Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Lenovo Thinkpad T400


Overview:
Lenovo proudly presents the successor to the popular T61 series, the ThinkPad T400. Our model of this portable business laptop came with a Montevina Intel Core 2 Duo T9400 2.53GHz processor, 2GB DDR3 RAM, and a 160GB HDD. It was equipped with a 256MB ATI Mobility Radeon 3470 dedicated GPU, but also had a switchable graphics feature which let us go between that and the Integrated Intel GMA 4500 graphics at will for the sake of battery life. The 14.1” display was a bright LED backlit WXGA+ (1440x900) LCD. With all the reputation (and looks) of the ThinkPad series behind it, ths T400 is another strong entry into the workhorse business notebook world.

Design:

Case look and feel:
If you’ve ever seen a ThinkPad before, you know what the T400 looks like for the most part. Although Lenovo has made slight changes in other lines, like making the hinges on the X301 black and the top glossy on the SL400, the T400 continues to sport the traditional silver hinges and black matte top we all know and 'love'. The chasis is all black as is the keyboard and palmrest/touchpad. You’ll find the bright red nub of the TrackPoint in the center of the keyboard and the silver ThinkPad logo emblazoned across the bottom right corner of the palmrest and lid. There are a few dull silver buttons for volume control/power next to the blue ThinkVantage button. Just above the keyboard there are a number of green status lights to tell you if your WiFi, BlueTooth, etc is on.

Size & Weight:
With dimensions of 13.2”x9.4”x1.1” and a weight of 5.3lbs with a 6-cell battery, the T400 will win no awards for portability but neither will it slow you down. We don’t advise picking it up with one hand if you’re going to move it further than across your desk, but you could if you needed to. The dimensions are small enough that it doesn’t feel awkward carrying it with one arm, and carrying it in a normal laptop case it will hardly feel heavier than you’d expect. To sum it up, “how you’d expect” is a good description of the size and weight of this notebook – unimpressive without being detrimental, it manages to feel “normal”.

Keyboard:
Ordinarily, we love typing on ThinkPads, and while the T400 still beats a lot of other laptops we’ve tested we got the feeling something just wasn’t quite the same. Nosing around online we found others had the same feeling, some going so far as to take apart the notebook and get a good look at the backplate. To his (and our) dismay, the new backplate is riddled with holes when compared with the old T61 backplate, which we suppose was done to reduce the weight. This had the negative effect of also increasing keyboard flex.

Don’t get us wrong, it’s still a good keyboard, with decent feedback and key travel. It wouldn’t be a ThinkPad if the keyboard wasn’t still at least good. We’ll be a little sad if Lenovo decides to bring the ThinkPad standard down to this level though, because keyboards such as the one located on the X301 are some of the best we’ve ever typed on.

Display Quality:
The LED backlit WXGA+ (1440x900) LCD offered an excellent display. The screen was extremely bright at full brightness, and even when reduced to 60% visibility was still respectable. On full brightness the LED backlit screen is visible even in sunlight. Horizontal viewing angles were strong, with little to no washout even when nearing perfectly horizontal viewing. Vertical angles were still good, and we were able to push the LCD back on its hinges almost 135 degrees before significant washout occurred.

Connectivity:
The connectivity on the T400 is fair, going back to the original theme of failing to either impress or disappoint. You get most everything you need, but nothing flashy like HDMI or a DisplayPort. Our particular model even lacked a card reader, but it’s available as a $10 option on Lenovo’s website.

The back features nothing but the jutting 6-cell battery and the AC power jack, as well as a lock slot.

The right side contains a USB port as well as the optical drive.

The front has a FireWire port, WiFi on/off switch, and audio in/out jacks.

Most of your wires will be hanging off the left side (even the power cord is in the left half of the rear). After an exhaust vent you get VGA, modem, LAN, 2 more USB ports, and an ExpressCard 54 slot.

