Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Netgear NV+ v2 and LaCie 2big NAS: A Second Look

by Ganesh T S on 7/18/2012 3:49:00 AM
Posted in IT Computing , NAS , Storage , NetGear , LaCie

Netgear launched the Marvell-based NV+ v2 (4-bay) and Duo v2 (2-bay) NAS units last November. We reviewed the Netgear NV+ v2 and came away quite satisfied with the price to performance ratio. However, we had some reservations about the absence of NFS and iSCSI (which happen to be staple features in offerings from other vendors in this particular segment of the market). The maturity of the platform was also a concern (since this was Netgear's first attempt at introducing a NAS based on an ARM chipset).

 

Netgear recently updated the firmware for the NV+ v2 and Duo v2 units. RAIDiator 5.3.5 added support for a number of new share management protocols including NFS. It also brought along a number of fixes. In the meanwhile, LaCie also contacted us about a firmware update improving RAID-1 performance in the 2big NAS that we reveiewd a couple of months back. Keeping these updates in mind, it is time to take another look at the 2-bay NAS units in our labs.

The testbed setup remains the same as what we used for the LaCie 2big NAS reivew. All the NAS units were populated with two empty 3TB Seagate Barracuda 7200rpm [ ST3000DM001 ] drives prior to benchmarking.

NAS Benchmarking Testbed Setup [ Q2 2012 ]ProcessorIntel i7-3770K CPU - 4C/8T - 3.50GHz, 8MB CacheMotherboardAsus P8H77-M ProOS Hard DriveSeagate Barracuda XT 2 TBSecondary DriveKingston SSDNow 128GB (Offline in Host OS)MemoryG.SKILL ECO Series 4GB (2 x 2GB) SDRAM DDR3 1333 (PC3 10666) F3-10666CL7D-4GBECO CAS 7-7-7-21PCI-E SlotQuad-Port GbE Intel ESA-I340CaseAntec VERIS Fusion Remote MaxPower SupplyAntec TruePower New TP-550 550WHost Operating SystemWindows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise.

Two virtual machines were set up using Hyper-V with the following configuration

Windows 7 Ultimate x64 : Guest OSProcessorSingle Physical Core of Intel i7-3770KOS Hard DriveVHD File on Seagate Barracuda XT 2 TBSecondary Hard DriveKingston SSDNow 128GBMemory1 GBCentOS 6.2 x86_64 : Guest OSProcessorSingle Physical Core of Intel i7-3770KOS Hard DriveVHD File on Seagate Barracuda XT 2 TBSecondary Hard DriveKingston SSDNow 128GBMemory1 GB

The usage of VMs as NAS clients allows us to test Samba and NFS performance from a single host machine. While Intel NASPT can run on Windows (and has to be restricted to 2 GB of RAM in order to avoid caching effects), IOMeter / Dynamo can be used to measure performance in Linux.

The Kingston SSDNow 128 GB SSD we used in the earlier testbed has been reused here. In the host OS, this disk is set to offline, and is made available to the Hyper-V VMs as a physical drive. Note that we don't do any teaming in the Intel ESA-I340 in this testbed. Each VM gets its own physical Ethernet port in the ESA-I340, and the host OS uses the motherboard's built-in GbE port. All the Ethernet ports are connected to a ZyXel GS2200-24 switch.

For measurement of performance in Linux, dynamo was run on the Linux VM and connected to an IOMeter instance run on the host OS. Four tests were run to determine the characteristics of the NAS as a storage system for the client. In order to completely rule out caching effects, a special build of IOMeter with O_DIRECT access mode for NFS shares was used.

The robocopy / rsync benchmarks (transferring a 10.7 GB folder structure backup of the HQV 2.0 Benchmark Blu-ray to and from the NAS to the internal SSD) were also run in both the VMs.

In the rest of the review, we briefly cover the updates in the latest firmware for the NV+ v2. We also test out one of the unique add-ons in the NV+ v2, ReadyNAS Replicate. In the last two sections, we will present the refreshed benchmark results.

