Posts Tagged “samsung nc10”

Here’s my first attempt at a podcast, I tried running Half-Life 2 on my Samsung NC10 Netbook, the results weren’t as bad as you would think. Check it out.

 

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If you want to install OS X (hackintosh) on your Samsung NC-10 Netbook, then you must have realised by now that neither the WiFi card nor Ethernet card inside it are compatible with the Mac operating system. The only option you have is to swap the WiFi card out for a model the OS X can work with. I chose the Dell 1490 which uses the Broadcom chipset. These are readily available on eBay for around £15.

What you will need

Spludger – if you’ve never heard of one, it’s a plastic tool used to open devices such as iPods and iBooks (although you can use something flat and smooth instead)

Small Philips Screwdriver

OS X comaptible WiFi Card

Open up

Once you have your WiFi card you’re going to want to swap it out, this isn’t to difficult, although it can seem that way at first. Just follow these steps and you should be fine.

1. Turn the Netbook off, unplug the Power cord, and remove the Battery.

2. Place it upside down on a soft surface (you want to protect that finish right?)

3. Proceed to remove all 15 screws from the bottom of the machine, including the Memory access door screw.

Bottom case
4. Once these are removed you will not notice much other than the keyboard feels a little loose. This is where you must be careful

5. Take a spludger, or anything relatively smooth and flat (I used the bottle opener on my Swiss Army Knife). I found starting in the bottom left corner (near the two USB ports) to be best. Gentle pry the case apart with your spludger, there are numerous clips holding the case together. It’s easier to slide it along the gap, rather than try to lever it open, less chance of leaving marks.

Start in this corner
6. Move your spludger around the casing cracking open all the clips. You’ll feel the case is nearly ready to come off.

7. The last part holding the case together is four clips along the back section, where the battery fits. Gentle work you spludger in here and crack the four clips open.

Rear end

8. The bottom should now come free and you will see the bottom of the Motherboard, housing the fan, and in the corner, the WiFi card.

WiFi Card

9. Unplug the two antennae cables from the WiFi card, then remove the single black screw holding it in place.

Empty WiFi slot

10. Once removed, replace the card with your own, rescrew and reconnect the cables.

Broadcom WiFi

11. Clip the bottom case back on, making sure all the clips are seated properly. Turn the laptop over and make sure the keyboard is clipped in properly.

12. Replace all 15 fifteen screws to the bottom on the Netbook.

13. Refit Battery, and power on the machine. Once if loads Windows you will be greeted with a Driver install screen.

Driver install

14. I found the easiest way through this part was to connect the Netbook up  via Ethernet, then choose to search for the Driver online. Windows will then find and install your WiFi card and you’re ready to rock!

Thanks for reading, I’m going to attempt installing OS X on this baby next, so check back for a progress update!

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When I first saw the deal O2 were offering I was very tempted to take them up on it right away. For £29 a month they were offering Mobile Broaband with a free Laptop. Now I didn’t need a Laptop as I already have my MacBook. But what I was interested in was a Netbook. I thought to myself, no I don’t need one, but I sure would like one (isn’t it always the same)

Anyway, I finally gave in, and after thrashing out a deal with O2, I got the price down to £22 a month. Add to that Quidco were offering £100 cashback if you ordered through their site, and it suddenly felt like a bargain!

I’ve always looked at Netbooks online and thought of them as being somewhat cheap looking. If only Apple would make a Netbook, I kept telling myself. With this deal though, I thought to myself, even if I don’t like it, I could always just sell it. I could then just use the Mobile Broadband Dongle on my MacBook, so I wouldn’t be losing out. Well as it turns out, I do like it, a lot.

Build Quality & Design

Ok so the build quality isn’t going to win any awards, but it is a very rugged little thing. There’s no flex in the casing when you pick it up, neither does it creak like many Laptops do. The screen hinge has a nice feel to it. I especially like the little rubber feet underneath, they really grip the machine to your desk. The edge of the unit sports a nice chrome effect bezel that flows around the front and sides, then makes another appearance on the hinges. The power button is accommodated in the hinge on the right hand side, similar to a new Apple Wireless Keyboard. When the unit is powered on this switch glows blue, a very nice effect that works great with the chrome. The underside of the unit is very basic, many vents and bumps, a memory access door, and the battery latch. The battery fills the void between the screen and the base, a nice touch, as I don’t very much like the Netbooks which have a great big gap there.

