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Foxconn Nettop NT535 review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £136
inc VAT

Foxconn's compact barebones nettop is let down by the difficulty of opening it and its aging processor

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Unsurprisingly for such a compact PC, the nettop lacks an optical drive bay. However, there are plenty of USB ports – two on the front and four on the back – which you can use to connect an external one. There’s also a memory card reader which can handle MMC, Memory Stick PRO, SD and the high-capacity SDHC card formats, making it easy to view photos or video recorded on most digital cameras. If you’d rather store your data and media elsewhere on your network, you’re still in luck. The NT535 has a Gigabit Ethernet port and built-in 802.11n wireless networking, so you’ll be able to access content stored on NAS devices, other PCs or just easily stream media from the internet without having to worry about running a cable to the NT535.

Foxconn Nettop NT535 front

For our tests, we set up the Nettop with Windows 7 Pro 64-bit, 2GB of RAM and a 60GB hard disk. Its performance in our tests reflected its modest processor, with an Overall score of 22 (compared to our benchmark score of 100 for a fast PC based on an Intel Core i5-2500K processor). Its best performance was in our image-editing test, and it managed a slow but steady performance in our video-encoding test. However, multitasking in particular is a weak point. If you like to have a dozen applications or scores of browser tabs open at the same time, this is not the ideal PC for you. Unsurprisingly, its gaming performance is also limited. You won’t have any trouble with the odd round of Bejewelled, but Call of Duty 4, our benchmark 3D game, wouldn’t even run.

Although the NT535 looks good and is easy to mount on a monitor or TV, it failed to win us over. It’s difficult to open and its performance is underwhelming. Despite its Full HD resolution and HDMI port, it’s not up to playing 1080p video files, which makes it a poor choice for a media centre PC. It’s good enough for the same basic email and simple browsing tasks that any netbook or nettop is built for, but the Atom processor is getting on a bit. We’ve seen some great performance from AMD’s Fusion platform, such as in the Asus E35M1-I, so we’d pick a Fusion-based nettop over the current generation of Atom-based models.

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Details

Price £136
Rating **
Processor socket Intel FCBGA559
Processor support Intel Atom D525
Processor heatsink supplied yes
Memory slots 1
Supported memory type PC3-6400
Memory 4GB
Dual-channel support no
Form factor Mini-ITX
Chipset north bridge Intel NM10 Express
Chipset south bridge intel NM10 Express
Passively-cooled north bridge yes
Graphics Processor Intel GMA 3150
Graphics Memory 256MB
Graphics memory type shared

Ports

USB2 ports (front/rear) 2/4
Firewire ports (front/rear) 0/0
Legacy ports none
Graphics/video ports HDMI, VGA
Other ports none

Internal Expansion

Size 25x190x135mm
Dual 3D architecture N/A
IDE ports 0
Serial ATA ports 1
RAID drives 0
Floppy ports 0
3.5in drive bays 0
5.25in drive bays 0
Other bays none

Features

Wired network ports 1x 10/100/1000
Wireless networking support 802.11n
Sound Realtek HD Audio
Sound outputs 3.5mm stereo line out (shared optical S/PDIF), 3.5mm stereo headphone out
Speaker configuration 5.1
Supported memory cards SD, SDHC, Memory Stick PRO, MMC
Power supply wattage N/A
Cables included none
Power consumption standby 2W
Power consumption idle 18W
Power consumption active 24W

Buying Information

Price £136
Supplier http://www.morecomputers.com
Details www.foxconnchannel.com

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