Samsung N210: A Touch of Class

At the end of the day, the insides of the Samsung N210 aren't likely to inspire, and they weren't supposed to. Netbooks just aren't exciting kit where hardware and performance are concerned, though their purpose may need to be made more explicitly clear. Samsung loads the N210 with all kinds of irritating bloatware (hello McAfee!) and utilities that it just doesn't need; the hardware inside is already beleagured enough without having to suffer through loading all that extra crap. They also include their own instant-on software and make sure you know about it with a sticker attached to the palm rest that threatens to take the entire palm rest with it if you try to remove it. That software is a cute idea, but doesn't take the place of a full Windows installation.

As an aside, I'd like to mention the N210 was benched with its stock configuration but also tested using Windows 7 Home Premium and 2GB of DDR2. Bumping up to 2GB can definitely improve overall system performance, and the anemic Intel GMA 3150 on board the Atom N450 is able to handle Aero Glass beautifully. There's a convincing case for using Home Premium instead of Starter on netbooks, where the 3150 can handle some of the brunt of the Windows GDI, and at the very least Aero makes it more attractive.

What we're left with as far as the N210 goes is really a matter of aesthetics. After all, battery life is on par with the competition and performance is as expected. But in terms of looks, the N210 really does shine. It sports an excellent (albeit quirky) netbook keyboard that's fairly easy to get accustomed to, and the use of matte plastics across the entire shell is much appreciated. Whether or not a white netbook is your cup of tea or not comes down to personal preference, but Samsung has at least assembled a sleek-looking machine that combines practicality and personality in way where neither overpowers the other. If you're in the market for a netbook and the slightly cheaper-looking, glossier Eee PCs aren't doing it for you, the N210 may be just what you need.

Application Performance and Battery Life
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  • InternetGeek - Wednesday, July 28, 2010 - link

    I have an HP Mini 210. It's got exactly the same hardware configuration than this Samsung. I'm running Windows 7 64bit, VIsual Studio 2010, SQL Server 2010, and the usual set of desktop applications 'must-have' (office, paint.net, metrotwit, etc). I expanded the the RAM to it's max of 2GB. However, I don't find it too slow. It would be better if it had an SSD but it would actually cost more than the netbook itself.

    These netbooks would be a no-brainer to buy if they came with bluetooth and wireless n. I don't include a 3g modem because now I tether to my phone (Nexus One) and don't have to pay for that function :)....
  • vol7ron - Wednesday, July 28, 2010 - link

    I'm getting to the point where I'm going to be adding another SSD to my desktop.

    I'm curious what the performance gain would be with a netbook/laptop like this, if anything noticeable.

    I wouldn't normally buy a new ~$300 computer and then pay ~$250 to upgrade one component, but this SSD (x25m g2) is getting old and the new ones on they way will be worth purchasing. I'm trying to determine if it's worth cleaning the SSD and putting it in a netbook, or would it be worth having more solid state space in my desktop? Is the Atom even powerful enough to demand higher performance from its resources?
  • flgt - Wednesday, July 28, 2010 - link

    I would think that a netbook would really benefit from a value class SSD, although even they seem outrageously overpriced compared to complete $300-$400 system. I’m willing to be that a lot of the sluggish feel is from waiting for the anemic 5400 rpm HDD to load programs into memory. I was on a budget so I only upgraded to a X25V, but it has been the best computer upgrade I’ve ever made. I can’t wait for the 80 GB models later this year.
  • Dustin Sklavos - Wednesday, July 28, 2010 - link

    The problem is that the majority of netbooks don't even allow you to actually replace the hard drive. I actually tried to get photos of the inside of the N210, but despite removing every screw from the bottom panel it refused to pop open. I could see the hard drive in there, but be damned if I could actually replace it.

    So yes, changing out the drive for an SSD may help, but that's operating on the assumption that you can even change out the drive to begin with, along with the assumption that you're willing to void the warranty to do it.
  • JarredWalton - Wednesday, July 28, 2010 - link

    My own experience with netbooks suggests that the Atom CPU is a huge bottleneck. When you have a CULV laptop with a 5400RPM load a game up in 60 seconds, then have an Atom netbook with a similar 5400RPM drive take three times as long to start a game, I'm pretty sure it's the CPU and RAM that's slowing things down. Really, Atom is state of the art performance from around 2003. Seven years is an eternity in computers, and just like slapping an HD 5870 into an old Athlon 64 system won't provide a good gaming experience, an SSD with Atom is only going to be marginally faster in a few HDD limited situations.

    Anyway, some people are fine with the performance, but I suspect most of those people don't know (or what to know) about CULV or other ultraportable options.
  • mino - Thursday, July 29, 2010 - link

    Are you joking ?

    My as-cheap-as-it-gets Athlon XP 1700+ from 2003 would eat any netbook for breakfast.

    Remember, 2003 wast the year of Arhlon 3200+, Pentium 3.2EE and Radeon 9800 ...

    State-of-the-art 2000/2001, I might agree.

    Atom might be competitive with Athlon 1.4 in SSE2 multimedia encoding. But it will not stand a chance in general purpose x86/SSE stuff.

    Think 1GHz PentiumIII/Athlon with Geforce Ti 200. That's about it.
  • strikeback03 - Thursday, July 29, 2010 - link

    Not at all a direct comparison, but Anandtech testing showed the original Atom was roughly equivalent to a 1.2GHz Pentium M. My 1.8GHz Pentium M was faster than the Athlon XP 3000+ that was in my desktop at the time, so Atom at 1.66GHz might be in the same ballpark as your 1700+
  • Dustin Sklavos - Thursday, July 29, 2010 - link

    I know we have independent testing that suggests Atom was close to the Pentium M, but...

    I had a Sony TR2A a lifetime ago with a 1GHz Pentium M, and that notebook was an absolute joy to use. 1GB of DDR, 1GHz Pentium M, slow-as-hell 1.8" hard drive...but it was far more responsive than I've ever felt Atom to be.

    In raw number-crunching Atom may be faster, but I get the feeling it's nowhere near as agile.
  • strikeback03 - Thursday, August 5, 2010 - link

    My only use of Atom has been my carputer, which uses an Atom 330. In that application it works quite well, the only lag I experience is when opening large directories of songs within my front end program. I'm not sure if that is due to the lack of processing power to poorly written software. But I can see it having issues when trying to do more difficult things.
  • Computer Bottleneck - Wednesday, July 28, 2010 - link

    Considering the modest single core/1 GB RAM/5200 Rpm HDD I was amazed when Best Buy told me none of the netbooks they sell come with the original OS install disk.

    Granted these machines don't come with DVD drives stock, but many people still have access to external optical drives for clean install purposes.

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