i have owned one of these for about four months now.
i bought it because it was the smallest physical shall that contained a 10" screen, as this is what matters to me in a netbook above all else; diminutive size.
i can recommend it to all except netbook gamers who might find the vertical screen resolution of 576 pixels an impediment.
"At £249, it's competitively priced and worthy of consideration. If you need extra battery life, consider the similarly specced Samsung NC10, with double the battery life, for only £50 more."
£50 represents an increase of over 20%... on the other hand, I guess it's the cost of a good 3 course meal with wine...
Thought the justification of 16:10 format for PC monitors was that you could display a 16:9 video fullscreen and have enough pixels left over to show a status bar/control buttons underneath.
For those of us who work on public transport this is actually a must-have feature. My HP screen has nearly 180 degrees visibility which means that all people sitting next to me can read it. I would gladly change it for a screen with under 30 degree viewing angle.
Is that a general statement and a limitation of Linux, or just this netbook?
How about doing a round-up of 3G services? I quite like the look of these netbooks, but I ma not going to buy one if it will cost me £50 a month in service charges. I'll run XP if I have to.
"PC Card slot - does anyone use these any more?" - yes, of course. For 3G cards, much more convenient than USB dongles, as they do not stick out this much!
I've been using the S10e for about two weeks now, it's about the same as all the other netbooks on the market. I find the build quality and keyboard feel slightly better than most models. OSX runs a treat on it as well, bar the wired ethernet.
.. this company inherited the smallest navigation device around, ie the pointing stick (aka the nipple) and they don't use on a compact computer. Smells of a re-badge methinks.
I was really hoping that with the Lenovo offering, we'd finally have a netbook with what seems the most logical of input devices - those little red thumbsticks/mini-joysticks from the Thinkpad series; they take no space whatsoever, and while non-technical users do take a little while to get used to them, they're faster and much more precise (try selecting a specific pixel or drawing a straight line accross the screen, not to mention every-day operations like dragging icons etc on a pad). I can't believe there's a prohibitive cost or structural problem with placing them in netbooks - so why is it that none of them have it, even as a secondary option?
First company that produces a netbook with one of those has my money; otherwise, I just can't see myself spending actual cash on a device with a tiny, imprecise, aggravating input method that basically forces me to install a mouse :(
It's just that splashtop doesn't have support for 3G dongles built in. Most dongles work fine under linux, but depending on the dongle and the distro you might need to get the helper app from here:
"Who decided to swap the Ctrl and Fn keys?"= Nobody. This is the absolutely normal layout at all IBM / Lenovo keyboards.. like the one i'm typing now...
The latest Ubuntu works a treat with every 3G dongle I've tried, even the Split-Mode ones. I was merely saying that SplashTop didn't support it - which is a big down side.
As far as the lack of nipple - remember that this is not a ThinkPad branded laptop - it's a Lenovo :) Personally, I love the nipples and would have liked to have seen one!
Lenovo IdeaPad S10e netbook
REMF
good review - great netbook #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 15:36 GMT
i have owned one of these for about four months now.
i bought it because it was the smallest physical shall that contained a 10" screen, as this is what matters to me in a netbook above all else; diminutive size.
i can recommend it to all except netbook gamers who might find the vertical screen resolution of 576 pixels an impediment.
operation flashpoint from GoG works great tho.
Anonymous Coward
Value #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 15:36 GMT
"At £249, it's competitively priced and worthy of consideration. If you need extra battery life, consider the similarly specced Samsung NC10, with double the battery life, for only £50 more."
£50 represents an increase of over 20%... on the other hand, I guess it's the cost of a good 3 course meal with wine...
Anonymous Coward
why 16:10 and not 16:9 #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 15:36 GMT
Thought the justification of 16:10 format for PC monitors was that you could display a 16:9 video fullscreen and have enough pixels left over to show a status bar/control buttons underneath.
Anton Ivanov
Small range of viewing angles is actually good #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 15:36 GMT
For those of us who work on public transport this is actually a must-have feature. My HP screen has nearly 180 degrees visibility which means that all people sitting next to me can read it. I would gladly change it for a screen with under 30 degree viewing angle.
Anonymous Coward
No 3G #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 15:36 GMT
Is that a general statement and a limitation of Linux, or just this netbook?
How about doing a round-up of 3G services? I quite like the look of these netbooks, but I ma not going to buy one if it will cost me £50 a month in service charges. I'll run XP if I have to.
Bronek Kozicki
PC Card and 3G? #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 15:36 GMT
"PC Card slot - does anyone use these any more?" - yes, of course. For 3G cards, much more convenient than USB dongles, as they do not stick out this much!
Daniel Barnes
Fair review #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 15:36 GMT
I've been using the S10e for about two weeks now, it's about the same as all the other netbooks on the market. I find the build quality and keyboard feel slightly better than most models. OSX runs a treat on it as well, bar the wired ethernet.
Funky Gibbon
I don't get it ... #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 15:36 GMT
.. this company inherited the smallest navigation device around, ie the pointing stick (aka the nipple) and they don't use on a compact computer. Smells of a re-badge methinks.
Nikola
Little red thumbsticks? #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 15:36 GMT
I was really hoping that with the Lenovo offering, we'd finally have a netbook with what seems the most logical of input devices - those little red thumbsticks/mini-joysticks from the Thinkpad series; they take no space whatsoever, and while non-technical users do take a little while to get used to them, they're faster and much more precise (try selecting a specific pixel or drawing a straight line accross the screen, not to mention every-day operations like dragging icons etc on a pad). I can't believe there's a prohibitive cost or structural problem with placing them in netbooks - so why is it that none of them have it, even as a secondary option?
First company that produces a netbook with one of those has my money; otherwise, I just can't see myself spending actual cash on a device with a tiny, imprecise, aggravating input method that basically forces me to install a mouse :(
Anonymous Coward
@AC No 3G #
Posted Wednesday 4th March 2009 21:17 GMT
It's just that splashtop doesn't have support for 3G dongles built in. Most dongles work fine under linux, but depending on the dongle and the distro you might need to get the helper app from here:
http://www.draisberghof.de/usb_modeswitch/
dee mak
Who decided to swap the Ctrl and Fn keys? #
Posted Saturday 7th March 2009 11:05 GMT
"Who decided to swap the Ctrl and Fn keys?"= Nobody. This is the absolutely normal layout at all IBM / Lenovo keyboards.. like the one i'm typing now...
Spode
3G #
Posted Sunday 8th March 2009 00:44 GMT
Hi Chaps,
The latest Ubuntu works a treat with every 3G dongle I've tried, even the Split-Mode ones. I was merely saying that SplashTop didn't support it - which is a big down side.
As far as the lack of nipple - remember that this is not a ThinkPad branded laptop - it's a Lenovo :) Personally, I love the nipples and would have liked to have seen one!