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Corsa Sport » Message Board » Off Day » Geek Day » Heeeelp! Mini laptop! » Post Reply
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mjw_2k2 |
posted on 11th Aug 09 at 16:25 |
ive got the asus eee pc 904ha with very good battery life, it says 6 hours on it but practically i got 5, which isnt too bad lol thats with upgrades of 2gb RAM and 250GB sata HDD and works amazing well with windows 7 RC on!!! all in all spent about £300 which is pretty low price for what ive got, basically when my laptop broke i bought it for £260 from argos then put the hdd from laptop into it and upgraded the memory also bought a usb cd drive which had a laptop size drive in it then i ripped it apart and stuck in the dvdrw from laptop then installed windows 7 and it works perfectly! | |
MarkM |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 15:09 |
quote: The NC10's keyboard isn't that much smaller than a "normal" sized laptop. | |
MarkM |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 15:08 |
The Samsung can have its RAM upgraded to 2GB very easily. | |
AndyKent |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 15:07 |
Make sure you try one first. I really wanted one but had a play in PC World and thought the keyboards were stupidly small. Given that I do type quite a lot of assignments and stuff I decided against and got a proper laptop instead for an extra £100. | |
Shell |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 13:58 |
One website is claiming the Dell 10v has 160GB of memory or whatever and saying the NC10 has 1gb? Confusion. | |
bubble |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 12:58 |
samsung nc10, or wait and get the N130 | |
MarkM |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 12:20 |
Samsung NC10 Netbook. I have one and can't fault it really. | |
_Allan_ |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 12:17 |
I think on the Samsung as well the RAM is easy to swap out and another 1GB is fairly cheap. Where as some of the others, not sure if it's the Acer ones who have to dismantle to get to the RAM. Handy if you wish to upgrade in the future. | |
Brett |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 12:14 |
I'd get the Samsung if you can stretch your budget. | |
Shell |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 12:12 |
There's a good samsung one I'm going to have a look at Allan. Does anyone know if the Dell netbooks are crap? | |
_Allan_ |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 12:10 |
The Asus and Samsungs always do well in reviews. Find one of these with the best price and memory and I'm sure it would be fit for what you want it for. | |
Shell |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 12:08 |
Right, should have mentioned. Limit of £300. Nothing ridiculous that costs the same as a normal laptop. Thank you | |
Kurt |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 12:07 |
Sony make a nice "Vaio" netbook, its £800 though :| | |
Shell |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 12:02 |
I have a normal laptop at home for all of the things a netbook wouldn't do. I'm just looking for a little one with as long a battery life as possible. Any you can recommend? I'd like one made by a company that aren't going to be entirely unhelpful if something goes wrong with it during the warranty period as I am having loads of problems with Fujitsu Siemens are the moment due to a problem with my every day laptop. | |
Brett |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 11:58 |
Netbook is smaller, usually doesnt have anything like a cdrom, floppy etc. | |
Shell |
posted on 10th Aug 09 at 11:55 |
Ok, I am a bit technically challenged so looking for a bit of help here. I know you get mini laptop affairs, and I thought they were called notebooks, but alas they may be called netbooks? I really don't know. Can someone tell me what they actually are, what difference they hold to a normal laptop and which ones are best? I really just need one for uni, note taking in lectures etc. Needs to have wireless net connection also. Thanks! |