Netbook minus Battery

Shecsy Power button

Bottom side

Screen & Storage

The 10.2″ screen is a joy to behold, it’s an LED backlit jobby with a 1024 x 600 resolution. Most websites I’ve visited fit the width fine. The screen is lovely and bright aswell, easily on par with my MacBooks, and actually surpases it in a brightly lit room (that hurt to say) Another area where it trumps my MacBook is viewing angle. The new Unibody MacBooks are known to have a terrible viewing angle compared to their big sister, the MacBook Pro. The Samsung easily beats my MacBook here, with an excellent viewing angle. Storage wise the model I got has a 160GB Hard Drive, this is a lot of storage for a Netbook, more than a MacBook Air. I don’t mind the fact it isn’t an SSD either!

Next to MacBook 13"

Connectivity & WiFi

There’s a fair few options here for you to connect peripherals. The left side of the machine houses the Charger point, Ethernet port, and two USB 2.0 ports (from back to front) On the right hand side we have VGA out, single USB 2.0 port, Microphone, and finally Headphones (again back to front). At the front there’s an SD Card slot, and a bunch of blue LED status lights. I’ve found the SD reader to be very handy, the 16GB SDHC card I use for my Kodak Zi6 is picked up effortlessly. I haven’t had any problems using the WiFi either, it may only be G-spec, but it offers great range and good speed.

Keyboard & Trackpad

The keyboard is very good for a device of this size, Samsung state it’s 93% full size. All I know is it’s nice enough to type on and has good tactile feedback. One thing that catches me out is the ‘A’ key, it isn’t as far in from the left as my MacBook so I’m constantly hitting ‘S’ instead! Onto the trackpad, this is possibly the only major gripe with the unit. Size wise it just isn’t big enough. There are virtual scroll bars on the vertical and horizontal axis to aid with browsing. The trouble with this is, it leaves very little room left to navigate the cursor. I found a great little hack for this though. It enables two-finger scrolling, thus you can disable the virtual scroll bars, freeing up precious trackpad space!

Battery Life

The Sammy comes with a 6-cell battery as standard. Most Netbooks make you fork out extra for one of these. With a full charge expect a class topping 6 hours of battery life. Now I’m not saying you’ll get 6 hours of watching a Movie, or browsing YouTube, but for general Web Browsing, Email, Blog posting etc, it easily makes it over 5 hours for me.

Carry Case

Performance

Spec wise this Netbook uses the same sort of hardware that many on the market today do. That is, an Intel Atom 1.6GHz N270 Processor with Intel 945GSE Integrated Graphics. While the GPU isn’t very good, this machine is still nippy enough for most multimedia needs. Watching Standard Def movies or streaming YouTube videos is pretty effortless. I upgraded the 1GB PC6400 RAM module in mine to a 2GB version from Play.com, only cost £14.49 and was well worth it. I was actually surprised when I tried running a 720p trailer from the Apple website, it dropped a few frames here and there, but was still watchable. Lower it down to 480p and it’s absolutely fine. One thing that bugs me though is the tearing, quite noticeable with HD movies or if you run a game. I guess after all’s said and done, these are not Gaming/HD machines. Look out for my Podcast when I launch it later this week, first episode is this very machine running Half-Life 2!

Conclusion

Overall I am delighted with this Netbook. On the way to work in the morning it’s the type of device you can just quickly throw it in your bag. I can see myself taking it to work with me nearly everyday because it’s so light and convienient. The excellent battery life means you barely have to worry about carrying a charger around with you. To top it all off you also get a 1.3MP webcam, which seems of reasonable quality, built in stereo speakers, and a microphone. The speakers aren’t the loudest I’ve ever heard, but they do the job. If you’re in the market for a Netbook then you’d do a lot worse than pick up a Samsung NC10.

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