320GB drive, and Vista 64-bit Home Premium (with a free upgrade to Win 7). </p>
<p>I bought the box with MS Office Home & Student and the 3-year mail-in warranty (the drop 'n break warranty was just too pricy). I've now put Norton 360 with the 25gig offline backup option and Lojack for Laptops on the box and gotten a Kensington lock for her dorm room.</p>
<p>She has a wireless keyboard and mouse already and she’s happy with the display. We’re waiting to see what she has for space before going with a printer. She may just print to the dorm. I believe the email a lot of their assignments nowadays anyway.</p>
<p>Yeah, go to a place where they are selling cheap flash drives and pick a few up. A case would be good, as to not break or damage the laptop, definetly a printer (when you get the chance), a wireless mouse may be good also, but not nessicary. Basically you have everything. Oh, you do have Microsoft Office on the computer, becuase it would be pretty bad if you didn’t.</p>
<p>She has a slipcase so she can carry it around in her backpack. I got MS Office Home/Student with the computer. I thought it would be best if she had a legal copy. </p>
<p>A few thumb drives isn’t a bad idea and they’re stupid cheap nowadays.</p>
<p>I have one huge (32gb) flash drive and another small one (4gb). Honestly, I didn’t need a 32gb one but I like to buy more than I need at the current time so it lasts a while and it was only $60 where I bought it (Micro Center, highly recommended for flash drives even if you have to buy online) which is definitely good for 32gb. God, it’s amazing how far these things have come. My first one was a 32mb one and I thought it was huge because it could hold like 20 floppy disks worth of data. Now we’re up to…let’s see…almost 23,000 floppy disks.</p>
<p>Also, I like the slipcase so I can throw my laptop in a backpack or suitcase for a longer trip but it’s not very practical for everyday usage. For that I like to use a well-padded messenger bag. The one I got is big enough for my laptop + accessories, a textbook, and maybe a notebook or some papers.</p>
<p>A mouse is highly recommended. I have a wireless, but it’s kind of annoying because it eats batteries and the adapter is easy to lose. If your D’s laptop has bluetooth, I’d recommend a bluetooth mouse. Better yet, a wired mouse is cheaper and doesn’t need batteries.</p>
<p>A keyboard is only really necessary if your D is planning on setting up her laptop with an external screen.</p>
<p>Also +1 for the external back up drive, losing all your files and data is probably the worst thing that can happen to your computer. I know this, unfortunately, from experience. If you have a backup and your laptop is stolen, yeah, that sucks, but you can buy a new laptop. You can’t exactly go to the store and buy your data back.</p>
I disagree. I would say Kaspersky offers one of the best. Norton and McAfee are decent to good. Of course, the best security will always be a smart user.</p>
Yeah. One of the cons about Kaspersky is it’s cost, but one license can be shared by 3 computers. So it you know folks who need it, you can just split the cost which at $79 total would come to about $27 per user. That’s pretty good for a better than average security suite. Even better if you can find those online coupons!</p>
<p>I could run the free McAfee anti-virus that I get from Comcast, but the Norton has many more features and I could get a 3-box license for 65 bucks at Staples.</p>
<p>Norton is junk. There are far better anti virus programs out there, such as AVG, Avast, Nod32, and Kaspersky. Or you could use the best anti virus program this year: Common Sense 2009</p>
<p>NOD32, Norton Antivirus 2009, Norton Internet Security 2009 are my favorites. Low on system resources and a tiny footprint.</p>
<p>And one can purchase Norton Antivirus for $0.00 after rebate, or $20.00 after rebate for Internet Security from Fry’s (at least last time I checked).</p>