It’s a Samsung Ativ Smart PC. The entry-level Windows 8 tablet from Samsung running on a Clover-Trail Intel Atom platform, with a 64Gb eMMC (more on that later) and 2Gb RAM. The dual-core Atom immediately felt like it was in a totally different league to the old Atom-based HP Mini netbook I used to have.
[caption id="attachment_259" align="aligncenter" width="567"] Samsung's Ativ and Intel's Roadmap for the Atom.[/caption]
It’s probably a testament to Microsoft’s work on keeping the system requirements for Windows from getting ridiculous like they had in the days of Windows Vista. The overhead for Windows 7 and 8 isn’t really that different, which has allowed the lower-level hardware to catch up a bit.
There's a very tiny jitter in the start-screen when scrolling back and forth, probably due to the lower-power integrated graphics chip. But said jitter is occasional, and so hard to notice that you have to point it out to people, and even then you can blink and miss it. So no big deal there.
I’ve typed a few pages on this device and I' have to say, for a small machine the keyboard is fantastic, I’m able to type at the same speed as I would on my expensive desktop PC keyboard (sadly, it can’t help my poor spelling though).
It’s actually not shy on connectivity options either. For those of us who don’t share the iPad’s “less-is-more” design ethic, there's welcome inclusion of one full-size USB port on the tablet and two on the keyboard. Real work requires USB, so that’s great. The tablet also sports a micro HDMI port and a MicroSD slot. The other bonus feature is the S-Pen, a proper active stylus that’s pressure-sensitive and as accurate as a Wacom digitiser. It lacks the eraser found on some, which is a small shame.
It’s got some bad that comes with the good though. The buttons on the touchpad have nothing to indicate where the left button and right button meet. The charger is tiny, which is great, except so is the connector, it’s one tiny pin isn’t very kid-friendly, and is likely to get bent. The biggest disappointment though, is the way the tablet docks to the keyboard, the bizarre clip mechanism fails a lot on this test machine. More often than not, you’ll pick up the tablet and the keyboard will fall off. You have to be quite forceful to be sure it clips securely.
But this test machine wasn’t as much about the individual features of the Ativ as it was about giving one of these new Atom-based tablets a thorough test. Which isn’t going so bad at the time of writing. Nothing I’ve tried to do has made the device seem horribly underpowered, although it’s mostly been simple content creation and web surfing so far. I don’t think it’s going to be quite so pretty when I try Photoshop on it, or try to edit a video. But I’m happy to be proven wrong.
UPDATE: - Actually, I might be at least partly wrong, editing in Photoshop is doable with Web-sized images, and short video editing in Movie Maker can also be done.
Either way, I’m feeling positive about these little tablets. We’d prefer our chosen machine to be an Intel Core i based unit, but if economic realities force us to look at the little-brother (or sister) from Intel, I don’t think it’ll be so bad.