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    Home Latest News
    • Storage

    Actius Notebook Hits New Lows

    Written by

    Jason Brooks
    Published May 26, 2003
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      eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.

      EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
      Actius MM10

      Sharps Actius MM10 is an extremely portable notebook with built-in support for Ethernet and 802.11b connectivity. Although keyboard and performance trade-offs come with this small size, the $1,499 Actius will suit many mobile workers rather nicely.

      KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS

      USABILITY

      FAIR

      CAPABILITY

      GOOD

      PERFORMANCE

      FAIR

      INTEROPERABILITY

      GOOD

      MANAGEABILITY

      GOOD

      SCALABILITY

      GOOD

      SECURITY

      GOOD

      • PRO: Weighs just 2.1 pounds; integrated 802.11b capabilities.
      • CON: Cramped keyboard; performance slow compared with larger notebooks; lacks Bluetooth support.

      EVALUATION SHORT LIST
      • Fujitsus Lifebook P2120

      Weighing in at only 2.1 pounds, Sharp Electronics Corp.s Actius MM10 is one of the lightest and most pleasant-to-tote notebooks eWEEK Labs has ever reviewed. However, as one might expect, with this great portability come certain sacrifices. In our tests of the Actius MM10, which is powered by a Transmeta Corp. 1GHz TM5800 processor, we experienced somewhat-sluggish performance.

      Ultralight notebooks such as this one arent necessarily built for speed, of course, but we noticed small lags even when we switched between running applications from the task bar.

      The Actius MM10s keyboard is also a bit cramped. In particular, its right shift key is half-size, and we often found ourselves hitting the up key when wed intended to “shift.”

      Wed rather see the up key moved all the way to the right of the keyboard, leaving enough space for a full-size shift key. Of course, this would violate the “T” configuration for arrow keys that is standard on most keyboards, but we believe accidentally hitting the shift key would be preferable to unintended “up” strokes.

      Even with these limitations, however, the impressively portable form factor of the $1,499 Actius MM10 makes this machine a compelling option for mobile workers looking to lighten their laptop bags without incurring the significantly greater sacrifices that accompany other alternatives such as handheld computers.

      In terms of heft, the Actius MM10 compares favorably with other ultralight units, such as Fujitsu PC Corp.s LifeBook P2120, which weighs 2.8 pounds with its optical drive removed, or the LifeBook P1120, which weighs 2.2 pounds. (See eWEEK Labs May 5 review of the Fujitsu LifeBook S2000.)

      The Actius MM10, which is available now, ships with a 15GB hard drive and a fixed 256MB of RAM. The unit sports an integrated Ethernet card, an internal 802.11b radio, two USB (Universal Serial Bus) 2.0 ports, an external VGA port, one PC Card slot and a stereo headphone jack. Wed like to see support for Bluetooth as well, but this is not in the works as far as we know.

      The notebook measures 9.9 by 8.2 by 0.78 inches and includes a 10.4-inch, 1,024-by-768-pixel, thin-film-transistor display, which we found a bit dim but not unpleasant to use.

      The Actius MM10 is powered by a lithium-ion battery, which, in our tests, yielded about 3 hours of life between charges. Sharp sells a $199 extended-life battery that we did not test; Sharp officials promise about 9 hours between charges from the extended-life battery.

      Page 2

      To keep the Actius MM10 superslim, Sharp left out an internal optical or floppy drive. The company sells $99 external USB floppy, $229 CD-ROM and $299 DVD/CD-RW drives separately. For a limited time, online buyers receive a DVD/ CD-RW drive free (one notebook per order).

      Although the Actius MM10 does not necessarily require one of these drives for general use, companies will have to at least have a drive on hand for the installation of software, or theyll have to install applications over one of this units network connections.

      The Actius MM10 comes equipped with a connection cradle that charges the unit and, through an included USB cradle, makes the hard drive in the Actius MM10 available to another machine as a removable USB drive.

      The system ships with a synchronization application called SharpSync that enables users to automatically synchronize files and folders between the Actius MM10 and a second machine when the Actius MM10 is placed in its cradle.

      Senior Analyst Jason Brooks can be reached at jason_brooks@ziffdavis.com.

      Jason Brooks
      Jason Brooks
      As Editor in Chief of eWEEK Labs, Jason Brooks manages the Labs team and is responsible for eWEEK's print edition. Brooks joined eWEEK in 1999, and has covered wireless networking, office productivity suites, mobile devices, Windows, virtualization, and desktops and notebooks. Jason's coverage is currently focused on Linux and Unix operating systems, open-source software and licensing, cloud computing and Software as a Service.

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