Upgrading:
The T400 comes with a decent amount of upgrading options. Our T9400 processor was close to the high end, but you can go even higher with the T9600 2.8GHz if you want to. The HDD can grow to be as large as 320GB, or if SSD is your thing there is a 64GB option for that as well. RAM can even be upgraded to a whopping 8GB DDR3, although it’s important to note that you’ll need a 64 bit version of Windows if you want to utilize more than 3GB of it. If you’re a DIYer, the hard drive can be replaced from the outside by removing a single screw, and while other components are accessible it takes a bit more work to get at them.

Features:
The ThinkPad T400 comes with a number of useful features. From 802.11 a/b/g/n to integrated WWAN (our model didn’t have it, but it’s an easy upgrade), it’s easy to stay connected on the go with this notebook. Also useful for travel is the keyboard light, activated by pressing the bottom left button (fn) and top right button (PgUp) on your keyboard, making it easy to find in darkness. Other features include a fingerprint reader, integrated webcam, and as always on a ThinkPad the ThinkVantage button, offering easy access to wireless and multimedia management.

Some of the more unique features of this notebook revolve around switching on the fly. The UltraBay optical drive is hotswappable, allowing you to switch it for an additional battery or hard drive with the computer still on. The T400 also features Switchable Graphics, allowing you to switch between integrated and dedicated graphics and improve your battery life without interrupting what you’re doing. These are both useful features that are also extremely convenient, as neither requires the loading of any software, or a login/reboot.

Performance & Conclusion

The T400 is certainly a workhorse, capable of performing well even when multitasking. It’s not a high end unit but we predicted it would do pretty well in our testing. For a full explanation of our testing methodology, see here.

Windows Vista Experience Score

Processor 5.4
RAM 5.7
Graphics 4.6
Gaming Graphics 4.7
Primary Hard Disk 5.3
Overall 4.6

The 4.6 overall rating is actually fairly strong, comparing favorably to the 3.4 of the ThinkPad X301 ultraportable and approaching the 5.2 of the ASUS G50-X1 gaming laptop. It’s clear, however, that gaming is the weakness of this business oriented notebook.

PCVantage Pro

We ran the PCVantage test twice, once with the laptop plugged into the wall and the graphics set to dedicated, and then again after unplugging it and setting the graphics to integrated.

ASUS G50-X1 3935
Alienware M15x 3767
ThinkPad T400 (dedicated) 3764
HP HDX16 3320
Lenovo X301 3308
ThinkPad T400 (integrated) 3100

As you can see, thanks to a good processor, a solid 7200RPM HDD and DDR3 RAM, this laptop scored better than the ultraportable X301 and the multimedia focused HDX16, and was surprisingly close with the slightly older M15x. Predictably though, on integrated graphics, the laptop trailed everything, although not by as much as you might have thought.

3DmarkVantage

We were unable to run 3DmarkVantage on this laptop. Although it can run a 1440x900 resolution, it could not generate the 1280x1024 resolution the benchmark required.

WorldBench 6

Alienware M15x 104
ThinkPad T400: 91
Toshiba Satellite E-105 83
HP HDX16 80

The T400 (dedicated) compares well here to some of the other laptops we’ve tested. The versatile M15x still leads the pack, but 91 is a strong score and a testament to the capabilities of this computer.

Battery Performance

We tested the 6-cell battery with dedicated graphics and also with integrated graphics.

ThinkPad T400 (integrated) 334
ThinkPad T400 (dedicated) 291
Toshiba Satellite E-105 260
HDX 16 156
Lenovo X301 235
ASUS G50 X1 110

Here is where the T400 shines brightest. With the medium sized battery we were able to generate almost 5 hours of casual use battery life with the graphics set to dedicated, and over 5.5 hours doing the same with the graphics set to integrated. With the 4-cell option you should expect reduced time, but with the 9-cell you can expect as much as 10 hours if you play your cards right. Recharging our battery took approximately three hours.