Netgear NV+ v2: RAIDiator and Add-Ons Introduction and Testbed Setup Netgear NV+ v2: RAIDiator and Add-Ons Windows Performance: CIFS and iSCSI Linux Performance: NFS and CIFS Final Words Print This Article 6 Comments View All Comments Post a Comment Still a step behind similar units from Synology and QNAP? by Zebble on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 Netgear's ReadyNAS products in particular, dollar-for-dollar seem to always be a step behind Synology and QNAP. Synology has really got it figured out with a common firmware/featureset across all models, which is why I was surprised to read this article to find that all features are available across SPARC, x86 and now Netgear's ARM platform...

Does the ReadyNAS make sense for anyone? Zebble Reply RE: Still a step behind similar units from Synology and QNAP? by Zebble on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 Correction: "all features are *not* available across SPARC, x86 and now Netgear's ARM platform..." Zebble Reply RE: Still a step behind similar units from Synology and QNAP? by chadwickba2 on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 A few months ago, I purchased the NETGEAR ReadyNAS Ultra 2 Plus and it is really nice. I have owned a Buffalo Linkstation Live, a Synology DS209+II, and several older external units and the unit I purchased blows them all away in performance. I have not owned a QSNAP, and it may be awesome. Synology products have very spotty performance in my experience. Synology does have the uniform upgrade and software down pat. Netgear is not even close on the software, but they are awesome in performance on my unit. chadwickba2 Reply my synology is pretty good by philipma1957 on Thursday, July 19, 2012 I have the synology 210+ it is pretty good and support was good. but it cost more the 400. so if this is 250 it may be worth a look. philipma1957 Reply Best reason to buy Netgear is price by MrKane on Sunday, July 22, 2012 Currently I'm operating a Synology 209+ and a Netgear Ultra 2.

From my point of view the Netgear is acceptable" as a backup device, but as a more general server it is miles and miles behind Synology.

The user interface for one is just ancient on the Netgear, even though it's a newer model with more CPU and more memory.

The software on the Synology unit is way better. I'm running with it as a small LDAP server and connects Windows7, Mac and Linux clients to this. The media sharing sw on the Synology is by far more comfortable to use.

The Readynas Ultra server is for me purely an rsync backup server for the Synology server. IT should be more capable, but as it is now it was chosen purly because it was a cheap solution. MrKane Reply NV+ by Evadman on Tuesday, July 24, 2012 I have 3 NV+'s, and have always been impressed with their stability and the UI from a home user and a power user standpoint. Their throughput is slower than pretty much everything else I have tried, but for me the stability and ease of setup were worth the tradeoff. I should have waited for the price to come down (I paid $1100 for the first diskless unit, and they are $250ish now). I wish they made one that supported more disks (8 or more) so I could move off my 20 disk 3 TB RAID60 array on my server that I have most of my stuff on. The NV+ work awesomely for backup purposes now.

