- Jun 16, 2007
- 3,102
- 24
- 81
I got a Samsung Ativ Smart PC 500T tablet with the keyboard on Christmas eve. And have played with it for just over a day now. Seems to be a good tablet/netbook, has some issues, but satisfied over all.
Very happy with the look of the screen. Resolution is a bit low at 1366x768, but since the desktop portion doesn't scale as well, I find the resolution to be ideal for working with desktop apps without the UI getting too small. Text looks reasonably good. Samsung also included 5 display modes you can toggle between, but I find the default to be ideal. The screen is nice and bright, I just leave mine at 40% brightness and that's plenty indoors. And it's bright enough to take outside too.
I love the keyboard, but unimpressed with the keyboard dock. I find typing on this to be quite easy. It's a relief since I had a 10.1 inch TF300 and that was a disaster to type on. The keys feel good and responsive, the spacing is nice. I don't find myself fumbling over keys, think I've only accidentally hit the track pad twice. For it's price, $130, and everyone else is including a battery, I'm disappointed Samsung didn't include a battery also. An HDMI and SD port on the keyboard would have been nice too (tablet has micro HDMI and micro SD).
I want to slap the Samsung employee that thought a glossy plastic back was a good choice for a tablet. I have zero complaints about the choice of plastic. But why couldn't they include some sort of texture like the Nexus tablets? After using the tablet a while, it starts to get really slippery.
It seems Samsung went really cheap on the wifi. 65Mbps maximum connection, so it's just single channel. Supports both 2.4GHz and 5GHz. I had a lot of problems connecting and staying connected to my 5GHz access point. I don't think it's the 5GHz but I have 40mhz bandwidth enabled on that band. It was a problem with my Nexus 4 and I suspect a problem with this tablet too. I switched to the 2.4GHz channel with 20mhz bandwidth and it seems to be doing fine there. Kinda disappointed my Kindle Fire HD has much better wifi than this much more expensive Windows 8 tablet. Seems like an odd corner to cut to save a buck.
Performance was pretty choppy the the first day. Had me a little worried. I wasn't expecting laptop performance from this little Atom. I realized I was making a sacrifice for all day battery life. But was still a bit concerned with what I saw the first hours of using it. Fortunately the second day it seems to have smoothed out. I had to install a lot of updates yesterday, including some Windows updates and I got more Windows updates this morning. Also I noticed the Microsoft malware scanner running in the background yesterday. So it seems like it needed about a day to get things up to date and settled in.
I installed Office 2010, runs smoothly. Also loaded Steam and installed Torchlight. Tried to play that without the keyboard, then realized it was a bad idea. But the game ran smooth, was able to move my character around without lag. Chrome unfortunately still seems a bit laggy. IE is very smooth though.
Battery life has been excellent so far. I read a complaint somewhere that the tablet wouldn't sleep well with the keyboard dock (this was about a month ago). So I unplugged the power and left it in the keyboard over night. Checked on it this morning and it lost only 5% power after 9 hours, so it seems to sleep just fine with the keyboard now.
I'm happy with the tablet. Though I think if I had more patience, I might have waited for the HP Envy X2. It's got an aluminum body (and so I hope would slip less) and a better looking dock with a battery.
Seems like many of the other tablets from Lenovo, HP, ASUS, and Dell are coming in late January. But I didn't really want to wait another month and then risk the possibility of another delay. So it was either this or the Acer W510. And that looked nice, but I wanted a tablet big enough that I could type comfortably on it's keyboard too.
I'll key the tablet (no choice, Amazon will charge me a 15% restocking fee if I return it). But I think I might try to sell this early after more Windows 8 tablets come out. I can live with the wifi, speakers, and no keyboard battery, But the slick plastic back is hard to live with.
PS.
Forgot to mention the speakers. Having front facing speakers is nice. However they are not very loud and sometimes hard to hear. Wish they were a bit louder. It kinda reminds me of the Nexus 7 speaker in the way both are pretty weak. With Android there's an app you can use to boost the speaker, I'm hoping there will be someway to do the same with the this Windows 8 tablet.
