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View Full Version : Notebook: Sleek, Light and fast



Bender10
04-11-2008, 04:53 PM
I was just handed a new laptop. It was used as an equipment interface box at werk....The following is a Tech Report on this spiffy little speedster...



Two years ago, NCR established itself as an important player in the notebook market with the Safari 3170. This year, it's introduced another major machine - the 3150 notebook.

The 3150 is sleek, light, and fast. It's powered by a 25-MHz 486SX processor, and has a 9.5-inch screen, local-bus video, PCMCIA Type 2 slot, a 1.44MB floppy drive, and external trackball. The 3150 also comes with 4MB of RAM (upgradeable to 20MB), and a removable hard disk of 80-170MB, capacity. Video options include monochrome, passivematrix color, and active-matrix color. The monochrome and passive matrix displays can be upgraded to active matrix.

The review unit I tested featured active-matrix LCD, an 80MB hard disk (too small for a machine of this caliber), and 4MB of RAM.

Looking at the outside of the 3150 you'll find a sturdy, attractive case that's dark brown with putty details. Open the case and you'll see these same colors repeated with turquoise accents on important keys. Status information is provide by small LEDs directly under the display.

The 3170's keyboard is very good for a notebook. The layout is nearly fullsized, with an inverted T to cursor keys. There are also dedicated Page Up, Page Down, Home, and End keys, all of which are a plus.

As I mentioned above, there's a trackball which you can attach to the front of the machine. When I use a trackball, I prefer it to be on the side of the computer, and I found this front position to be awkward.

If you don't want to use the trackball, however, you can configure the cursor keys to do double-duty for mouse movement. I found this arrangement to work very well in Windows, but the key combination you have to use to switch back and forth between cursor and mouse takes some getting used to.

The 3150's active matrix screen is excellent,: It's one of the best color displays I've seen on a notebook. The colors are sharp and saturated, and it's a joy to use.

This machine was built to run Windows and it shows. With the 486 processor and local bus video, Windows really moves:shocked:. If you're used to laptops being sluggish with Windows, you'll really be surprised with the 3150.

The 3150 can use either nickel hydride (NiMH) or nickel cadmium (NiCAD) batteries. The computer senses which type of battery is attached, and batteries can be changed while the computer is on. Power-saving features are everywhere in this machine, but battery life is still about two hours for the color model.

The cost for the 3150 varies according to the screen and hard disk options, but prices range from $1,995 for the monochrome model with a 80MB hard drive to $3,805 for an active-matrix color model with a 170MB hard drive.

The 3150 is well-deigned, well-built, fast, and stylish. With a removable hard drive, PCMCIA slot, upradeable video, it's also modular and easy to enhance. You may pay more for this machine than a mail-order clone, but it might just be worth the investment.


The HD seems to be dead, I'm trying to see if I can get this beauty going...(it's Friday, and slow here in Dr. Frankenstein's laboratory..) :icon_mrgreen:

Bender10
04-11-2008, 05:12 PM
Got it to boot up. Windows 3.1. Just had to run Scandisk through it...

PcManiac
04-11-2008, 06:06 PM
Nice Laptop dude! 25MHz! and 4MB RAM! holy cow! I want one! :icon_mrgreen:
I would definatly want to have the active-matrix screen though..

Nflight
04-11-2008, 06:15 PM
I excited to see what you can do with all that power? Actually What good is it? :icon_wink:

Bender10
04-11-2008, 06:29 PM
This is the high end model. 8 meg ram, 170 MB HD and the Active matrix screen. Boots up to Windows (3.1) in about 15 seconds. Hey, Someone paid $3,000 skins for this. Kinda hard to throw it in the bin.

Another box for the confuser museum....Call for tour schedules.

AMDave
04-12-2008, 04:46 AM
That would be an excellent candidate for Smoothwall (linux) firewall and router.

Steve Lux
04-19-2008, 03:30 AM
Can it run MJ-12, Dimes or some other low CPU project?

Frederic Brillouet
04-19-2008, 10:46 AM
Euler? it should be a blue ribbon winner at that :icon_lol:

Steve Lux
04-19-2008, 04:21 PM
Does it run good-old style PCMCIA, or is it one of those new-fangled CardBus jobs?

(If I could find an old-style PCMCIA network card I could run my old 386 W-95 laptop.)

Frederic Brillouet
04-19-2008, 06:25 PM
Does it run good-old style PCMCIA, or is it one of those new-fangled CardBus jobs?

(If I could find an old-style PCMCIA network card I could run my old 386 W-95 laptop.)
wireless pcmcia cards do exist though... so wired ones should exist too

Steve Lux
04-19-2008, 09:37 PM
Yeah, but those are the 32-bit CardBus version of PCMCIA (actually PCMCIA 5.0 and higher), not the old 16 bit style (PCMCIA 1.0 - memory only), or even 2.0 memory and modem). CardBus PCMCIA cards physically won't fit in old-style PCMCIA 1.0 or 2.0 slots. The keyed side guide is thicker.

All the old-style PCMCIA 2.0 cards I have found are just dial-up modem cards (and I have two of those), or memory cards - neither of which are very useful for hooking up to an ethernet.