Real-life usage:
We’ve described this computer as striking us as a sturdy workhorse, with features that are easily sufficient but not necessarily impressive. After extensive use and additional testing, we realize we may have sold it just a bit short. It’s not flashy, but it’s done pretty much everything we’ve asked it to and done it well, and that in and of itself is an impressive feat. It’s portable enough to move around but solid enough to know that it’s there. The keyboard may be half a notch down from some other ThinkPads, but we can’t complain after typing on it for several hours consecutively. It’s quiet and runs relatively cool, generating just enough heat that you notice it and no more. We feel like we would be extremely happy if this was a computer we had to work with on a regular basis, and take comfort in the fact that it seems every dollar that wasn’t spent on flash was spent on solid construction. Yes, it is indeed a ThinkPad.

Conclusion:
Lenovo has presented a worthy successor to the T61 series with the T400. Every piece of the hardware, from the processor to the RAM to the HDD, was a solid choice by Lenovo and performed well under our testing. The battery life was excellent, in part thanks to unique features like Switchable Graphics, which let you switch between integrated graphics and the dedicated 256MB GPU at will. The brightly lit WXGA+ display was easy on the eyes and there were just enough peripherals (fingerprint reader, webcam, keyboard light) to keep us interested. Further, it was portable enough that we didn’t think twice about carrying it all over the office. Overall the computer was a great worker and did everything we asked, even if it didn’t drop our jaw with anything too astounding.

HP Mini 2140


It also ditches Vista in favor of the more suitable XP Home and adds a larger screen to the mix. Altogether, this makes it a much more interesting netbook than its predecessor.

Design and Build

With an all-aluminum casing and a highly usable keyboard (92% of full size) HP’s Mini netbooks have been considered a premium alternative, although it's a bit heavier than the average netbook.

Thanks to the large keyboard, the trackpad buttons have been placed on either side of the trackpad instead of below it, which may take some time getting used to. The Mini 2140 feels very solid and durable in its metal casing, but the metal construction does add slightly to the weight – the 2140 weighs in at roughly 3 pounds.

Performance and Features

What made the previous 2133 iteration much less desirable than the competition was partly the choice of VIA CPUs, which are somewhat slower than the Intel Atom, but most of all it was the disastrous decision to sell the netbook with Windows Vista instead of a more lightweight Linux or XP. Due to Vista’s steep hardware requirements and the low-end hardware in the Mini, it felt very slow and dated. Even worse was that Vista actually inflated the cost of the 2133.

All of these issues have been remedied in this the new 10-inch Mini 2140. It’s faster and costs less while retaining the same excellent build quality. Vista has been replaced by an old fashioned but snappier Windows XP. In terms of performance, the 2140 can be compared with other similar netbooks – it’s enough for web browsing, office work and watching videos, which is more or less what netbooks are intended for.

The Mini 2140 has the usual ports plus one – in addition to the 2 USB, Ethernet, line-in/out, VGA, and a memory card reader it also comes with an Express Card slot. This might not be important for most consumers, but adds some versatility for professional users who may use it for 3G modems and other peripherals. Battery life was good with the 6-cell battery, almost 7 hours, which is below the specified 8 hours and 30 minutes but still acceptable.

Conclusion

On the whole, the 2140 is a big step up from the 2133 with no price premium – in other words it offers a lot of value while being one of the best netbooks currently on the market. Highly recommended.

Source: laptoplogic.com

Fujitsu Lifebook E8410

Design & Features

Overview
Today were taking a look at the Fujitsu Lifebook E8410 15.4 widescreen notebook through the Laptop Logic Labs this black metallic beauty has the new 45nm Intel chipset inside, and even though our particular model doesnt boast the NVIDIA GeForce 8400M G with 128 MB of dedicated memory (opting rather for the integrated x3100 Intel GMA) it does come featured with Bluetooth and Wireless N inside, along with some old school Parallel and Serial ports!

