Notebook Trio: ASUS A8JS and G2P and ABS Mayhem Z5
by Jarred Walton on December 29, 2006 12:15 PM EST- Posted in
- Laptops
Test Setup
We've covered all of the features and details about these laptops, and it should be pretty clear what type of performance you can get in various applications at this point. However, we of course like to run some real-world benchmarks and provide the results to help show you exactly what you get. Here's a recap of the basic components used in each laptop during testing.
We ran our typical battery of benchmarks, including office, multimedia, 3D, and gaming applications. Given that all three laptops use the same Core 2 Duo processor model and come with 2GB of memory in the tested configurations, performance in many of the benchmarks is going to be nearly identical. The areas where we are likely to see the most separation are of course gaming performance, battery life and power draw, and temperatures. We will also discuss our experience with calling the technical support departments of the manufacturers.
We do have a few results from the Dell XPS M1710 that we tested earlier this year, which uses the same graphics card as the ABS Mayhem Z5 only it's paired with a Core Duo T2600 processor instead. We have updated many of the benchmarks we run, so we can't compare results in the majority of tests, but where we have corresponding results from the Dell XPS system we will include them.
We've covered all of the features and details about these laptops, and it should be pretty clear what type of performance you can get in various applications at this point. However, we of course like to run some real-world benchmarks and provide the results to help show you exactly what you get. Here's a recap of the basic components used in each laptop during testing.
Tested Configurations | |||
ASUS A8JS | ASUS G2P | ABS Mayhem Z5 | |
Processor | Core 2 Duo T7200 2.0 GHz 4MB L2 667FSB |
Core 2 Duo T7200 2.0 GHz 4MB L2 667FSB |
Core 2 Duo T7200 2.0 GHz 4MB L2 667FSB |
Memory | 2x1024MB Infineon DDR2-667 5-5-5-15-21 Timings |
2x1024MB Infineon DDR2-667 5-5-5-15-21 Timings |
2x1024MB Corsair DDR2-667 5-5-5-15-21 Timings |
Graphics | NVIDIA GeForce Go 7700 512MB 3D Clocks: 450/800 |
ATI Mobility Readeon X1700 512MB 3D Clocks: 459/990 |
NVIDIA GeForce Go 7900 GTX 512MB 3D Clocks: 500/1200 |
Hard Drive | Hitachi 100GB 7200 RPM SATA | Hitachi 160GB 5400 RPM | Hitachi 100GB 5400 RPM SATA |
Optical Drive | 8X DVD+/-RW | 8X DVD+/-RW | 8X DVD+/-RW |
Battery | 6-Cell 53WHr/4800 mAHr | 8-Cell 71WHr/4800 mAHr | 8-Cell 65WHr/4400 mAHr |
Operating System | Windows XP Pro SP2 | Windows XP Pro SP2 | Windows XP Pro SP2 |
We ran our typical battery of benchmarks, including office, multimedia, 3D, and gaming applications. Given that all three laptops use the same Core 2 Duo processor model and come with 2GB of memory in the tested configurations, performance in many of the benchmarks is going to be nearly identical. The areas where we are likely to see the most separation are of course gaming performance, battery life and power draw, and temperatures. We will also discuss our experience with calling the technical support departments of the manufacturers.
We do have a few results from the Dell XPS M1710 that we tested earlier this year, which uses the same graphics card as the ABS Mayhem Z5 only it's paired with a Core Duo T2600 processor instead. We have updated many of the benchmarks we run, so we can't compare results in the majority of tests, but where we have corresponding results from the Dell XPS system we will include them.
17 Comments
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unclebud - Saturday, December 30, 2006 - link
"Seems all the usual suspects are on a holiday"more than likely they were just thrown speechless by such extreme bias in this "review"...
newsflash - it can have a sorry gma 900 in it that can barely play rollercoaster tycoon and call it a "gaming laptop" if they want...
ugh. i tried skipping around to get something valuable out of this "article", but there aren't any pictures of the models even...
going to reread mr anand's review of his laptop to cheer myself up -- now that's a thorough review!
JarredWalton - Saturday, December 30, 2006 - link
"but there aren't any pictures of the models even"Umm... what? There are 36 images (with enlarged shots) in the article, plus another 30 or so graphs/charts. If you're not seeing them, either your browser is incorrectly configured and is blocking the images, or else the servers are having issues. And if someone called a GMA900 a "gaming notebook" they would be lying; calling an X1700 laptop a gaming laptop is more of an exaggeration, but it's clearly not the fastest mobile GPU.
