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Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Fri Feb 26, 2010 9:23 pm
by ranns
A day after I got my S10-3T, monchter and I went to the Lenovo Shop again. He was in awe when he saw the S10-3, that he bought it right away. My Favorite Lenovo staff Rey was in a meeting. Good thing they still had two units left. We got one and the last one was bought 10 minutes later. It was so good that all their stocks of 4 S10-3T's and 10 S10-3s were sold out in two days. The red colored lid S10-3 is good, but the black one is better.

It has basically the same specs as the S10-3T except for the touch screen. The LCD also has a size ratio of 16:9. The battery however is a 6-cell type which goes for more than 6 hours based on our initial testing. It also has Windows 7 Starter Edition but we upgraded it to Home Premium along with the RAM upgrade to 2GB. It also has an extra mini pci-e slot for 3G modem but I have yet to see the BIOS since it's different from the S10-3T.

S10-3 Specs:

Processor: Intel ATOM Processor N450 ( 1.66GHz 667MHz 512KB )

Operating system: Genuine Windows 7 Starter

Graphics: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 3150

Memory: 1GB PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz

Display: 10.1 "SD LED Glare(1024 x 600) 16:9 ratio

Pointing device: Multi-touch Trackpad

Hard Drive: 250GB SATA 5400rpm

Battery: 6 Cell Lithium-Ion

Network Card: 10/100 Ethernet, Lenovo b/g/n Wi-Fi wireless + Bluetooth

Media Reader: 6-in-1 Card Reader

Weight: 1.1 Kg.

Accessories : Sleeve Case


Here are the pics:


Overall design is simply amazing! The lid has a carbon fiber design. No more finger prints!
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wide screen lcd, brushed aluminum design palm rest, island-style 98% keyboard (no flex)
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Apple Macbook inspired muti-touch trackpad
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Full use of the screen bezel (power button on the left, and One-key Recovery and Quick Start buttons on the right)
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Tilts further
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Left side where the VGA port, power jack, USB port, card reader and wireless switch is located.
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Right side consist of mic/headphone jack, 2 more USB ports, and LAN port
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The 6-cell battery is now flushed with the back of the unit. Small bulge at the bottom which gives a nice upward tilt.
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Re: Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Fri Feb 26, 2010 9:23 pm
by ranns
Post continues....

The lenovo logo is embossed on the carbon fiber design which gives a more elegant look.
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Textured keyboard keys
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Bottom panel has a rough finish, an easy to remove back panel plate for upgrading, and an aztec design vent holes!
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The 6-cell battery is surprisingly not protruding that much at the bottom. Nice job Lenovo!
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Back panel removed. Only 4 screws to loosen.
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Better view of the 3G modem slot with pre-wired antenna. Wifi module is at the top part.
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Compared to the older Lenovo S10-2
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Close up of the 6-cell battery
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SIM Slot inside the battery bay
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The BIOS section
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Side-by-side
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I hope they put up this design on the tablet version too. I'll bet it'll be another hotcake version.

Re: Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Sun Feb 28, 2010 7:25 pm
by sartre
i got mine too :ymapplause:

sir ranns, any idea on how much a 3g modem is? thank you

Re: Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Sun Feb 28, 2010 7:41 pm
by ranns
Some old ones costs around 2k-2.5k. The one I used cost a bit more

Re: Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Tue Mar 02, 2010 1:16 pm
by sartre
sir, any store where i could buy even the 'old ones'? tia

Re: Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Tue Mar 02, 2010 4:44 pm
by ranns
There are quite a few on eBay. However, I found a bit of problem with S10-3 BIOS.

After I successfully unlocked my S10-3T BIOS to receive a third party 3G modem, I now tried it on monchter's S10-3. I know it's the same specs as my S10-3T minus the touch screen, but it has a different BIOS. When I first tried the third-party 3g modem card to my unhacked S10-3T, it wouldn't boot up because of it. But when I tried the same card to the unhacked S10-3, the booting went through! I was able to boot into windows but the device wasn't detected. I re-inserted the card and it was the same. The only thing I can think of is that the mini pci-e slot is disabled. That's why no matter what card I insert there, it will still boot up but won't be recognized in Windows.

One thing I noticed also is when I tried to hack the S10-3 BIOS, I couldn't find any traces of VID/PID which I found in the S10-3T BIOS. I tried looking for all the approved VID/PID and there wasn't any. I thought at first that maybe there is no white list in the BIOS (which is next to impossible) that's why I was ecstatic when it first booted up with the card installed, only to find out that it's not recognized by windows.

Re: Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Tue Mar 02, 2010 6:47 pm
by sartre
thank you sir.

please keep us posted of any development on s10-3's bios modifications

Re: Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Sun Mar 07, 2010 12:26 am
by ranns
Good news for S10-3 users! The mini pci-e slot is not BIOS locked!

I know now why it didn't work the first time I tried it. It's not enabled by default! After you install your modem and fire up your netbook, you need to press Fn-F5 and enable the 3G modem there by setting it to "on", and windows 7 will recognize it and ask for drivers. Just install your modem's drivers, install the connection manager too, and you're set! I think you can practically plug in any card and it might just work!

It puzzles me why Lenovo did this to S10-3 while locking the BIOS of S10-3T.

Re: Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Tue Mar 16, 2010 10:06 am
by dencio888
Got a new unit this week, how long usually does a 6cell last with wifi on?
I got mine working continuously for approximately 530hrs only on Energy Star power scheme mode.
Shouldnt it be more than 6hrs ?

Re: Lenovo S10-3: Review with Pics

PostPosted: Tue Mar 16, 2010 10:58 am
by ranns
you are right about the actual battery life. Mine goes for the same length on Energy Star mode. It might go more than 6 hours on super power saver mode though.