Very happy with the look of the screen. Resolution is a bit low at 1366x768, but since the desktop portion doesn't scale as well, I find the resolution to be ideal for working with desktop apps without the UI getting too small. Text looks reasonably good. Samsung also included 5 display modes you can toggle between, but I find the default to be ideal. The screen is nice and bright, I just leave mine at 40% brightness and that's plenty indoors. And it's bright enough to take outside too.
I love the keyboard, but unimpressed with the keyboard dock. I find typing on this to be quite easy. It's a relief since I had a 10.1 inch TF300 and that was a disaster to type on. The keys feel good and responsive, the spacing is nice. I don't find myself fumbling over keys, think I've only accidentally hit the track pad twice. For it's price, $130, and everyone else is including a battery, I'm disappointed Samsung didn't include a battery also. An HDMI and SD port on the keyboard would have been nice too (tablet has micro HDMI and micro SD).
I want to slap the Samsung employee that thought a glossy plastic back was a good choice for a tablet. I have zero complaints about the choice of plastic. But why couldn't they include some sort of texture like the Nexus tablets? After using the tablet a while, it starts to get really slippery.
It seems Samsung went really cheap on the wifi. 65Mbps maximum connection, so it's just single channel. Supports both 2.4GHz and 5GHz. I had a lot of problems connecting and staying connected to my 5GHz access point. I don't think it's the 5GHz but I have 40mhz bandwidth enabled on that band. It was a problem with my Nexus 4 and I suspect a problem with this tablet too. I switched to the 2.4GHz channel with 20mhz bandwidth and it seems to be doing fine there. Kinda disappointed my Kindle Fire HD has much better wifi than this much more expensive Windows 8 tablet. Seems like an odd corner to cut to save a buck.
Performance was pretty choppy the the first day. Had me a little worried. I wasn't expecting laptop performance from this little Atom. I realized I was making a sacrifice for all day battery life. But was still a bit concerned with what I saw the first hours of using it. Fortunately the second day it seems to have smoothed out. I had to install a lot of updates yesterday, including some Windows updates and I got more Windows updates this morning. Also I noticed the Microsoft malware scanner running in the background yesterday. So it seems like it needed about a day to get things up to date and settled in.
I installed Office 2010, runs smoothly. Also loaded Steam and installed Torchlight. Tried to play that without the keyboard, then realized it was a bad idea. But the game ran smooth, was able to move my character around without lag. Chrome unfortunately still seems a bit laggy. IE is very smooth though.
Battery life has been excellent so far. I read a complaint somewhere that the tablet wouldn't sleep well with the keyboard dock (this was about a month ago). So I unplugged the power and left it in the keyboard over night. Checked on it this morning and it lost only 5% power after 9 hours, so it seems to sleep just fine with the keyboard now.
I'm happy with the tablet. Though I think if I had more patience, I might have waited for the HP Envy X2. It's got an aluminum body (and so I hope would slip less) and a better looking dock with a battery.
Seems like many of the other tablets from Lenovo, HP, ASUS, and Dell are coming in late January. But I didn't really want to wait another month and then risk the possibility of another delay. So it was either this or the Acer W510. And that looked nice, but I wanted a tablet big enough that I could type comfortably on it's keyboard too.
I'll key the tablet (no choice, Amazon will charge me a 15% restocking fee if I return it). But I think I might try to sell this early after more Windows 8 tablets come out. I can live with the wifi, speakers, and no keyboard battery, But the slick plastic back is hard to live with.
PS.
Forgot to mention the speakers. Having front facing speakers is nice. However they are not very loud and sometimes hard to hear. Wish they were a bit louder. It kinda reminds me of the Nexus 7 speaker in the way both are pretty weak. With Android there's an app you can use to boost the speaker, I'm hoping there will be someway to do the same with the this Windows 8 tablet.
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