Samsung NC20

The Samsung NC20 is a subnotebook / Netbook computer designed by Samsung. At the time of its introduction, (February 2009, while in the U.S.A. was on March 2009), it was the first mainstream netbook to use the VIA Nano processor and the first to support the x86-64 instruction set. The 12.1" screen size is larger than typical for this class of ultra portable PC. Its most direct competitors are the Lenovo IdeaPad S12 and the MSI Wind U210.

Samsung NC20
DeveloperSamsung
TypeSubnotebook/Netbook
Media160 GB 2.5" SATA HDD
Operating systemWindows XP
CPUVIA Nano ULV Processor U2250 (1.3+ GHz, 800 MHz)
Memory1 GB
Display12.1" 1280 × 800 LED-backlit TFT LCD
InputKeyboard (100% full size, anti-bacterial)
Touchpad
Microphone
Camera1.3 megapixel webcam built-in
Connectivity10/100 Mbit Ethernet
802.11b/g wireless LAN
Bluetooth 2.0+EDR (standard configuration)
3 USB 2.0 ports
3-in-1 Flash Memory card reader (SD, SDHC, MMC)
Power6.5 hours of battery life with standard 6-cell battery
Dimensions292.4 mm × 217 mm × 30.7 mm
Mass1.52 kg
Samsung NC20 opened (harddrive and battery removed)

Technical overview

Processor and memory

The Samsung NC20 uses a VIA Nano ULV Processor U2250 (running from 800 MHz - 1,6 GHz) and comes with 1 GB RAM. Internally, the NC20 has one slot for RAM accepting memory modules up to 2 GB.[1]

The hardware is powerful enough to run Windows 7 in everyday situations (web-browsing, email, office applications). However, CPU-demanding tasks (e.g. Flash videos) tend to put the system at its limit.

Display

The screen is a glossy display and measures 12.1 inches (307 mm) diagonally. It has a native resolution of 1280 × 800 pixels. The screen is LED-backlit. An external display can be used through the standard VGA connector.

Keyboard and touchpad

The 84-key keyboard is a full-size keyboard, with standard 18.5mm key pitch between keys. The keyboard has also been coated with anti-bacterial Silver Nano ions. The touchpad supports multi-touch gestures.

Storage

The standard internal hard drive is a SATA 160 GB. It also includes a SD card slot, supporting MMC, SD and SDHC cards for additional storage.

Connectivity

The NC20 has built-in LAN (10/100 MBit) via a standard-sized RJ45-jack, 802.11b/g Wifi as well as Bluetooth. It also comes with 3 USB 2.0 ports.

Audio and video

A webcam (Namuga 1.3 megapixel) is built into the display frame, as well as a microphone. Together with the built-in stereo speakers, the NC20 can be used for audio/video conferences (e.g. using Skype), albeit only with moderate call-quality. The webcam picture becomes relatively noisy under low-light conditions and the microphone produces audible noise and picks up vibrations from the harddisk or when typing.

The NC20 also has standard 3,5mm jacks for audio output (headphones / line-out) and input (external microphone / line-in), allowing for far better audio quality than the built-in speakers and microphone.

Criticism

Not all of the features of this notebook are supported under Linux. Playing video and microphone are partially supported. External monitor support under Linux is not possible. WLAN under Ubuntu is reported to have frequent freezeups. [2]


gollark: It also has the fun purple lightning effects zapping off it sometimes.
gollark: My AE2 control room looks half-decent now.
gollark: Also, what are the rules for cells adjacent to other cells?
gollark: The aesthetic is kind of ruined by the signalum fluxduct I had to add, but you know.
gollark: And is actually two controllers.

See also

References

  1. "Samsung NC20 Review". www.laptopmag.com. 2009-03-04. Retrieved 2009-03-04.
  2. "NC20 Community Ubuntu". Ubuntu. 2009-09-22. Retrieved 2009-10-01.
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