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Alienware Sentia


Alienware Sentia

Alienware's recent overhaul of its all-purpose thin-and-light Sentia brings about a number of changes. Most noticeably, instead of the kryptonite-green case, the new and slimmer Sentia comes clad in silver. Also new are a smaller battery and screen than found on former models. Unfortunately, we still found the same slow mobile performance that the previous Sentia delivered. We think the Sentia's £1,100 price (as of April 2005) is too much to pay for this kind of performance.

Design
The new, 2.5kg, silver Alienware Sentia lacks the aesthetic shock value of the previous green incarnation. However, the Sentia's lid retains the handy rubber palm grips and alien face, with eyes that now gleam a cool blue instead of a creepy yellow. The case measures a more demure 292 by 38 by 228mm -- average for its class, but smaller than the previous model.

And in some ways, the new, smaller Sentia is more difficult to use. The small arrow keys and matchstick-size mouse buttons make typing less comfortable. The 12.1-in screen (down from 14.1 inches) has a high 1,280x800-pixel native resolution that provides crisp, detailed graphics, though some may have problems reading the resulting tiny text. Like the Fujitsu LifeBook N5010's display, the Sentia's screen features a glossy finish that blocks out ambient light. This makes the screen easier to see in extremely bright conditions, but creates an annoying reflective glare in darker environments.

Features
The Sentia has a satisfying selection of ports and slots. On the port side, all the essentials are covered: FireWire, S-Video out, Ethernet, and two USB 2.0 ports. The system offers one Type II PC Card slot plus a 4-in-1 slot for reading four types of increasingly ubiquitous flash memory cards: Memory Stick, Memory Stick Pro, Secure Digital, and MultiMediaCard. The Sentia can also be configured with either a DVD/CD-RW combo drive or a multiformat DVD drive. Really, the only thing the Sentia lacks is a battery-conserving on/off button for its integrated 802.11b/g Wi-Fi card.

You can configure the Alienware Sentia with one of two processor types -- Intel's Pentium M or Celeron M -- in several speeds; our evaluation unit featured a 1.7GHz Pentium M with 1MB of Level 2 cache, as well as 512MB of RAM, and an Intel 855GME video engine with 64MB of dedicated memory.

Performance
In our tests, though, the Sentia couldn't keep pace with other comparably outfitted machines. You'll likely get more speed out of a Sentia by configuring it with another of Alienware's CPU choices that includes 2MB of L2 cache or a faster 7,200rpm hard drive.

Unfortunately, you can't choose a faster chip for better graphics performance; the low-end Intel 855GME chip is fixed. The Sentia's power-saving PM didn't completely mitigate the effects of its small 10.8V, 4,000mAh battery, and it lasted a decent 185 minutes in our drain tests.

Mobile application performance
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
BAPCo MobileMark 2002 performance rating
Fujitsu LifeBook S7010
198
HP Compaq Business Notebook nc6000
180
Alienware Sentia
175

Battery life (Longer bars indicate better performance)
BAPCo MobileMark 2002 battery-life minutes
HP Compaq Business Notebook nc6000
342
Fujitsu LifeBook S7010
220
Alienware Sentia
185

System configurations:

Alienware Sentia
Windows XP Pro; 1.7GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 333MHz; Intel 82852/82855 GM/GME 64MB; Samsung MP0402H 40GB 5,400rpm

HP Compaq Business Notebook nc6000
Windows XP Pro; 1.6GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 266MHz; AT Mobility Radeon 9600 32MB; Toshiba MK6022GAX 60GB 5,400rpm

Fujitsu LifeBook S7010
Windows XP Home; 1.7GHz Intel Pentium M; 512MB DDR SDRAM 333MHz; Intel 82852/82855 GM/GME; Hitachi DK23FA-80 80GB 4,200rpm

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Heaven - it is ok but try to earn money at hellishdollars.com !