Design

Case look and feel

Upon removing the Lifebook E8410 out of its box, you will notice the very attractive, all aluminum LCD cover. Im used to seeing plastic or some other sort of weird composite for an LCD lid, making this a welcome change. The aluminum face is met by beefy LCD hinges at the rear almost 2 in width on either side. These give the E8410 a very robust feel not cheap at all. The brushed (or burned?) aluminum call sign of Fujitsu Lifebook graces the middle. Towards the top end of the LCD lid is a glossy black plastic. Im assuming this houses the wireless antennae location, as the aluminum might offer a decent amount of resistance to the signal.

The bottom of the chassis is also nearly all aluminum. Again not a bad thing, and certain areas of the chassis are covered in a felt like material, that also aides in the unit not slipping and sliding around.

There is also a dedicated docking slot that accepts a proprietary accessory dock.

Keyboard

Open the LCD lid and you are greeted with a slight off-white full keyboard, surrounded by speakers on either side of a silver plastic bezel trim. It is noted that this keyboard is spill resistant; at least it says so in the user manual - I didnt test it out. The base of the chassis did offer a little more flex than I was expecting Im assuming because of the hot-swap bay. The speakers, although given ample space on either side, are very tinny sounding normal I suppose, but I was expecting fuller sound, and was left very unimpressed (unfortunately).

The keyboard feels ok (yes, just ok, not the best, not the worst), typing distance is relatively smooth, but the layout isnt the most user friendly. The page up / page down are functioned together with home and end, and the delete key is in kind of a funky position. The touchpad is decently sized and offered great response after some tweaking it is surrounded by 2 sets of left/right click buttons.

You will also find the biometric fingerprint scanner below the touchpad, in between the lower set of mouse buttons. It worked well, and can be used to store passwords instead of typing them for entry.

On the upper portion of the keyboard area is a small LCD which offers battery status, wireless power state, HDD activity, cap, num and scroll lock, etc. Unfortunately, this area does not illuminate, making it near impossible to read in the dark. I really wish you could illuminate this, or have the option to at least. A simple LED wouldnt hurt, would it Fujitsu? Then again, there are no busy blaring hyper-LEDs scattering your normal vision, which is also welcomed.

To right hand upper portion, there is a set of four hot buttons 1-4 (and enter) that can be programmed as shortcut keys. But they also serve another function one that follows the Lifebook blood hard and true. These buttons can act as a 5 digit pass code before the computer can boot up. Highly effective in thwarting thieves! You can enter this information through a program in Windows Vista to engage when you first boot the laptop up. As default hot buttons, the 1 key launches Notepad, 2 is the calculator, 3 is Internet Explorer (or your default browser) and 5 launches your email application.

Connectivity
The E8410 houses a plentiful array of connections, even going old school with some Parallel and Serial port connections. Some might find the multi-pinned ports of yore archaic, but to others in the business world where they dont have the investments of newer equipment, this is a god send. Im torn between the two points of interest, seeing no point for myself, but know of many professionals that still faithfully use a serial port to upload maps to their GPS. And yes, some still rely on good old parallel ports to connect to a printer. Anyways, lets leave the judgment up to you and just showcase them.

Front

The front of the E8410 contains the wireless LAN on/off switch, IR port, media card reader, and hinge release. Nothing too fancy however, I have to note that the media reader did NOT work for me. I tried 2 different brands and sizes (2GB and 1GB) and neither registered. This is not a SDHC capable reader that Im aware of, but even so, it wouldnt register my media and there were no problems stating from the control panel / hardware settings. Other than that, Im glad to see there isnt an optical drive here! Making sure that if you DO use an alternative notebook riser (like the Logitech Alto I reviewed previously) it doesnt interfere with normal usage too much. Plus one, Fujitsu! Toshiba, take notice!

Left

Power jack, Audio out, Mic in, RJ-45, two USB 2.0 ports, four-pin Firewire, CPU exhaust and heres the real winner a PC Card AND ExpressCard AND Smart Card reader built-in!

