The Scientist wrote: » I dont think the Battery life is gonna be great in this... Big thread about Battery wear here is not inspiring confidence at all. I've noticed as well a few weeks ago when i got it, by clicking 'max battery performance' (in Samsung battery manager) would give you close to 7hrs. Now i've it charged 100% and its only showing 4hrs56.
Supercell wrote: » I've uploaded the Vista drivers to rapidshare here. Have fun !
smemon wrote: » The problem is that nobody knows how to properly look after a battery. Do we discharge fully / charge at 40%? How do we break it in? Charge for 12 hours right out of the box? So much conflicting information and we get confused with the battery advice from other devices. Percentages mean nothing unless it translates in to loss of time. Has anyone actually timed an NC10 from fully charged to fully discharged on that thread? No, they just spot check windows battery bar or some dodgy percentage program. QED.
smemon wrote: » The problem is that nobody knows how to properly look after a battery. Do we discharge fully / charge at 40%? How do we break it in? Charge for 12 hours right out of the box? So much conflicting information and we get confused with the battery advice from other devices. Percentages mean nothing unless it translates in to loss of time. Has anyone actually timed an NC10 from fully charged to fully discharged on that thread? No. QED.
benifa wrote: » Is this a must if installing Vista? Or just a "nice to have"? Can I ask, what is the 2gb RAM stick of choice for the NC10? Thanks!
Alanstrainor wrote: » Upgrade the RAM to 2Gigs..
blobert wrote: » Hi folks, after spending much of the day trying to install XP via USB and failing I put Vista Ultimate on. I've installed all drivers and BIOS update, I turned off Aero and other effects but I'm still finding it very sluggish compared to XP. Some of the rest of you seem to be happy with Vista SP 1 performance so pehaps I have done something wrong. I tried installing a 2GB SD card for Readyboost in the hope of improving it but it's still sluggish. Don't think its worth getting the extra RAM, I think the money might be better spent on an external USB DVD Drive to install Xp. If anyone has any suggestions on ways to speed things up let me know. Oh and the function keys do not seem to be working either. I thought I saw a solution here but I can't find it now:(
Supercell wrote: » Bootable pen drives are the way ahead i think as is solid state storage in general in all likelyhood. The only thing I've used cd's for in the last few years is OS installation and given the speed that Vista went on to my NC10 via usb key I wont be doing os installation by cd again. By the way I would recommend Alcohol 52% over daemon-tools any day. It's also free, but has better emulation and is not riddled with spyware, and has other features such as remote iscsi virtual drives.
Alanstrainor wrote: » Have you tried updating the wireless driver?
ongarite wrote: » Go to Control Panel-Mouse-Device Settings-Settings. In Virtual Scrolling disable vertical & chiralMotion scrolling. In Pointer Motion, disable Pinch (this is causing the zoom to happen) In 2FingerScroll program, tick "Start with Windows", change Speed to 2 and disable Acceleration & change "One + one finger" to middle button.
basquille wrote: » As vibe666 said above, there is a trick with the U3 based USB keys that allows you to emulate an ISO from it (by replacing the U3 ISO with one of your own).See here! EDIT: Bah.. took too long in a reply.. hate that!
davemie wrote: » Maybe I should patent this idea... what ya think? Or maybe it already exists and I just don't know......
davemie wrote: » I can't understand why someone hasn't designed a USB memory stick, that allows you to copy an ISO onto it, and with the switch of a button (on the stick), the stick then appears to the PC as a USB CD/DVD drive and the ISO appears as a disk that is inserted in the drive!!! This would make things so simple. No more messing around trying to get OS/Apps/Games etc installed from a USB drives. Maybe I should patent this idea... what ya think? Or maybe it already exists and I just don't know......
vibe666 wrote: » i read somewhere that a U3 based USB pen drive can be hacked to boot from an iso image stored on it, and i know you can set regular ones up as bootable too so that most OS installtion disks can be moved onto them and then booted directly from USB.
basquille wrote: » Well.. if you're like me, you haven't used a CD drive in 3 years. What does a CD drive do that an ISO and emulation software, or USB key can't? Not a whole lot! But you could buy a USB powered external CD / DVD drive if needs be.
dory wrote: » Anyone know, how annoying is it to not have a CD drive, and how awkward is it to use an external one? Is it just a case of plug and play? Cheers.