Netbook question

BrandonT

Member
Feb 23, 2011
102
7
81
I have had the 1001P (basically same as 1015) for about 11 months and I still love it. I have had no problem simultaneously browsing the web, having a .pdf open, and Scottrade streaming quotes. No problem with standard def Youtube. As long as it isn't HD it doesn't look like anything you said will cause you an issue. BTW I upgraded to 2Gb right when I got it, so I have no idea how 1Gb would be, although from all I've read going to 2Gb was a must do.

All that and it can fit in a full backpack, sit on an airplane tray table, and run 8+ hours on the stock battery! Used within it's capabilities and strengths, it is way more useful to me than a normal laptop. Especially on the portability and battery life.

Having said that...if I were in the market today I would probably get something with AMD E350. For me personally it would be a tradeoff between more graphics power (for sure can play HD) and losing battery life. Supposedly the E350 can get 6+ hours and that is pretty good for my needs, although I will wait until I see if large capacity batteries are available before making a decision. More graphics/compute is handy, but a lot of battery life when traveling can be VERY useful.
 

hans007

Lifer
Feb 1, 2000
20,212
18
81
get an x120e. it has hdmi. and its black (or red).

even without any of the crazier deals, with the 10% coupons that are always at lenovo its just about $400 for a dual core one.
 

frostedflakes

Diamond Member
Mar 1, 2005
7,925
1
81
1015T is a pretty nice netbook. It benchmarks similar to Atom N450, is slightly faster in single threaded tasks but Atom pulls ahead a bit in dual threaded stuff thanks to HyperThreading. Subjectively, though, I thought the 1015T felt quite a bit faster than other N450 netbooks I've used. Maybe this was due to Aero running smoother thanks to the better IGP the 1015T has, not sure. Pretty nice netbook for the money, only downside is underwhelming battery life, about 4.5-5 hours with the brightness turned down just browsing the web.

Won't have any problem with Pandora or YouTube videos, even up to 1080p. Not sure how it does with Netflix, though, I have no idea what technology they use for streaming. If it supports offloading video decoding to the IGP, it should work fine. If the CPU has to do all the decoding, you should be able to play standard def movies, but the V105 is probably way too weak to handle HD vids on its own.
 

BrandonT

Member
Feb 23, 2011
102
7
81
Let me amend my post. I thought the 1015P had the single core N450/N455. Since it has the dual core D550 and you are already giving up battery life for it, get the AMD E350 based machines. Superior performance with slightly better battery life than dual core Atom. I have not seen it in a 10" (which I really like) but the Lenova mentioned above is 11.5" I think and so is the HP DM1Z.
 

flensr

Member
May 28, 2009
84
1
71
high def netflix will require a good cpu and vid chip. I built up a previous gen htpc using a dual core socket 939 cpu and a reasonably up to date AMD low power vid card, and netflix would drop to lower definition until I found the exact right combination of drivers and codecs.

Don't waste money on a single core atom... Go for dual core, or at least ION chipset.

Last, for predicting whether a netbook is actually USABLE, there is no substitute for putting your hands on one and seeing how you like the keyboard and mousepad. Go to best buy or any other store that has a few of those things side by side, and see which keyboard you like. I think this is just as important as any other consideration because for any particular price range, the rest of the features are nearly identical. All the single core, dual core, or ION netbooks will cost within about $50 of each other, and sometimes the only difference in price is based entirely on the battery size. So the distinguishing features are really just how the keyboard feels, and whether they put access panels on the bottom so you can swap out ram and hard drive easily. And yes, you care about that because if you care about performance in a netbook, the main things you can do to help that out is to add more memory and put in a faster hard drive. The WDC caviar black I put into my 9" eeepc netbook made a significant difference, and with 2gb of ram it actually runs win7 fairly nicely.
 

JWade

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
3,273
197
106
www.heatware.com
Delloulet has the M101z (single core k125 1.7ghz amd chip) in black for 339, there is currently a 15% off coupon on laptops bringing it down to 289. it has hdmi out on it too. Though it is not a fusion netbook, it is way more powerful than an atom netbook.

I have one and my battery lasts between 4 to 5 hours on average.
 

AsusReview

Junior Member
Feb 22, 2011
11
0
0
www.asusreview.net
I've used netbooks to stream and decode 1080p through the HDMI out and natively on the screen. It works great provided you can be sure to get hardware acceleration to work. If not it's guaranteed to stutter. The easiest program I got to work was MPC-HC (media player classic - home cinema).