I don't have a specific model to recommend, but I'd keep these points in mind:
- You don't need the fastest thing on the market. If they're mainly going to write papers, create presentations, surf the web, then you don't need the a laptop with a Quad-Core 2.3 tera-hertz processor... pick something in the mid-range.
- Hard-drive space... more is better. You'd be amazed how quickly a HD can fill-up.
- RAM and RAM expandability. The cheapest performance boost a laptop can get is RAM. The more it comes with the better. Also, if you want to add more, does the laptop come with its slots full of lower sized RAM modules that you'd have to throw away and add larger ones to... or is there an empty slot that you can add a new RAM module to at less cost and keep the original module?
- Battery life. Most cheaper laptops only offer 2-3 hours of "average" use on a charge. I'd look for something rated at 4+ hours. Keep in mind that usable time only gets worse with age.
- PC vs. Mac. That's a personal call. But it's still a Windows world out there for the most part. Apple products are well designed for the most part and generally well built (though my first iPod Touch died a day after I bought it), but you do pay a STEEP premium for them. A friend recently asked me "What's the difference between an Apple and a PC?" I quipped back "About a $1,000!" If you shop around a look for deals, you can get some steals on PC laptops. In March I bought a decked out, nicely designed, HP laptop on clearance from
Best Buy for $400. The thing has been flawless for me and I love it.
One more thing, the "
You don't have to worry about viruses/malware with Macs" myth is pure Apple marketing genius.