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Review: Samsung Q30 ultraportable notebook

An ultraportable notebook that's got style, but not for those after performance

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Price: £1,499
Manufacturer: Samsung
Specifications: Intel Pentium 1.2GHz ULV
Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Ease of use: Ease of use
Value for money: Value for money
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Verdict

Pros: Lightweight design; good keyboard and screen
Cons: No inbuilt optical drive; needs more memory
Overall: The Samsung Q30 notebook is great for anyone where battery life and portability is more important than blistering performance, and it looks stylish as well

Rob Jones, Personal Computer World 22 Mar 2006

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Samsung's updated version of the Q30, internally badged the Q30+, but still available on its website as the Q30 Red, adds extra processing power and the 915GM chipset to this super-slim, ultra light notebook.

It is aimed at people who don't want to carry around a heavy machine, but want enough power for office tasks and decent battery life.

To gauge its performance and portability, we've been road-testing the notebook for several months, including two international trips.

With its small battery, which lasts two hours 22 minutes for office tasks, it weighs a mere 1.15kg.

Slot in the supplied long-life battery and the notebook lasts almost five hours and adds just 200g to the weight, making the Q30 a great option for anyone that needs to carry the notebook all day and doesn't want to take a power adapter.

With its lid closed, the Q30 is only 18mm thick - thanks in part to the lack of an internal optical drive. Instead it comes with an external dual layer DVD drive, but again it is very light.

It weighs only 600g, so even if you took this, the notebook and both batteries, you'd still be carrying under 2kg.

The problem with ultra portables is their performance can be very pedestrian. With a 1.2GHz Pentium M CPU, don't expect to play the latest games, but it will cope with office tasks. By using this Ultra Low Voltage CPU though, it helps conserve battery life and means it does not need a fan.

During our long term test, we pushed it to its limits. It often had our copy of Openoffice Word, our email client, Adobe Photoshop and several Internet browsers running at the same time.

We loaded and converted Raw photo files, managed our podcasts, used it to write and load stories on the web and made video calls over Skype on the laptop.

With so much going on, it did struggle and could benefit from another 512MB of memory. But we often had an extreme amount of applications running simultaneously, and closing a few would speed up the laptop.

With only a few running, such as Word, email and Internet radio, it would work fine.

The full-size keyboard is very comfortable to type on and the 12.1in widescreen display easy on the eye. As an Intel Centrino machine it has inbuilt 802.11g wireless, plus two USB2 and a Firewire port.

It also has slots for SD, Memory Stick/Pro and Compact Flash cards. But it does not have a PC Card slot.

Both batteries and the external optical drive come as standard with the Q30, plus there's Samsung's notebook management software pre-installed.

If you need lots of processing power, this is not the laptop for you. But if you're after a back-friendly machine that's easy to use and has long battery life, the Q30 is worth consideration.

See also:

Image: Sony Vaio TX2-HP reviewAs compact as a fashion magazine but costing an arm and a leg; it can only be Sony's new TX series notebook  20 Mar 2006
Review: Mesh Pegasus 7800GTXA bulky yet powerful desktop replacement from Mesh  14 Mar 2006
Review: MSI Megabook S425A budget single-core notebook for undemanding users  03 Mar 2006
Review: Apple Macbook ProApple's first Intel-based laptop has potential, but the lack of software could let it down  03 Mar 2006
Averatec 1050This notebook has good battery life and a neat design, but it’s no games machine  25 Jan 2006
Rock Xtreme 64Big and ugly, but a truly powerful notebook  09 Feb 2006
Buyers' Guide: MonitorsWe guide you through the things to consider when buying a notebook  15 Feb 2006

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