In a nutshell, each has it's upsides and downsides, and you need to pick the one that fits your needs better. Evadman Reply Subject Comment Post Comment Please login or register to post a comment.
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Latest from AnandTech Pipeline Submit News! Broadcom Announces 802.11ac Combo Chip, BCM4335 Vizio Co-Star Pre-Orders Open: $100 for the Next-Gen Google TV Dell Announces New Precision M4700 and M6700 Mobile Workstations ASUS Announces Plans to Bring Jelly Bean to Transformer Pad Series EVGA Tease mini-ITX sized Z77 Windows 8 Gets A Launch Date: October 26th Qualcomm Shows Off APQ8064: Quad-core Krait and Adreno 320 AMD Radeon HD 7970, 7950, 7870 Price Cuts Inbound. 7970GE Available Next Week? NVIDIA Forums & Dev Zone Breached; Up To 400K Password Hashes Taken Plextor Releases M5S SSD Series Samsung To Sell Developer Edition Verizon Galaxy S III with Unlockable Bootloader Motorola Atrix HD Official: $99, LTE, 4.5" HD LCD on AT&T DailyTech Apple to Break Its Vow of Silence on Security Issues at Black Hat Apple iPhones Outsold by Samsung 2-to-1 in Q2, Profit Suffers NASA's IRVE-3 Heat Shield Test Flight a Success NSA Chief to Pitch "Common Core Values" to Hackers at DEFCON 20 Australian Judge Grows Frustrated with Apple, Samsung Case Facebook, Google Up Lobbying Expenses in Q2 2012 7/24/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews USB 3.0 Group Proposes Eliminating Proprietary Laptop Chargers Windows 8 Pumps up Metro UI With DirectX 11.1 Graphics Jellyfish Movement Inspires Reverse Engineering of Muscular Organs Self-Cleaning/Repairing Coating Technology Developed for Cars, Smartphones First 2013 Honda Fit EV Delivered to California Google Nexus 7 16 GB Sells Out, is Android's First Tablet Hit Piracy on Android so Rampant that Madfinger Games Makes "Dead Trigger" Free Australian Text Message, Email Scam Seeks to Extort With Death Threats New Zealand's Controversial Piracy Law Halves Illegal Downloads in a Month 7/23/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews Twitter @AgentKyle @gruber eventually NAND will get faster though, not enough to require TB but enough to need more than USB 2.0 RT @siromega: @anandshimpi do you know of anyone building a 4-6 drive USB 3 UASP external enclosure? Looking for something for a mac mini for ZFS. @siromega hmm I don't but I'll RT this and see what we get :) @zeDrexler I've mentioned my height adjustable desk - GALANT from Ikea, very simple but it gets the job done. I'm happy with it :) I don't know what to say, my heart goes out to all impacted by this - http://t.co/Pd4m97bF @NitroWare hmm are you talking about one of their wireless adapters? the model number doesn't look totally right there @KShermPhoto I wouldn't recommend it :) different SATA speeds, minimal real world gains for most uses @PenLlawen I believe it was Dothan based, which would've put it around 2003 - 2004. The first iPad prototype used a Pentium M @captainwonkish haha no need, I miss stuff like that all the time. Apple seems to only have the i7/8GB configs in stores  

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The 2012 MacBook Pro Review

by Vivek Gowri on 7/18/2012 2:00:00 PM
Posted in Mac , Apple , MacBook Pro , Mobile , notebook , laptops

With most of the attention from Apple's hardware refresh event centered around iOS 6 and the new Retina MacBook Pro, the updated 2012 edition of the regular MacBook Pro has flown a little bit under the radar. Basically, it’s just an Ivy Bridge-infused version of the venerable unibody MacBook Pro chassis that we’ve known and loved for the last few years. The details don’t bring any particularly earth-shattering revelations, with 13” retaining the dual-core processor and integrated graphics, while the 15” makes the switch from AMD to Nvidia’s new Kepler-based GT 650M dedicated graphics. Along with Ivy Bridge, the 2012 MBP line gets HD 4000 graphics and USB 3.0 across the board, plus a free update to Mountain Lion when it releases later this summer. Naturally, it doesn’t generate the same kind of excitement that the all-new, all-awesome Retina MacBook Pro does. But is a less headline-worthy computer necessarily a worse one?

It’s pretty difficult to find things to write about the 2012 MacBook Pro hardware. You can essentially sum it up in one paragraph, or even one sentence if you try hard enough. The 2012 MBP looks exactly like the 2011 MBP, which looked exactly like the 2010 MBP, which looked exactly like the post-April 2009 MBP. It’s likely to be the last iteration of the original unibody MBP, giving this body style a 4.5 year run as one of the most instantly recognizable notebook computers on the market. I’m not going to go too far in depth with analyzing the design, because we’ve gone over it a few times over the years (here, here, here, here, here, and here. Oh and here too, just for good measure.)

It’s a solid notebook, that much is certain. From an SKU standpoint, Apple has kept things relatively straightforward, with a high end and a low end for both the 13” and 15” models. Starting at $1199, the MBP13 comes with a 2.5GHz Core i5-3210M, 4GB DDR3, and a 500GB HDD, while the higher end SKU bumps that to a 2.9GHz i5-3520M, 8GB DDR3, a 750GB HDD, and a $1499 pricetag. Other than the updated processor/integrated graphics and the addition of USB 3.0, the 13” is identical to the previous model that we covered in depth last year.

