STARTING PRICE : $1649
Samsung's Series 9
laptop isn't the first Windows-bearing PC to try to steal Apple's MacBook Air
limelight. At less than three pounds and
0.7 inch thick, the Series 9 gets the hardware part right, and narrows the price
gap a little. The Series 9 is costlier than the competing 13-inch MacBook Air
with a starting price of $1649 (compared with Apple's $1299), but it offers
mostly superior hardware and is eminently usable.
EDGE
OVER MACBOOK AIR
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Battery life is
quite decent for a laptop this thin. It lasted 5.5 hours, half an hour longer than the 13-inch MacBook
Air. The Series 9 comes standard with a 128GB SSD, just as the Air does, and
this really helps the system to feel responsive and quick, to boot up fast, and
to resume Windows, when you open the lid, in less than three seconds.
EDGED
BY MACBOOK AIR
The Series 9 falls a bit short when it comes
to 3D gaming, relying on Intel's HD Graphics 3000 to push pixels. There's a
huge improvement over previous Intel integrated graphics, but it's still not
powerful enough to run the latest games without severely compromising visual
quality. Older games, and simple casual games, work great. Performance is
actually quite similar to the integrated Nvidia GeForce 320M found in the
MacBook Air. Intel's new integrated graphics does a great job with video
decoding, so even hi-def material plays smoothly.
DESIGN
Samsung says its handsome brushed-metal
exterior is made from Duralumin, an aluminum alloy first made for rigid
airships and planes. That may or may not be a bunch of marketing hooey, but the
system is definitely attractive and feels stiff and sturdy, with very little
flex in the main body. The 13.3-inch LED backlit screen stands as one of the
laptop's best features. The 1366 by 768 resolution is appropriate for its size,
but it's the vibrant colors, excellent viewing angles, bright backlight, and
matte antiglare finish that really make it stand out. That's right: It's a
colorful, bright screen on a high-style laptop that doesn't leave you staring at reflections of yourself all day!
FEATURES
The full-size
keyboard is quite easy to type on. There isn't a lot of travel to the keys, but
they have a distinct "clicky" feel and are all sized and spaced so
that touch-typists can easily achieve their full speed without errors. The
touchpad is less fantastic. It's a huge, buttonless clickpad that has a nice
smooth feel and tracks quite well, but it's just too sensitive. Even after
tweaking the Synaptics driver, I found the cursor occasionally jumped around a
bit, or the palm-cancellation would briefly fail when I was typing. All the
fancy multifinger gesture controls in the world don't make up for a clickpad
that sometimes does what you didn't want it to do. Things go more smoothly
after a period of adjustment, but the overtouchy clickpad was definitely the
one usability sore spot in my testing.
Port space is
extremely limited on a laptop this thin, and Samsung mostly does a good job
with what it gives you. You have a USB 2.0 port on each side, one of which is a
"sleep-and-charge" port that can power your devices while the laptop
is asleep. You also get a Mini HDMI output port, a combination headphone/mic
jack, and a microSD card slot. That last one is a bit unfortunate--it looks
like there's room for a full SD card slot, and that format would have been much
more useful for importing photos from digital cameras. The MacBook Air and
Series 9 are too slim to fit the RJ45 jack necessary for an ethernet plug, but
while Apple just does without it, Samsung's got your back: A slim proprietary
port on the left side is for plugging in an included, short port-to-ethernet
dongle.
APPLICATIONS
& SOFTWARES
Preinstalled
software is relatively minimal, thankfully. You get trials of Norton Internet
Security and Online Backup, a few casual games from WildTangent, plus Skype and
CyberLink YouCam. Samsung includes its own emergency system restore software as
well as a simple Control Center that's a one-stop shop to adjust brightness,
join Wi-Fi networks, enable or disable Bluetooth, and so on. In short, you
don't have a tray full of useless junk eating through all your precious RAM and
processor cycles, and I didn't feel the need to clean the fluff out of this
brand-new computer.
CONCLUSION
Samsung is clearly
trying to make a statement here, creating a high-concept halo product that will
attract customers to its brand even if they can't stomach the price of the
Series 9. Is it worth the $1600-and-up asking price? For the average person,
no. You're certainly paying for style here, and you can get considerably better
performance for the price or get the same performance in a less impressive body
for a lot less money. It actually stacks up well against the MacBook Air in
terms of value. Sure, it's $350 more, but you get a faster processor, a matte
screen, an ethernet jack, and twice the RAM.
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