Samsung showed off a completely new line of notebooks at CES, and we've gotten to go hands on with all of them. In addition to the refreshed Series 9 ultraportable that we saw earlier, Samsung was showing off the new Series 5 and Series 5 Ultra, the Series 7 Chronos, and the Series 7 Gamer.

The new Series 9 comes in 13" and 15" variants, compared to 11" and 13" variants for the original S9. With the S9 refresh, Samsung basically fixed every design related complaint leveled at the S9 and then slimmed the entire system down for good measure. The glossy plastic on the LCD bezel and interior of the notebook is gone, as are the hidden drop-down ports, and the gorgeous matte display panel gets a much needed bump in resolution to 1600x900. Samsung claims a 400nit brightness for both generations of the Series 9, and we measured the original at 394 nits max brightness and a 520:1 contrast ratio. The new one looks to be similarly great - if every notebook had a panel like this, we would never complain about notebook displays again. Samsung has moved the S9 over to an anodized aluminum unibody chassis (sound familiar?) allowing them to cut the weight of the 13" model to 2.5lbs (from 2.8) and reduce thickness to an anorexic half-inch. The slow selling 11"er has been dropped from the lineup, replaced by a larger 15" model. I use the term larger very loosely, as the 15"er weighs just 3.3 pounds and strikes a footprint smaller and thinner than most of the new 14" ultrabooks on display at the show. The Series 9 is slated to show up in Q2 for $1399 and 1499 price points for the 13" and 15" models, respectively, and will be sold alongside the original Series 9 systems until Q3. 

Staying with the ultraportable theme, Samsung also launched the Series 5 Ultra, a mainstream ultrabook featuring 13" and 14" models. Samsung is speccing these with the standard ultrabook fare - low voltage Core i5 processors, 4GB of memory, a 500GB hard drive with 16GB express cache, optional SSDs, and 8 hours of battery life. The express cache drive is borrowed from the Series 7 Chronos, a feature that Anand will go more in depth on in a later post.  The 14" S5 Ultra is notable for having a built-in optical drive, a rarity in the ultrabook class. Both the 13" and 14" models have matte, 300 nit 768p displays, and it's really nice to see Samsung pushing for good quality displays throughout its notebook lineup. The S5 Ultras are both relatively heavy, at 3.5lbs for the 13" and 3.95lbs for the 14". They're not heavy by normal standards, but compared to many of the other ultrabooks on display, they're definitely not light. The S5 Ultra will start at $899 for the 13"er and $949 for the 14", while the SSD option will cost you $200 on the 13" model. Both models will be available on January 30th.

The mainstream Series 5 notebook looks to be a very solid mid-range option that is set to ship when Ivy Bridge launches later this year. There are two models, a 15.6" (900p) and a 17.3" (1080p), both with matte 300-nit displays. Starting price is expected to be in the $799 range for the 15.6" model, and the spec list includes Ivy Bridge i5/i7 CPUs, Nvidia's GT650M with Optimus, up to 2TB of storage in the 17", Blu-ray, and JBL speakers. For a mid-range media oriented system, it looks to be very full featured and well specced, and given the quality of the  display, the Series 5 is definitely a notebook to look out for in the second half of this year. 

The Series 7 Chronos is a notebook that's been out since late last year in 14" and 15.6" forms, and Samsung snuck in a 17" variant at CES. The 17"er comes with a 1080p matte display with a 300nit brightness, along with IVB Core i7 quad-core CPUs, next-gen ATI graphics, JBL speakers, and the same express cache technology as the smaller S7 Chronos systems and the S5 Ultra. Pricing is expected to be in the $1500 range, and availability is slated for the Q2-Q3 timeframe. 

The Series 7 Gamer is the largest and most ostentation system that Samsung was showing off, in a variety of bright and loud colors. It's available in your choice of bright yellow, orange, and red, as well as a (slightly) more understated black. Spec-wise, it's pushing an i7 quad, AMD's HD6970M with 2GB of vRAM, JBL speakers, and the same 1080p panel as the 17" S7 Chronos. The keyboard has blue backlighting, except for the WASD keys, which are highlighted in red. The system is gargantuan in size, rivaling things like the ASUS G74 and Toshiba's Qosmio X770. It's expected to show up in Q2 for $1799, hitting the higher end of the gaming notebook market. 

Overall, Samsung seems to be making a huge push in the notebook market, and in a very short time, has become a serious player in the mobile PC space (or at least the American market, since Samsung has been pretty big in Europe and Asia for quite some time now.) We're pretty eager to get some extended time with their new notebooks and excited to see where Samsung goes from here.

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  • PAPPACLART - Sunday, January 15, 2012 - link

    I would hope samsung would sort the AMD GPU switning problem on the existing Chronos series 7 laptops. (14 and 15 inch model)

    Many members at notebook review have had problems with GPU switching that does not work. I returned my Samsung back to where I purchased it from yesterday as the HD also failed as well as the GPU switching problem. I also demonstrated to the staff on 2 display model 7 series laptops that the AMD GPU switching does not work. I would make ann intelligent guess that this problem effects most if not all the Samsung chronos models. Many consumers are probably not tech enough to realise.

    Notebookreview thread http://forum.notebookreview.com/samsung/630666-ser...
  • Sunburn74 - Sunday, January 15, 2012 - link

    Yeah I have a HP envy with a radeon 5650. It too has switching problems. However the reason is clear and the fix is pretty easy actually. Whats happening is some background program is using the GPIU at the time, you wantt o switch. With me it was GPU accelerated flash on a info/ad bar on windows live messenger. I always had the program on, the gpu (either integrated or dedicated) was always in use and so switching was a pain. I turned off win live messenger and took it off my startup list and haven't had a problem since.

    Find the background application that is holding your gpu hostage and turn it off and you'll see your problem go away.
  • B3an - Sunday, January 15, 2012 - link

    If you still want to use Messenger but without this problem, simply google blocking ads for Messenger. It's easy to do. Problem solved.
  • five_seven - Sunday, January 15, 2012 - link

    The ultrabook/laptops being shown at CES this year seem to be some of the most anticipated yet with better screens, revised features, etc. I'm still running on an emachines M6811 that weighs 7.8 lbs! Based on reviews here and some of my own research I've not been happy with many of the current mobile offerings. I mainly want around ~4 lbs or less in a 13" size with an i5 or comparable future IVB chip. Here's to hoping something out of this Samsung series or the new HP lineup fits the bill. I like what I see, though!
  • tedallen1958 - Sunday, January 15, 2012 - link

    We would have liked to have seen something new from Samsung but alas, Samsung didn't ablige. The promised Win 7 slider would have been the greatest thing in the world of tablets and truly believe they'd have sold 10 million by this time but they have failed to follow through.
  • blzd - Monday, January 16, 2012 - link

    Finally a laptop manufacturer that seems to at least be considering the type of displays being used in their lower end lineup as well.

    Now let's abolish 1366x768 from any mobile over $500, it's safe to assume that any mobile LCD using this resolution is going to be pretty garbage.
  • omaudio - Monday, January 16, 2012 - link

    The series 5 looks so perfect for me but I really want a backlit keyboard.
  • Wolfpup - Monday, January 23, 2012 - link

    An AMD GPU? That's unacceptable in a notebook with Intel CPUs until you can use AMD's normal drivers with it.

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