Still got that old PCMCIA TV tuner card, but want 5.1 ExpressCard surround sound AND secure shopping with your Smart Card? You can do it! Hooray!

Right

Not to much shaking on the right side we have a lock slot, DVD-RW removable driveand thats it.

Rear

Normally, the rear of laptops arent too impressive yet with the E8410 we yet ANOTHER lock slot, exhaust location, two more USB 2.0 ports, a parallel port, serial port, VGA out, Ethernet and S-video out. Honestly, I would use 90% of those, maybe 100% if I dug out some cool old-school joysticksbut again, the use of the parallel and serial connections is strictly user preference. If it were up to me, I would ditch the PA and SA connections for DVI or HDMI especially the unit that houses the dedicated NVIDIA 8400 card.

Display
The display on this unit has a 1280x800 WXGA panel driven by Intel's GMA X3100 integrated graphics card featuring 358MB video RAM (128 dedicated, 230 shared). The display was evenly lit, and offered decent, flicker free output on the glossy LCD. However, the viewing angles left something to be desired. But then again, considering this is a business laptop its maybe a blessing in disguise. If on a plane, I wouldnt want to have all my fancy information or movie shared with the next personso it might pan out well.


Straight on, a wonderful Ms. Nat.


The bottom and top angle not so great looking Ms. Nat.


The side angle isnt too bad however. Ive seen worse, and it depends on what is being displayed.

The vertical viewing angles were not impressive, but the side to side viewing angles were not TOO bad as noted in the pictures.

Size & Weight

The E8410 isnt the thinnest around, but by no means as huge as some weve reviewed. The actual dimensions come in at 14.1 in x 10.1 in x 1.4 inches. Not too bad, but definitely could lose some thickness; it is almost surprising to note that the thickness doesnt help with the body flex. The LCD lid is very sturdy and should hold up to many bumps and bruises.

As far as weight is concerned, loaded up with a 6-cell battery, it ticks in at just over 6 pounds.

The power adapter isnt enormous, shown here along with the battery compared to a DVD.

Upgrading
There isnt much more you can boast from this laptop, as both DIMM sockets are filled (in our configured model) with each containing 1GB of DDR2 667 RAM. The hard drive is a SATA 5400rpm 120 GB hard drive, formatted into two partitions. For the performance and price the best thing to do would be opt for the NVIDIA 8400 dedicated card option, and even though its only 128MB of dedicated RAM, Vista will love you for it.

Features

Weve mentioned most of the features at least in passing so far, and as you can probably tell, this laptop is rather loaded on the whole. Wireless connectivity is abundant, featuring 802.11n WiFi, Bluetooth, and IR - options you usually only find on more media centric laptops.

It does carry a 1.3mp webcam on the upper portion of the LCD lid, which, if this is geared towards the business user provides ample power for decent video conferencing, but not much more. Simple snapshots looked decent, although the color seemed muted and unnatural sometimes (as most small sensor webcams often produce). It does not swivel, something that isnt a make or break deal, but I wish it was able to do so.

The other great feature to make this a worthy road-warrior is the option to hot swap your DVD drive out, and insert another (sold separately) battery.

Just a flick of your fore-finger and the drive will pop right out, making it a snap to either ditch the weight and save some battery power, or add a different drive / battery to gain.

Performance & Conclusion

Every laptop we review goes through a standard set of tests, although we do opt to skip some tests with units that do no have dedicated GPUs (as in this laptops case). The gaming section has been omitted from this test and all remaining results are gathered. You can read more about our testing methodology here.

Windows Experience Score
Processor

5.3

Memory

4.9

Graphics

3.4

Gaming GFX

3.5

Primary HDD

5.0

PCMark Vantage Pro

PCMark Vantage Pro
Fujitsu Lifebook E8410

4296

Toshiba Qosmio F45

3730

Acer Ferrari 5005WLMi

3875

The PCMark tests were SPANKED by the efficient dual core Penryn CPU. It loves its duties thats for sure. It scored WAY above our Acer Ferrari, almost 500 points more!

