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Entering schools' increasingly digital classrooms in the fall requires some slick hardware to supplement the old-fashioned pen and paper. Notebooks, the electronic kind, still top 2012's list of "must-haves" for busy students, but this year's ultrabook craze is set-ting new standards for back-to-school gadget forms and functionality.
"What you get [from an ultrabook] is the thinnest, lightest laptop computer on the market with the best specs," said Elliot Chun, spokesman for Future Shop.
Parents and students have so many choices available to them that investing in electronics can be confusing, but it doesn't have to be. Here are three notebooks to be on the lookout for that will give you the most bang for your buck, regardless of whether you're a budget-minded shopper or a power user out for the latest and greatest.
The Samsung Series 9's efficient, trim and featherlight construction is a close esthetic twin for Apple's hugely popular MacBook Air, but with a price tag to match.
What you get for the princely sum of almost $1,300 is a solidly-built portable weighing in at a little over 1 kg that comes parcelled with impressive battery such as dell U0386 battery , Dell Inspiron 300M Battery , Dell C6109 Battery , Dell Inspiron 9100 Battery , Dell Studio 1436 Battery , Dell Studio 1450 Battery , Dell Latitude X1 Battery , Dell 312-0882 Battery , Dell Studio 1735 Battery , Dell Studio 1737 Battery , Dell U150P Battery , Dell U164P Battery life - benchmarked at nearly seven hours of moderate use - and a bright, high-res (1600x900), 13.3-inch display. Throw in a 1.7 Ghz Core i5-3317U processor, 4 GB of RAM, 128 GB solid state drive (SSD), a card reader, Ethernet port, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth capabilities plus two USB ports - one each for USB 2.0 and 3.0 - and it's apparent the Series 9 packs a lot of punch in its svelte frame.
The granddaddy that sparked Intel's decision to push the traditional note-book one step closer to extinction with the ultrabook concept is still going strong. The new MacBook Air received some internal upgrades this year, the most significant being third-generation Core CPUs in i5 and i7 flavours, along with a host of small, but welcome changes like faster RAM and two USB 3.0 ports to accompany Thunderbolt.
The $999 entry-level model runs on a Core i5 processor with a 64 GB SSD and features the same sleek design that launched a thousand ultrabooks. Higher-end models running the i7 can be configured with larger SSDs, up to 512 GB, and a fully decked out machine will cost more than $2,000. It's powerful enough to zip seamlessly between productivity software and your favourite HD movies and the 30-day standby battery life (around five hours continuous, moderate usage) means you can put the Mac-Book Air to sleep, come back three weeks later and power it up instantly.