The 15” is a bit more interesting. The base $1799 SKU comes with a quad-core i7-3615QM (2.3GHz) and a 512MB Nvidia GeForce GT 650M dGPU, but makes do with a paltry 4GB of memory and a 500GB hard drive. The standard memory and storage configuration in a nearly-$2000 notebook is pretty unacceptable. This being Apple, upgrade pricing is still a hair away from being highway robbery, but at least the matte WSXGA+ screen upgrade costs a reasonable $100. Thankfully, unlike the rMBP and MacBook Air, you can always opt to buy RAM and storage upgrades on your own.

2012 MacBook Pro Lineup Comparison 15-inch Mid 2012 MacBook ProMacBook Pro with Retina DisplayDimensions0.95 H x 14.35 W x 9.82" D0.71 H x 14.13 W x 9.73" DWeight5.6 lbs (2.54 kg)4.46 lbs (2.02 kg)CPUCore i7-3615QMCore i7-3720QMCore i7-3615QML3 Cache6MB6MB6MBBase CPU Clock2.3GHz2.6GHz2.3GHzMax CPU Turbo3.3GHz3.6GHz3.3GHzGPUIntel HD 4000 + NVIDIA GeForce GT 650MGPU Memory512MB GDDR51GB GDDR5System Memory4GB DDR3-16008GB DDR3-16008GB DDR3L-1600Primary Storage500GB 5400RPM HDD750GB 5400RPM HDD256GB SSDOptical DriveYYNDisplay Size15.4-inchesDisplay Resolution1440 x 9002880 x 1800Thunderbolt Ports12USB Ports2 x USB 3.0Other Ports1 x Firewire 800, 1 x Audio Line in, 1 x Audio Line out, SDXC reader, Kensington Lock slotSDXC reader, HDMI out, headphone outBattery Capacity77.5 Wh95 WhPrice$1799$2199$2199

The unit we’re looking at here is the high-end 15” SKU, with a 2.6GHz i7-3720QM and a 1GB version of the GT 650M, plus 8GB memory and a 750GB HDD. It rings up at $2199, which interestingly is the same as the base rMBP (i7-3615QM/8GB/256GB SSD/1GB GT 650M). I’m mostly certain that it’s not the configuration to get - you’re better served by getting a base 2.3GHz 15”, adding the $100 high-res screen, and grabbing a 256GB SSD (~$250) and an 8GB RAM upgrade (~$50) separately from Newegg or Amazon. Boom. You spend roughly the same $400, depending on your SSD choice (I would go Samsung SSD 830), and end up with a system with a better screen that’s faster in most day to day situations. Unless you have a really specific need for the extra 512MB vRAM or 300MHz clock speed increase, I’d recommend against it.

