Notebooks' faults weigh heavy on feds
Connecting state and local government leaders
—Gene Mercer, unit LAN manager, Air Education and Training Command, Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M., on his Micron GoBook "I'd like it to be about half the weight.'' —Robert Allan, integrated logistics support manager, Army Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command, Picatinny Arsenal, N.J., on his Hewlett-Packard notebook
Gene
Mercer, unit LAN manager, Air Education and Training Command, Kirtland Air Force
Base, N.M., on his Micron GoBook
Id like it to be about half the
weight.
Robert Allan, integrated logistics support manager, Army
Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command, Picatinny Arsenal, N.J., on his Hewlett-Packard
notebook
Look for a steadily rising tide of notebook computer use in the federal
government.
A GCN poll found that feds expect to increase time spent using notebooks from 20 to 27
percent and decrease their use of desktop PCs over the next few years.
The ability to work on the go, take files and applications on site, access e-mail on
the road and generally increase productivity were all part and parcel of what most feds
liked about their notebooks.
Although theyre planning to step up their notebook use, feds aired a few gripes.
Some notebooks took a bashing for limited battery life, hefty weight and diminutive
keyboard size. Complaints about connection quality and difficulties in logging into
networks from remote locations also abounded.
But for most notebook users GCN talked with, assets outweighed liabilities.
I wouldnt know what to do without it, said Tim Hancock, a Federal
Aviation Administration project manager in Washington, whose 320CDT notebook from Toshiba
America Information Systems Inc. is a constant companion.
Its my desktop and my notebook, he said. I travel constantly.
Im on the road about 300 days a year and didnt want to keep two sets of files.
When Im in the office Ive got a LAN card and I plug right in. The rest of the
time, Ive got everything with me, and I dial in.
Hancocks biggest beef concerned connecting to his office LAN while traveling.
My remote log-in problems probably are not specific to this computer but to the
servers Im trying to log in to, so Id be hard-pressed to say that its a
Toshiba problem, he said. When I call up and yell at our help desk, it always
seems to clear itself.
Herb Hitney, a scientist with the Naval Space and Warfare Systems Command in San Diego,
uses a Toshiba 700CT. He has had trouble connecting to SPAWARs LAN from overseas
locations. Its always complicated to find the right connections to make,
he said. He now finds it easier to check e-mail via the Web on PCs at overseas sites he
visitsand leave the notebook at home.
On the plus side, Mike Hansen, an auditor at the Health and Human Services
Departments Administration for Children and Families, said enhanced productivity was
the key asset of his notebook.
It makes good use of dead time, said Hansen, who uses his notebook from
Micron Electronics Inc. of Nampa, Idaho, to prepare and modify presentations, or review
work done by the audit staff. I can work on flights or in the hotel.
Hansen said he has bigger fingers than the keys.
Poor battery life drew by far the largest number of complaints: about 18 percent of
those polled.
Some users I talked with simply avoid relying too much on batteries. I take the
thing back to the hotel and plug it in, Hansen said.
Users were suspicious of manufacturers battery-life claims.
When they say youll get four or five hours, yes, you will if you let it sit
there and go to sleep, Hancock said. But if youre actually using it for
anything, an hour and a half or two hours is all youll get, and thats not
enough for a cross-country flight.
When I whip out the notebook to do several hours worth of work in my hotel room,
I might as well get the power cord out because I know the batteries just arent going
to last, he said. Its a rare occasion to get all my work done without
eventually having to plug it in.
At the Armys Picatinny Arsenal, N.J., Robert Allan, integrated logistics support
manager for the Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command, finds coping with his
notebooks limited battery life especially frustrating.
I have to limit my [notebook] usage because sometimes Im out for days in
the field, said Allan, who shares a Hewlett-Packard Co. notebook with office mates.
When I travel, I go out to places where I dont have a chance to plug it
in.
Allan said he must limit computer work to two to three hours, depending on the
applications hes using.
At the Air Education and Training Command at Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M., unit LAN
manager Gene Mercer uses a GoBook notebook from Micron to check e-mail and run
applications on the LAN from remote sites. Its very good at that, he
said. It works excellently.
But he was critical of the GoBooks pointing device.
The touchpad is so sensitive, Mercer said. You usually have to turn
off the double-click feature. Otherwise when youre typing along youll activate
the touchpad accidentally with your thumbs. The problem is where the touchpad is in
relation to the keyboard.
Mercer also was one of about 12 percent of users who complained about having to lug
heavy notebooks everywhere. Weight is always a factor, he said.
When you go on a temporary duty assignment and have to carry [the notebook] through
an airport, and youve got the spare batteries and all your software and everything
else in the bag, it weighs 10 to 15 pounds.
At the Navys Coastal Systems Station in Panama City, Fla., project engineer
Teresa Floore uses a notebook while on the road to check e-mail and write trip reports.
She recently resolved some peeves she had about a notebook from Samsung Electronics
America Inc. of Ridgefield Park, N.J., by trading it for an IBM Corp. ThinkPad 600.
The ThinkPad was a major improvement, she said, noting that its much
lighter in weight, the touchpad is easier to use and more responsive, the screen is
brighter, and the battery lasts longer.
One users comments, though not altogether serious, summed up the supreme paradox
of growing notebook use.
What the user liked best about his notebook was: I can work anywhere.
Heres what the same user disliked: I cannot get away from
work.