Samsung NC20 review

Netbook or low powered laptop? We find out

TechRadar Verdict

The Eee 1000HE has the edge on battery life and price, but Samsung's screen is glorious

Pros

  • +

    Gorgeous panel

  • +

    Decent battery life

Cons

  • -

    Relatively high cost

  • -

    Slightly slower than an Atom

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Traditional logic dictates that in the technology world everything gets smaller over time. Indeed, this has remained true in the laptop sphere, culminating in the rise and rise of the netbook. And now that darling is tipping things upside down once again. Rather than shrinking, it's getting bigger.

We started with the 7-inch Eee, which quickly gave way to its 9-inch, then 10-inch compatriots; sizes that have been copied across the board in manufacturing terms. Samsung itself has already released a 10-inch netbook in the guise of the excellent NC10 and is now bringing us the relatively enormous (for a netbook) 12.1-inch NC20.

There are many benefits to the NC20 coming in larger than its predecessor, the most obvious of which is the inclusion an incredibly beautiful panel, outputting at a native resolution of 1,280 x 800. And boy, does Samsung make incredibly beautiful panels. The screen on the NC20 is absolutely gorgeous and so crystal clear that you're going to reap the benefits whether you're at work or play.

The increased chassis size also has enabled Samsung to fit it with a larger keyboard, making typing easier and reducing the likelihood of the sort of typing errors that lead production editors to think we writers have employed dimwitted monkeys to take dictation for us.

The VIA Nano CPU that follows it though is a low-powered processor easily the equal of the Atom and yet this is the first netbook into the office that's carried the alternative company's chipset. This is strange considering the Nano could be dropped straight into any existing C7-ready platform, making it a fairly cheap revision for manufacturers to implement.

What's more, being a VIA-based system means it doesn't have to play ball with the Intel 945G graphics chipset, going instead for an S3 Chrome9 GPU. Now that's definitely no pixel-pushing powerhouse, but the VX800 chipset supports HD video decoding and is more than a match for 720p video playback – something traditional Atom-based netbooks simply aren't up to.

Personally, I'd buy it for the screen alone. The 12.1-inch size is definitely the sweet spot in terms of screen real estate and portability, and of all the netbooks released so far, this is the one that's genuinely blurring the lines between primary and secondary laptop. You could quite happily use this machine for your media on the move and have no problem making the odd spreadsheet on the train or bashing out a few pages of a Word document without giving yourself the traditional netbook headache in the process.

Machines with smaller screens may fit more happily in the bottom of a record bag, but if you actually want to use it regularly the bigger screen is the way to go. The VIA chip is no limiter either – indeed, it even gives you the 720p playback over a traditional netbook. It's a lovely machine, but whether you want to spend that extra £70 depends on how often you're realistically going to use your netbook.