Performance and Battery Life - Ivy Bridge and Kepler At Work. Meet the 2012 MacBook Pro, just like the 2011 MacBook Pro. Performance and Battery Life - Ivy Bridge and Kepler At Work. The non-Retinized Display: Still Good The 13" MacBook Pro - What Now? Concluding Thoughts Print This Article 119 Comments View All Comments Post a Comment Thermals and noise vs retina? by tipoo on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 Any info on that? Does this have the new fan as well? tipoo Reply RE: Thermals and noise vs retina? by NCM on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 Thermals shouldn't be much different than the previous model, since the internals are very similar, as is the TDP. See also the iFixit teardown here: NCM Reply RE: Thermals and noise vs retina? by tipoo on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 The case design and airflow are different though. This doesn't have those side vents, more space for air though. And the whole heatsink design looks different. tipoo Reply RE: Thermals and noise vs retina? by akfanta on Thursday, July 19, 2012 I think the side vents and different case design are only for retina mbp. akfanta Reply RE: Thermals and noise vs retina? by tipoo on Thursday, July 19, 2012 I know. That's why I'm asking if the thermals and noise are different between the two. tipoo Reply Apple, the company of minor upgrades but major price gouging by gnumantsc on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 For $2200 that is absolutely a waste of money on a machine that has a 1400x900 and poorly spec'd. I would rather get the Zenbook pro over Mac any day of the week. gnumantsc Reply RE: Apple, the company of minor upgrades but major price gouging by coder543 on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 For $2200, you should get the Retina Pro which is better than any Zenbook Prime by a good margin, and I would say better than any laptop on the market. (if someone points out a 10lb desktop replacement gaming laptop with an hour of battery life, they are only considering raw number crunching performance. A product is not defined by one number or another, but by all numbers considered at once.) coder543 Reply The number that kills it is... by Ratman6161 on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 $2200 or $1799 or even $1599. I'm just not going to pay those prices for a notebook (anyone's notebook) no matter how good it is. They are just outside the price range I'm willing to pay. Ratman6161 Reply RE: The number that kills it is... by michael2k on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 Did you notice how the $2200 MBP compares to the 2008 8 core Xeon Mac Pro?

You're paying for a portable workstation, here. michael2k Reply RE: The number that kills it is... by iSayuSay on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 A workstation from 2008 .. yeaah .. sure. Might as well say my iPhone is faster than Pentium III workstation box from 1998. I'm paying for a phone more capable than a full fledged computer 12 years ago. How can that be different? iSayuSay Reply Subject Comment Post Comment Please login or register to post a comment.
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Latest from AnandTech Pipeline Submit News! Broadcom Announces 802.11ac Combo Chip, BCM4335 Vizio Co-Star Pre-Orders Open: $100 for the Next-Gen Google TV Dell Announces New Precision M4700 and M6700 Mobile Workstations ASUS Announces Plans to Bring Jelly Bean to Transformer Pad Series EVGA Tease mini-ITX sized Z77 Windows 8 Gets A Launch Date: October 26th Qualcomm Shows Off APQ8064: Quad-core Krait and Adreno 320 AMD Radeon HD 7970, 7950, 7870 Price Cuts Inbound. 7970GE Available Next Week? NVIDIA Forums & Dev Zone Breached; Up To 400K Password Hashes Taken Plextor Releases M5S SSD Series Samsung To Sell Developer Edition Verizon Galaxy S III with Unlockable Bootloader Motorola Atrix HD Official: $99, LTE, 4.5" HD LCD on AT&T DailyTech Apple to Break Its Vow of Silence on Security Issues at Black Hat Apple iPhones Outsold by Samsung 2-to-1 in Q2, Profit Suffers NASA's IRVE-3 Heat Shield Test Flight a Success NSA Chief to Pitch "Common Core Values" to Hackers at DEFCON 20 Australian Judge Grows Frustrated with Apple, Samsung Case Facebook, Google Up Lobbying Expenses in Q2 2012 7/24/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews USB 3.0 Group Proposes Eliminating Proprietary Laptop Chargers Windows 8 Pumps up Metro UI With DirectX 11.1 Graphics Jellyfish Movement Inspires Reverse Engineering of Muscular Organs Self-Cleaning/Repairing Coating Technology Developed for Cars, Smartphones First 2013 Honda Fit EV Delivered to California Google Nexus 7 16 GB Sells Out, is Android's First Tablet Hit Piracy on Android so Rampant that Madfinger Games Makes "Dead Trigger" Free Australian Text Message, Email Scam Seeks to Extort With Death Threats New Zealand's Controversial Piracy Law Halves Illegal Downloads in a Month 7/23/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews Twitter @AgentKyle @gruber eventually NAND will get faster though, not enough to require TB but enough to need more than USB 2.0 RT @siromega: @anandshimpi do you know of anyone building a 4-6 drive USB 3 UASP external enclosure? Looking for something for a mac mini for ZFS. @siromega hmm I don't but I'll RT this and see what we get :) @zeDrexler I've mentioned my height adjustable desk - GALANT from Ikea, very simple but it gets the job done. I'm happy with it :) I don't know what to say, my heart goes out to all impacted by this - http://t.co/Pd4m97bF @NitroWare hmm are you talking about one of their wireless adapters? the model number doesn't look totally right there @KShermPhoto I wouldn't recommend it :) different SATA speeds, minimal real world gains for most uses @PenLlawen I believe it was Dothan based, which would've put it around 2003 - 2004. The first iPad prototype used a Pentium M @captainwonkish haha no need, I miss stuff like that all the time. Apple seems to only have the i7/8GB configs in stores  