3DMark 2006

3DMark 2006
Fujitsu Lifebook E8410

360

Toshiba Qosmio F45

544

Lenovo 3000 N200

535

Ugh, integrated graphics and Windows Vista are NEVER a good combination. Interesting to note that the F45 did do a lot better compared the Lifebook. However, this laptop is not geared at ALL for graphics or gaming, but on the road mobility workstation, which the following test provides a decent testament to that.

WorldBench

WorldBench
Fujitsu Lifebook E8410

80

Toshiba Qosmio F45

69

Lenovo 3000 N200

80

A great world bench score definitely loves to multi-task and do it efficiently. It is right up there with our Lenovo 3000.

Battery Performance

WorldBench
Fujitsu Lifebook E8410

157

Toshiba Qosmio F45

105

Lenovo 3000 N200

182

A great battery featured notebook for watching DVDs. It made it 4/5 of the way through the Lord of the Rings: Return of the King which was just over 2 and hours. Not to bad for a stock battery setup and volume at 50%!

Real-life usage
Using 50% brightness, volume, wireless on, and battery performance set to balanced, I got 3 hours and 42 minutes out of normal web browsing, typing, email, surfing, and listening to a few mp3 audio books here and there. Not bad at all. Imagine if you ditched the DVD drive and opted for yet another battery? One might argue they could work through a coast-to-coast flight, which is impressive by any laptops standards, especially in a 15.4 form factor.

The heat was minimal thanks to its efficient 45nm processor and well ventilated exhaust ports and the touchpad was great after a few customizations within Vista.

Conclusion

Pros:

  • Penryn CPU
  • Many connectivity options
  • Great battery life
  • Aesthetically pleasing

Cons:

  • Thick & heavy, no exotic materials to reduce weight

Im torn between the simple aesthetics, yet ample connections and battery performance. This laptop is by no means the beefiest configured road warrior, nor the flashiest. However it offers a lot of amenities and very usable computing power under the hood, coupled with great heat management, excellent battery life, and different configurations that can be ordered to fit the bill with a dedicated graphics cardI have to say Im mighty impressed. Not to mention coming in at a base price under $1,600 for a top of the line Penryn CPU and excellent features, I have to put this right up there with the Highly Recommended. It only falls short of Editors Choice because of the keyboard layout/feel, not able to upgrade the RAM further, and the speakers could definitely use a revamp. For a business user, you have to take a look at this form factor as 15.4 is a little on the larger side to lug around however, carrying a nearly 4 hour battery span definitely evens the playing field.

Source: laptoplogic.com

Asus Eee PC 1008HA


Asus Eee PC 1008HA

With minilaptop competition heating up, even Asus--the company that practically invented the Netbook--has to step up its game. While the internal components will be familiar, the new Eee PC 1008HA (also known called the Seashell) represents a radical design change from the boxy Eee PCs we've seen before, with a slim, tapered design that makes it one of the best-looking Netbooks we've come across.

To get down to about 1 inch thick, some engineering slight-of-hand was required. The VGA output uses a dongle, the Ethernet jack is angled to fit into the thin body, there's a custom-molded (nonremovable) battery, and an LED display shaves a few millimeters off the lid.

One inescapable current Netbook trend is falling prices. With a perfectly serviceable $299 10-inch system coming from Dell and subsidized Netbooks from mobile phone companies, the current standard of $399 for a nicely equipped minilaptop is starting to look like the maximum the market will bear. At $429, the 1008HA slips just over the line, although the difference is more psychological than practical.

