Thursday, July 28, 2011

Samsung RV510 laptop review


Samsung RV510 mainframe has a ability for designing excellent-looking laptops, and the Samsung RV510 mainframe continues the tradition. The glossy black lid, and silver and black colour machinate used on the keyboard and wrist rest, give it a more premium look than you’d I don’t know guess at this price.
Samsung RV510 laptop

Samsung RV510 mainframe


Like Samsung RV510 mainframe affair-all ears P530, the Samsung RV510 mainframe uses a keyboard with a cross between an isolated and traditional design. It has the wide, flat keys of an isolated keyboard but they’re more tightly grouped together, like on a traditional keyboard. The results are brilliant. The keyboard has very near no flex in the middle and the keys have a honest amount of journey and so feel quick to type on.
The describe is excellent too. Pretty much all the keys are full-sized and Samsung has also found room to fit in dropped cursor keys and a full numerical keypad. The trackpad is tiny in comparison to that of some additional 15-inch Samsung RV510 mainframe, but the not glossy go up helps your fiddle with slide simple across the go up and the two chrome-refined buttons are enjoyably responsive.
Samsung RV510 mainframe has gone with a cover that has a not glossy, rather than glossy, end, but this is no terrible business, as the not glossy coating helps to cut down hugely on reflections, building Samsung RV510 mainframe more comfortable to use for prolonged periods. Thankfulness to the LED backlight, the cover is very bright, which in turn helps colours to really make an impact. Viewing angles are excellent too by the ordinary of fiscal statement laptops. The resolution of 1,366×768 pixels isn’t all that wonderful, although text, images and videos still look reasonably astute.
Samsung RV510 laptop
The wide, flat keys make the Samsung RV510 mainframe keyboard comfortable to type on.
Samsung hasn’t been overly generous with the choice of ports on place forward. For example, you have to make do with just a VGA socket, as there’s a blanking plate where the HDMI socket should be. You also only get three USB ports, and the Samsung RV510 mainframe lacks an eSATA port or an ExpressCard slot. There’s no Bluetooth but 802.11n Wi-Fi is built-in.
On the storage front, the Samsung RV510 mainframe is more impressive. It has a fantastic 640GB hard drive, which provides loads of room for storing media records like movies and photos. There’s also an SD card slot on the front lip and a DVD writer tucked away on the right-hand side.

No motivating force

To keep the price of the mainframe down, Samsung has used a dual-core Intel Pentium T4500 processor clocked at 2.3GHz, rather than one of Intel’s privileged-spec Core i3 chips. The processor is backed up by a healthy 4GB of RAM and, thankfulness to the fact that Samsung has gone with the 64-bit version of Windows 7 Home Premium, all of this reminiscence is addressable by the OS.
Sorry to say, the mainframe refused to complete our PCMark05 benchmark text. In use, it was pretty evident that the machine lacked some oomph when faced with more demanding applications, although it was fine for day-to-day responsibilities like emailing, word processing, browsing the Web or surveillance programmes on BBC iPlayer.
Rather than opting for diplomatic graphics, Samsung has instead wedged with plain ancient integrated Intel GMA graphics. Integrated graphics never notch well in the 3DMark06benchmark test. The RV510 clocked up a meek notch of just 904, which is of poorer quality than some netbooks.
That means you should toss any thoughts you have of being able to play newer sports meeting out of the dialogue box, although you may be able to play much grown-up 3D titles. The graphics processor facility impeccably well, even if, when it comes to more mundane responsibilities, like high-definition record decoding. We had no problems playing HD streams from BBC iPlayer, for example, or high-definition movies in the MKV plot.
The less commanding processor and graphics also help the mainframe place in a clad performance when it comes to array life. In the most intensive Array Eater test, it kept chugging away for 1 hour and 26 summary, which isn’t terrible for a 15.6-inch machine. The Array Eater test simulates the most terrible-case scenario for array life, so, under real-planet circumstances, the mainframe should last much longer away from the mains.

End Samsung RV510 mainframe

The Samsung RV510 is a excellent-looking machine, with an impressive cover and keyboard. Its processor lacks grunt, even if, and its 3D performance is very poor. Its asking price at the initiation makes it seem like a pretty excellent deal, but it starts to look less tempting next to the likes of the cheaper and quicker Acer Wish 5741.

Samsung RV510 mainframe

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