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Windows 8 Gets A Launch Date: October 26th

by Ryan Smith on 7/19/2012 12:15:00 AM
Posted in Windows 8 , Microsoft , Windows , Software

After previously announcing that Windows 8 would have a retail launch sometime in late October, Microsoft has nailed down a final date: Friday, October 26th. The launch on a Friday instead of a Thursday or Sunday is a bit of an odd move, but this is otherwise consistent with Microsoft's previous launches. The only real unknown at this point is when Microsoft will start taking pre-orders - Windows 7 saw fairly early pre-orders as part of a two-week pre-order promotion, but Windows 8's equivalent promotion runs until 2013.

Meanwhile Windows 8 is still on track to RTM in the first week of August, which means the OS will actually be finished within a couple of weeks. Since the Windows 8 Release Preview wasn't technically feature complete and Microsoft still hasn't gone into great detail about Windows 8's new and unnamed desktop visual theme that will be replacing Aero, RTM leaks will likely be our first chance to see the new theme in action.

Source: Microsoft

Print This Article 33 Comments View All Comments Post a Comment Price by frostyfiredude on Thursday, July 19, 2012 Nice, now they just need to get the price for the full license out there. frostyfiredude Reply RE: Price by powerarmour on Thursday, July 19, 2012 Isn't it upgrade only?, I thought they were canning the full retail option... powerarmour Reply RE: Price by tipoo on Thursday, July 19, 2012 For RT, the tablet version tipoo Reply RE: Price by frostyfiredude on Thursday, July 19, 2012 There will still be a system builder license frostyfiredude Reply I'll be interested to see if it flops. by SlyNine on Thursday, July 19, 2012 My guess is it will flop. I think people will want the tradition desktop. People will not want to learn new shortcut keys, and having to navigate to the desktop. If vista's UAC was to much of a change, this will be disastrous. SlyNine Reply RE: I'll be interested to see if it flops. by Malih on Thursday, July 19, 2012 It looks like Microsoft considers Windows 8 as the Vista 2.0, they're releasing it as a bridge to Windows 9, or maybe after a year or so they'll release a Service Pack that'll significantly make everything better, or a (really) cheap upgrade to Windows 9.

I guess they're thinking that you can only truly know what the public wants by feedback of the release, just like what Apple did with OS X Lion, it's stable and usable, got lots of new features that's useful (just like Vista), but there's also dissatisfaction, and feedbacks, and then comes Mountain Lion a year after it.

(I used Vista after release of the SP1, the installation lasted until Q2 of 2010, and It was stable and usable enough for me, despite what articles said.) Malih Reply RE: I'll be interested to see if it flops. by damianrobertjones on Thursday, July 19, 2012 My guess is that it'll be a success. Nor you or I decide these things... It's the kids. Once the k ids think it's cool then the adults follow like sheep. damianrobertjones Reply RE: I'll be interested to see if it flops. by SlyNine on Friday, July 20, 2012 I've seen stranger things happen. I will be buying 2 copies of Windows 7 just in case. SlyNine Reply RE: I'll be interested to see if it flops. by jkostans on Saturday, July 21, 2012 I think it will do well. If it doesn't break backwards compatibility from windows 7 then I will be completely on board. I had a tough time going from XP to W7 x64 trying to get older games/hardware to work right(desktop application). Thank god for DosBox and the kxaudio people. If there ever exists a touchscreen laptop with a good keyboard/trackpad that can be removed I will jump on that in a heartbeat. Surface with the "type" cover seems like a good solution, just have to wait for the reviews to roll in. jkostans Reply RE: I'll be interested to see if it flops. by BSMonitor on Thursday, July 19, 2012 Honestly, this is the most innovative approach to an new OS Microsoft has come up with since moving fully to a GUI interface and mouse.. Since the release of Windows 95 and its subsequent merger with the NT kernel in Windows XP, each new version of Windows has simply taken what Windows does already, and try to make it better... Cough cough, I did say TRY.

