Bottom Line:
HP's Mini 5102 is virtually exactly the same as the Mini 5101, but it has much better battery daily life. You can pretty much obtain a total day of use from its 6-cell battery (providing you near the lid whenever you aren't actively employing it) and the big tough generate means it is possible to have about a substantial library of music and videos. We really like the unit's build good quality, its higher resolution display and its keyboard, but hate how long it will take to obtain up and operating.
Critique by
Elias Plastiras Personal computer World Australia (on the internet) 06 / 04 / ten Ask a Question HP Mini 5102 seems and feels much like Mini 5101, nonetheless it has superior battery lifestyle and it is less costly
The HP Mini 5102 is a netbook intended with company consumers in head. It has an anodised aluminium lid and its sturdy design and style places it a rung higher than most other netbooks on the market. In addition, it appears great and, contrary to well-known perception, business consumers apparently do value a bit of flair — so HP has introduced the Mini 5102 not only in black,
Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2010, but also in red and blue.
The HP Mini 5102 and also the HP Mini 5101
Physically, the Mini 5102 appears exactly like the HP Mini 5101, which isn’t a bad thing — we loved the 5101. The HP Mini 5102 is small and has a tapered body, getting thinner from the rear to the front. Its large battery gives it a nice slope when resting on a table, and it’s comfortable to type on. We like the fact that the RAM slot can be accessed without using tools, but the keyboard has to be removed in order to acquire to the tough push bay. Nevertheless, it’s easy enough to pop off the keyboard and if the drive ever needs replacing.
The HP Mini 5102 with its keyboard removed.
HP Mini 5102 specs and speed
The Mini 5102 is also similar to the Mini 5101 to the inside, with the main difference being a newer Intel Atom CPU. It’s still much better than the majority of consumer netbooks to the industry, mainly because you get 2GB of DDR2 SDRAM (most netbooks ship with 1GB), a 1366x768-resolution display screen rather than 1024x576 or 1024x600, and a 7200rpm hard drive instead of a 5400rpm generate. The challenging drive is 320GB — which implies that you absolutely must transfer all your songs and movies onto it if you want to get the most out of it! The netbook's battery has a long 66 Watt-hour rating, which will let you watch at least two movies without requiring a recharge.
The HP Mini 5102 runs an Intel Atom N450 CPU that runs at precisely the same clock speed because the Intel Atom N280 CPU it replaces (1.66GHz), nonetheless it has an integrated graphics chipset, which means there are only two main chips in the Mini 5102: the CPU along with the I/O controller. This helps to keep the Mini 5102 a smidgin cooler than the Mini 5101 and is also the main difference the two netbooks. You still get 802.11 draft-n Wi-Fi (it even uses the same Broadcom 43224AG chip that was in the Mini 5101), as well as Bluetooth and Gigabit Ethernet. There is a built-in webcam that can be used for face recognition security as well as conferencing, and you obtain a VGA port, an SD card slot, microphone and headphone ports, and three USB 2.0 ports. It’s definitely a well stocked netbook.
Apart from the upgraded processor, one of the other differences between the Mini 5102 and its predecessor is that the newer netbook runs
Windows 7 Pro 32-bit instead of Windows XP, and it runs it very well. There is an option to install Linux (SUSE Enterprise 11) or it is possible to still choose Windows XP if your business hasn’t migrated to
Windows 7 yet.
In our tests, the Mini 5102 produced slower times than the Mini 5101, which we put down mainly to the operating system difference. In the iTunes MP3 encoding test, the Mini 5102 took 8min 47sec to encode 53min worth of WAV files to 192Kbps MP3s, which is one minute slower than the Mini 5101. In Blender 3D, it took 7min 39sec to render an image using two CPU threads, and this is 42sec slower than the Mini 5101. It was also slower in the difficult push test. The Mini 5102’s Western Digital Scorpio Blue (WD3200BEKT-60V5T1) recorded 26.17 megabytes per second in our transfer tests. This is about 6.1MBps faster than a typical netbook, but over 2MBps slower than the Mini 5101, which used a Fujitsu drive.
But while the performance tests show the Mini 5102 to be slower than the model it replaces, it actually feels reasonably zippy during everyday operation. You are able to easily use it to browse the Web while you work on documents and listen to audio, and standard-definition movies will play just fine. Because the display screen is wider than a typical netbook display screen, it is possible to even use
Windows 7’s Aero Snap feature to line up two windows side by side.
HP Mini 5102 battery life
The battery lifestyle of the Mini 5102 is stellar. The 66 Watt-hour battery lasted 5hr 3min in our rundown test, in which we disable power management, maximise brightness, enable Wi-Fi and loop an Xvid-encoded video. If you use the netbook for Web browsing and document creation, and you shut the lid when you aren’t actively utilizing it, then you are able to go a complete day without having to plug in to an outlet.
With such a lengthy battery life, it’s a shame that a Sleep-and-Charge style USB port hasn’t been implemented so that you could charge your iPhone in your backpack while to the go, for example. For that sort of functionality, you have to turn to Toshiba’s NB300.
The HP Mini 5102’s battery has a physical indicator to let you know if you need to charge before you hit the road.
HP Mini 5102 setup
We deplore the setup procedure of the Mini 5102. Once you first pull it from the box and boot it up, you have to put up with a setup process that takes well over an hour. This installs all of HP’s utilities and trialware (such as Microsoft Office) and there are some registration screens that require your attention. It’s not a pleasant experience and a busy admin looking to quickly deploy the Mini 5102 will rapidly lose patience.
That said, once it’s up and operating you can get rid of all the preinstalled software, or put it to use. There is really a credentials manager, file synchronisation software, troubleshooting and maintenance software (whose pop-up reminders can drive you crazy) and Corel Home Office Suite just to name a few. You also get 3D hard push protection and also the ability to encrypt your data. A pre-
Windows 7 environment is available, called HP QuickLook; it lets you check calendar entries and contacts. This feature is aimed at users who want quick access to this information when their laptop is switched off. However, if you already have a smartphone then there is no need to use this software. It also has QuickWeb, which as its name suggests, is for browsing the Web. We think that an implantation of Splashtop similar to the one around the HP Mini 210 would be considerably more useful.
Conclusion
In terms of speed and looks, the HP Mini 5102 is not an upgrade over the HP Mini 5101. In fact, all you’re getting with this model can be a revision of exactly the same netbook that was released 10 months ago, but with considerably longer battery life and a much lower retail price. Whether you’re a business user or not, we think it’s worth going for the Mini 5102 over many other netbooks to the industry, especially because of its excellent battery existence, great create high quality, larger display screen resolution, faster networking and larger memory capacity. However, we do wish HP would give us a break from all the preinstalled utilities and a very long setup procedure.
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