I stand by my position on my HP laptop. I bought it right around the time their CEO was getting fired for spying on the board, which may indicate she was more concerned with that than she was making sure her company was making very computers.
I paid about a grand for it, maybe a bit more. The keyboard sometimes misses keypresses (literally). For about a week or so I actually wondered if the "e" key had completely lost its ability to register. The battery can be really inconsistent to charge and even though it's a high-range Pentium with a gig of RAM the thing runs a far second to my home AMD3000 with 512MB of RAM and a Fry's motherboard that had already been opened and returned. Granted, I must have done a really good job with this desktop, because it's still responsive as hell and keeps up even today without me biting the bullet on upping the RAM, but the difference in processing power is still supposed to be vast and my older-tech desktop should not be able to rampantly kick my laptop's ass.
I've already had to reinstall Windows once after I loaned it to a friend, who as far as I can tell didn't actually install anything but just dragged the laptop into reasonably rough-wear environments for a few days. You can literally FEEL the poor EM shielding from the internals when you type on my laptop. Your fingers tingle.
So I stand by my statement. I still love my laptop as I love all computers that work at all, but there are more reliable and responsive machines out there by far.