With the wind blowing toward portable touch UI, Microsoft is making a truly bold attempt to merge all the trending markets into one common UI. i.e. Windows Phone 8 will feel like Windows Tablet interfaces will feel like Windows 8 PC interfaces... All three devices will simply feel like smaller or larger version of the same computing experience.

Will it work?? Hopefully.. After all, if you don't like the new touch/homepage, you can opt for the normal Windows 7 look. BSMonitor Reply Subject Comment Post Comment Please login or register to post a comment.
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Latest from AnandTech Pipeline Submit News! Broadcom Announces 802.11ac Combo Chip, BCM4335 Vizio Co-Star Pre-Orders Open: $100 for the Next-Gen Google TV Dell Announces New Precision M4700 and M6700 Mobile Workstations ASUS Announces Plans to Bring Jelly Bean to Transformer Pad Series EVGA Tease mini-ITX sized Z77 Qualcomm Shows Off APQ8064: Quad-core Krait and Adreno 320 AMD Radeon HD 7970, 7950, 7870 Price Cuts Inbound. 7970GE Available Next Week? NVIDIA Forums & Dev Zone Breached; Up To 400K Password Hashes Taken Plextor Releases M5S SSD Series Samsung To Sell Developer Edition Verizon Galaxy S III with Unlockable Bootloader Motorola Atrix HD Official: $99, LTE, 4.5" HD LCD on AT&T DailyTech Apple to Break Its Vow of Silence on Security Issues at Black Hat Apple iPhones Outsold by Samsung 2-to-1 in Q2, Profit Suffers NASA's IRVE-3 Heat Shield Test Flight a Success NSA Chief to Pitch "Common Core Values" to Hackers at DEFCON 20 Australian Judge Grows Frustrated with Apple, Samsung Case Facebook, Google Up Lobbying Expenses in Q2 2012 7/24/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews USB 3.0 Group Proposes Eliminating Proprietary Laptop Chargers Windows 8 Pumps up Metro UI With DirectX 11.1 Graphics Jellyfish Movement Inspires Reverse Engineering of Muscular Organs Self-Cleaning/Repairing Coating Technology Developed for Cars, Smartphones First 2013 Honda Fit EV Delivered to California Google Nexus 7 16 GB Sells Out, is Android's First Tablet Hit Piracy on Android so Rampant that Madfinger Games Makes "Dead Trigger" Free Australian Text Message, Email Scam Seeks to Extort With Death Threats New Zealand's Controversial Piracy Law Halves Illegal Downloads in a Month 7/23/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews Twitter @AgentKyle @gruber eventually NAND will get faster though, not enough to require TB but enough to need more than USB 2.0 RT @siromega: @anandshimpi do you know of anyone building a 4-6 drive USB 3 UASP external enclosure? Looking for something for a mac mini for ZFS. @siromega hmm I don't but I'll RT this and see what we get :) @zeDrexler I've mentioned my height adjustable desk - GALANT from Ikea, very simple but it gets the job done. I'm happy with it :) I don't know what to say, my heart goes out to all impacted by this - http://t.co/Pd4m97bF @NitroWare hmm are you talking about one of their wireless adapters? the model number doesn't look totally right there @KShermPhoto I wouldn't recommend it :) different SATA speeds, minimal real world gains for most uses @PenLlawen I believe it was Dothan based, which would've put it around 2003 - 2004. The first iPad prototype used a Pentium M @captainwonkish haha no need, I miss stuff like that all the time. Apple seems to only have the i7/8GB configs in stores  

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