I honestly have no idea what you mean by bias, so I'd be happy if you would point out areas that are "biased" rather than just giving a blanket label to the article.
mino - Friday, December 29, 2006 - link
Overall a nice review, those ASU are getting some serious popularity here in Europe while the reviews are nowhere to find..However, ranting for half a page about 14inch not having numeric keypad? I would have thought it was under you level of knowledge...
While the KB is NOT perfect in any sense - small enter, small keys.. - the absence of numeric keypad is natural.
Maybe you should spend a few weeks on road with some 17inch baby of yours to see how "important" numeric keypad really is...
One thing I hate about A8J is that transreflective (CrystalSomething) screen. It is pretty much unusable the moment the sun shines, and it does shine a bit too much in the summer.
JarredWalton - Friday, December 29, 2006 - link
I wasn't really complaining about the lack of a numpad on the 14" A8Js, merely pointing out that it's not there and you really can't fit one into such a chassis. My "rant" for half a paragraph was dedicated to the Fn key - and mostly I was just talking about the uses and making a minor complaint about it not being switched with the Ctrl key location. Unless you're looking somewhere else?I tried to discuss my feelings about the keyboards on each laptop, as that's pretty important with long-term use. Given what I do for a living (writing), I would actually avoid purchasing the G2P (as tested) and the Mayhem Z5 purely on the basis of the keyboard alone. The US G2P might actually be fine, as the primary issue I had was with the mixed up locations (relative to most keyboards) of the \ and " keys.
As for the G2P, that's where I complained about the missing numpad, and it's a 17" model notebook. I complained about this same issue on the Dell XPS M1710 and E1705, as I use numpads on a regular basis and find them to be important. Ironically, the ABS includes a numpad, which I liked, but the other missing keys (Home - PgDn) were at least as irritating to me as the lack of a numpad. Obviously, my taste in keyboards isn't the same as every other person's, which I why I started the article talking about the importance of trying out laptops in person where possible - or try a similar laptop if that's all you can do.
Ideally, I'd like a 17" notebook to have a numpad and a layout very much like the ABS, only shrink the width of the Backspace, \, Enter, and Shift keys and put in a column with Home, End, PgUp, and PgDn similar to how the two ASUS laptops do it. There's plenty of room there for those keys... or just extend the keyboard area down a bit and put the keys right above the cursors like on a regular keyboard.
As for the two ASUS laptop LCDs, I didn't find the LCD on the G2P to have problems in bright light (sunlight is a stretch but possible). Hopefully all newer ASUS laptops have LCDs more like the G2P. The A8J on the other hand is definitely the worst LCD of the bunch and really suitable for indoor use only (or on overcast days). When I first used it I didn't think too much about the LCD quality, as most laptop LCDs can't compete with desktop LCDs in terms of brightness and color quality. After playing with the other notebooks, however, I became quite unhappy with the A8J LCD. Sure, it helps battery life, but all you need to do is have more brightness levels to allow for lowered battery use on LCDs like the G2P.
mino - Saturday, December 30, 2006 - link
Seems all the usuall suspect are on a holiday :)Maybe I should read a bit more thoroughy, and sllep more too :). Point taken.
As for the display, the are two things. I am yet to see an glossy surface LCD to be usable on sunlight. They are nice and sharp for movies and indoors. But my observation is that the moment sun shines (also through an unprotected window) the display changes to a mirror - well, it called an "mirror effect" dispaly sometimes :). At the same conditionas even a poor-quality anti-glare one retains usability.
That said I will have to pass the A8J, otherwise it is pretty solid bundle(I like the BT+DVI+14"WXGA+ combo).
Should the time come when the notebook are regularly of built-to-order variety such is it with cars now. That way most of these "issues" with manufacturer isung bad display, VGA, CPU and so on would be a thing of the past.
It would not even increase the price too much provided good automation is employed. Actually this would greatly simplify the abundance of notebook based of the same chassis with a bit different internals only.
Hell, just ASUS has 5+ series with the same 15.4inch chassis...
mino - Saturday, December 30, 2006 - link
spelling, here you come :(francisco54 - Friday, May 16, 2014 - link
hola mepodeia mamdar los draivers de este ordenador