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» Lenovo 3000 C200 Reviewed

(January 2007)

Lenovo 3000 C200

The Lenovo 3000 C200 is like a Dodge Omni with a Hemi dropped in: Sure, it’s got dual-core horsepower, but it still looks and feels like an economy car. Performance and battery life were good, but the graphics scores and overall fit and finish of the system are tough to ignore.

The 6.1-pound C200 is chunky and plain, leaving us to wonder if someone actually designed it, or just figured out the dimensions the plastic shell needed to be to contain the innards. The 15-inch, 4:3 screen seems dated in this day of 16:9 widescreens. Worse, it’s a matte-finish panel, which makes images appear fuzzy. Worse still, its native resolution is 1024 x 768 pixels, which in a panel this size leads to poor font reproduction and jagged edges on curves. The Windows XP Professional OS (upgradeable to Windows Vista Business for free) has the look of Windows 98 (for those who remember those low-res fonts and icons).

On the plus side, the keyboard feels excellent (cross-pollination with the ThinkPad line is a benefit here), and there are dedicated volume and mute buttons. On the other hand, there are no controls for playing back multimedia files, and you can’t play music or movies without booting into the OS.

Lenovo includes a lot of features for the price, including a multiformat DVD burner, a decent 80GB hard drive, and 802.11a/b/g wireless. Performance from the 1.6-GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T5500 was good; the C200 scored 223 on MobileMark 2005. Battery life was a respectable 4 hours and 32 minutes, though wireless throughput (just over 10 Mbps) was a touch low for a mainstream system. Both of these scores were second behind Dell’s Inspiron E1505, but graphics were among the lowest in the group at 1,328 on 3DMark03.Lenovo C200

Lenovo delivers a fairly complete software bundle, starting with its LenovoCare utilities for system recovery, network connectivity, and performance restoration. You also get Corel WordPerfect 12, the Corel Photo Album 6 image editing and management package, and InterVideo and Roxio CD- and DVD-creation suites.

The C200 has the features users need to run Vista but lacks the multimedia chops to keep up with the competition. Other value-priced notebooks leave it in the dust.
 

Lenovo 3000 C200

CPU 1.6-GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T5500
Operating System Windows XP Professional
RAM/Expandable to 1GB/4GB
Hard Drive/Speed 80GB/5,400 rpm
Optical Drive 8X DVD+/-RW DL
Display/Resolution 15 inches/1024 x 768
Graphics/Video Memory Intel GMA 950/256MB
Wireless Networking 802.11a/b/g
Ports Four USB, FireWire, VGA, Ethernet, modem, mic, headphone
Card Slots One Type I/II PC Card, SD Card
Standard Battery 6-cell
Weight with Battery 6.1 pounds
Size 13.3 x 10.9  x 1
Warranty/Tech Support One year (three-year upgrades available)
First-Party Software LenovoCare, Rescue & Recovery, Access Connections, fingerprint software
Third-Party Software Picasa from Google, System Update, WinDVD, Diskeeper Lite, WordPerfect, Google Toolbar, Roxio, WinDVD
MobileMark 2005 (Wi-Fi On/Off) 223 / 229
3DMark03 1,328
Battery Life (min:sec) 4:30 / 4:32
Wireless Performance (15/50 feet) 10.4 Mbps / 10.3 Mbps

 

Link: Review Lenovo 3000 C200

Source: laptopmag


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