Review: HP 2133 Mini Laptop

Mini-laptops are finally coming into their own, as small hardware has finally become powerful enough to run typical business applications. The Macbook Air, the Sony TZ series, and the new HP Mini typify mini notebooks. The Air and the TZ are diminutive, to be sure, but they’re no less expensive than a full-sized laptop. That seems a bit unfair, considering that you actually get less.

The HP Mini, on the other hand, only costs $600 you can get three of them for the price of a Macbook Air.

The best thing about the Mini, beyond the fact that it deftly runs Microsoft Office, is the full pitch keyboard. While it’s not a full sized keyboard, the keys are the same size as a normal desktop, making the computer a true note book  you can actually type at full speed, despite the diminutive size. Comparable Ultramobile PCs such as the Samsung Q1 are useless for typing.

Software

The  Out Of the Box Experience  for Vista computers absolutely sucks, but the Mini is better than most in that it isn’t bloated with crapware in fact, there is no trial-ware or unnecessary software installed at all except for a 60-day trial of Microsoft Office and the AOL toolbar for Internet Explorer. I have to give HP props for putting user experience over bloatware revenue. Expect the computer to take about two hours from the time you start it up until it’s ready to use.

The HP Mini ships with Windows Vista Home Basic, the least expensive version of Vista which is no better or worse than XP Home in my opinion. Vista Home Basic lacks the 3D  Aero  3D desktop enhancements, Windows Media Center, backup and recovery tools, and Remote Desktop. All of those things are either pointless or pretty easy to rectify with free software such as iTunes and VNC.

Hardware

The computer comes with 2GB of RAM a saving grace for a computer with a relatively slow processor. Coupled with a fast hard disk, the computer is quite snappy and more than sufficient for typical applications. The Windows Experience index comes in at 1.7 because of the processor, but the computer doesn’t feel slow at all it’s quite a bit better performing than my Sony UX-390, which has a faster processor but half the RAM. I installed Vista Ultimate on the machine to see whether it could handle Aero, and it does so quite handily, with no performance related artifacts (other than that the task manager reports that the CPU is usually quite busy). I installed Alcohol 52% and used an ISO image of Vista Ultimate on an Express Card Flash drive to perform the Vista upgrade, which worked just fine. Also unique in the small notebook range is the gigabit network adapter, which makes the computer ideal for dedicated use as a network sniffer, the purpose to which mine will be put. This is the least expensive laptop with a gigabit network adapter on the market at the time of this writing. I don’t expect that it will be able to capture at full gigabit speed (under Windows), but it should be considerably better than a 100Mb/sec adapter.

The screen’s native resolution is 1024 x 600, a widescreen format. Its about as small as a screen could be for Office applications without being annoying.

The laptop shell is aluminum, which helps dissipate heat (and the laptop does get hot under a full load). The computer does not come with a CD or DVD-ROM drive you’ll have to use an external USB DVD-ROM drive. The computer comes with a full set of ports: ExpressCard 54, SD flash, VGA, gigabit Ethernet, Wifi b/g, a webcam, and headphone and microphone jacks. The only significant missing interface is Bluetooth.

Summary

In all, it’s the best $600 I’ve ever spent for a computer, and I highly recommend it to anyone for whom portability is important and an internal CD/DVD drive is not necessary.

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