The Silicon Underground
  Welcome to Dave Farquhar's Silicon Underground Monday, November 23 2009 @ 11:23 AM CST  
Theme Changer
Change the look of the site by selecting a theme below:

What's New
STORIES
No new stories

COMMENTS last 48 hrs
  • Why don't wins co...

  • LINKS last 2 wks
    No recent new links

    Google Ads

    User Functions
    Username:

    Password:

    Don't have an account yet? Sign up as a New User

    Firefox


    First impressions: HP Mini 110   
    Sunday, September 27 2009 @ 01:15 PM CDT
    By David L. Farquhar

    I spent a few hours last night with an HP Mini 110 1012NR. It's a model with a 16 GB solid state drive (no spinning mechanical hard drive) and Windows XP.

    My biggest beef is the keyboard. It's undersized, and I can't touch type on it. Try it out before you buy one.

    The rest of the system isn't bad, but there are some things you'll want to do with it.

    The system acted weird until I removed Norton Antivirus 2009. By weird, I'm talking not staying on the network, filesystem errors, chkdsk running on reboot, and enough other goofiness that I was ready to take the thing back as defective. The system stabilized as soon as I removed Norton Antivirus, and stayed stable after I installed ESET NOD32.

    The system also ran a lot faster.

    Don't believe the hype about Norton Antivirus 2009. Use ESET NOD32. This is the second HP laptop in a month that's given me Norton Antivirus-related problems.

    McAfee is better, but only sufficiently better to use if your ISP is giving it to you for free. I still think NOD32 is worth the $40 it costs. The Atom CPU in the Mini 110 feels like a Pentium 4 with NOD32 installed. It feels like a Pentium II or 3 with something else installed.

    The SSD isn't a barn burner. I have OCZ Vertex drives in my other PCs, and this one doesn't measure up the Vertex. Reads are pretty quick, but writes can be a bit slow. Windows boots in about 30 seconds. Firefox loads in about five. Word and Excel 2000 load in about a second.

    So it's not bad. But an OCZ Vertex would be a nice upgrade. Drop it in, use it for the OS and applications, and use the stock 16 GB drive for data.

    A memory upgrade would also be worthwhile. With the stock 1 GB, it's hitting the pagefile to the tune of 400 MB.

    Unfortunately, to really make the computer sing, you're looking at spending $200 in upgrades ($40 for NOD32, $40 for 2 GB of RAM, and $120 for an OCZ Vertex). Spread it out over the life of the machine and it wouldn't be so bad though. And you'll be paying $40 a year for antivirus no matter what you use.

    The build quality is typical HP. I have lots of aged HP and Compaq equipment that's still going strong. I don't get rid of HP stuff because it breaks, I get rid of it because it's so hopelessly obsolete as to be useless. I hesitate to buy from anyone else, except Asus. And Asus, of course, is HP's main motherboard supplier.

    If you can get used to the keyboard, I think the Mini 110 is a good machine. It weighs 2 pounds and is scarcely larger than a standard hardcover book, so it fits almost anywhere. And having an SSD, there isn't much that can fail. The battery will eventually fail, and probably the AC adapter will too, but I think other than that, one of these computers could last 20 years, assuming it would still be useful for anything then.

      [ Views: 524 ]  


    First impressions: HP Mini 110 | 1 comments | Create New Account
    The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
    First impressions: HP Mini 110
    Authored by: DaveF on Sunday, September 27 2009 @ 04:57 PM CDT
    One more thing: Run SSDTweaker on it. XP was designed for hard drives, not SSDs, so some things it does by default are self-defeating or, arguably, harmful on SSDs.

    While the jury is still out on what exactly constitutes the proper care and feeding of SSDs, and my gut feeling is that SSDTweaker isn't 100% correct either, its defaults are undeniably better than Windows' defaults. Run it on an SSD-equipped Mini, and you'll see increased performance.

    And while I'm sure I'll get creamed for saying this, I believe that defragmenting the drive when you're done with the system build, and then about once every year or two from there on out will gain you some benefits. While the drive itself sees minimal harm from fragmentation, the filesystem is another story. Defragmenting too frequently will almost certainly shorten an SSD's life expectancy, so it's better to do it too little than to do it too often. Once every year or two, or whenever you reinstall Windows, seems like a good balance.

    [ Reply to This ]

    What's Related
  • More by DaveF
  • More from Hardware

  • Story Options
  • Mail Story to a Friend
  • Printable Story Format


  • Calendar
    November 2009
    SuMoTuWeThFrSa
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10
    11
    12
    13
    14
    15
    16
    17
    18
    19
    20
    21
    22
    23
    24
    25
    26
    27
    28
    29
    30
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    Click on any day to see postings and events for that date.

    Referrals

    Top 10 by Comments
    Story TitleComments
    Cheap laptops from Sotec 253
    An untrustworthy vendor 164
    Upgrading an eMachine 125
    eMachine upgrade advice 99
    Why I dislike Microsoft 51
    Upgrade diary: Gateway G6-400 35
    And we're live 30
    The day after the Columbia 22
    How to pray 22
    CD-ROM troubleshooting under Windows 9x 20

    Top 10 Read
    Story TitleViews
    eMachine upgrade advice 74333
    Upgrading an eMachine 63083
    How to view a blg file in Windows 2000 50612
    Cheap laptops from Sotec 32796
    Upgrade diary: Compaq Presario 7360 19997
    Upgrade diary: Gateway G6-400 19874
    CD-ROM troubleshooting under Windows 9x 15549
    Finding an open-source alternative to Ghost 14292
    Big trouble 13815
    Salary cap? Baseball needs something 11798

    Topics
    Home
    Apache (2)
    Baseball (63)
    Book reviews (2)
    Business (1)
    Christianity (57)
    Cooking (1)
    Copyright (16)
    Curmudgeonry (1)
    Design (7)
    DOS (6)
    Games (4)
    Genealogy (11)
    General (507)
    Hardware (168)
    Health (13)
    Human Interest (9)
    Humor/Satire (19)
    Investing (4)
    Journalism (1)
    Linux (93)
    Macintosh (22)
    Model Building (3)
    Music (33)
    net.culture (40)
    Personal (88)
    Photography (6)
    Politics (3)
    Retro Computing (26)
    Saving money (72)
    Servers and Networking (18)
    Society (49)
    Software (55)
    Spam (13)
    St. Louis (23)
    This weblog (14)
    Toy trains (74)
    Troubleshooting (7)
    Useless Trivia (1)
    Vendors (6)
    Video (21)
    Viruses (12)
    Windows (120)
    Writing (16)

    Older Stories
    Wednesday 30-Sep
  • 401(K) Paperwork (0)

  • Sunday 27-Sep
  • First impressions: HP Mini 110 (1)

  • Saturday 26-Sep
  • Getting more screen real estate in Firefox (0)

  • Wednesday 23-Sep
  • Barfy. (4)

  • Monday 21-Sep
  • Why I quit my job (2)

  • Saturday 12-Sep
  • Slimming down Windows XP for SSDs and nettops (0)

  • Thursday 10-Sep
  • And... bailing out. (3)

  • Friday 04-Sep
  • End of the innocence (0)

  • Monday 31-Aug
  • Installing Windows off USB (1)

  • Friday 21-Aug
  • Diving into real estate (0)

  • Who's Online
    Guest Users: 7

    Syndicate!
    Get your RSS/RDF fix here.

    List of all stories
    Click here for a list of all the entries on this site


    Created this page in 0.91 seconds


     Copyright © 2009 Dave Farquhar's Silicon Underground
     All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.

    Powered by GL 1.3.x