Price as reviewed$429
Processor1.66GHz Intel Atom N280
Memory1GB, 533MHz DDR2
Hard drive160GB 5,400rpm
ChipsetMobile Intel 945GM Express
GraphicsMobile Intel GMA 950 (integrated)
Operating SystemWindows XP
Dimensions (WD)10.3 x 7.1 inches
Height0.6- 1.0 inches
Screen size (diagonal)10.1 inches
System weight / Weight with AC adapter2.4/2.8 pounds
CategoryNetbook

The slim design of the 1008HA is a close cousin of the HP Mini 1000, but it feels even thinner, thanks to a tapered front lip. Helping shave a little size from the system are space-saving features including a pin-size power adapter plug, an angled Ethernet jack, and a mini-VGA port that requires a small dongle to use--cleverly hidden in the bottom of the chassis. Rather than a potentially smaller SSD drive, there's a standard 160GB HDD inside, augmented by a free 10GB online data storage subscription for backing up files to a remote server.

We've seen the 1008HA in white, but our review unit was glossy black, which was prone to picking up fingerprints at an alarming rate.

The flat, wide keyboard, similar to what we saw on the recent Eee PC 1000HE, is among the better Netbook keyboards we've used, and the full-size right shift key is one of those things you don't realize is very important until it goes missing. The touch pad is demarcated by a rectangle of raised dots on the wrist rest and works well, although we found ourselves going into the touch pad settings and jacking up the default pointer speed. Above the keyboard are two quick-access buttons for turning off the Wi-Fi antenna and disabling the touch pad (handy if you're using an external USB mouse).

The 10.1-inch LED screen offers a 1,024x600 native resolution, which is standard for a Netbook. The backlit LED allows the lid to be very thin, and also uses less power than a more traditional LCD screen. A system tray app cycles through some other resolutions (1,024x768, 800x600), but displays usually look best at their native resolution.

Asus Eee PC 1008HAAverage for category [netbook]
VideoVGAVGA
AudioStereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacksheadphone/microphone jacks
Data2 USB 2.0, SD card reader2 USB 2.0, SD card reader
ExpansionNoneNone
NetworkingEthernet, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi, BluetoothEthernet, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
Optical driveNoneNone

The 1008HA offers a fairly standard set of ports and connections, lacking only the ExpressCard slot we've seen on some high-end Netbooks. But bear in mind that all the ports are hidden behind hinged plastic doors, so to even plug in a USB key, you'll have to flip open one of them. The tiny, angled Ethernet jack is impressive--you should try plugging a cable in at least once to see how it works.

Using Intel's N280 Atom CPU, the system was minimally faster in our iTunes encoding test than Netbooks with the slightly slower N270 version of the ubiquitous Atom. Performance in other tests was in line with other Netbooks, and overall we have yet to meet an Atom-powered Netbook that vastly outperformed or underperformed the pack. The basic rule of thumb is that for basic tasks such as world processing, Web surfing, and e-mail, an Atom Netbook is more than adequate, as long as you keep your expectations modest.

Like the MacBook Air, the 1008HA has a nonremovable battery--something that rubs some users the wrong way, but we've never been particularly troubled by nonremovable batteries. The benefit is that a larger battery can be custom-molded to the chassis, instead of the standard three-cell battery typical in a thinner Netbook. While it can't match the six-plus hours we've gotten from Netbooks with massive six-cell batteries, such as Asus' own 1000HE, we got an impressive 4 hours and 1 minute from the 1008HA in our video playback battery drain test. Asus also includes its Super Hybrid Engine feature in the system, which is essentially a series of power-saving presets to further extend battery life. These are mostly power consumption tweaks one could perform individually, but it's handy to have them all in one place.

Asus covers its laptops with a standard, one-year parts-and-labor warranty, and it offers online Web-based help and a toll-free phone number. The company's support Web site has improved over the past few years, and includes easy to find driver downloads and FAQs. One nice extra is a 30-day warranty on dead or stuck pixels in the display, giving you some time to find pixel problems.

Multimedia multitasking test
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)

Jalbum photo conversion test
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)

Apple iTunes encoding test
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)

Video playback battery drain test (in minutes)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)

Source: reviews.cnet.com

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