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LG X110 Netbook Review
| Author | Ardjuna Seghers |
| Published | 26th Feb 2009 |
| Manufacturer | LG Electronics |
| Supplier | The Hut |
| Price | £256.46 (Exc VAT) |
| as reviewed | £294.93 (Inc VAT) |
| Latest Price | Click here |
| Design | ![]() |
| Features | ![]() |
| Performance | ![]() |
| Value | ![]() |
| Overall | ![]() |
Connectivity is of course identical to the Wind's, and to most other netbooks for that matter. This means you get two USB 2.0 ports on the left, together with the power jack and a Kensington lock slot. On the right, we have another USB port as well as Ethernet and D-sub connections, headphone and microphone jacks (now in black rather than the Wind's red and green) and a memory card reader. The front and back of the X110 are left clean.

The LG's internals are identical to its MSI cousin and most other netbooks. An Intel Atom N270 CPU running at 1.6GHz will just about handle everyday computing, though you'll want to stay away from multi-threaded applications, encoding and decoding. 1GB of RAM is par for the course, and the minimum you'll want to run the included Windows XP OS. The hard drive, meanwhile, is at the upper end of the netbook spectrum, matching the revised Wind at 160GB.

One area where LG doesn't quite match the competition is in terms of wireless connectivity. WiFi only goes up to 802.11g and there's no sign of Bluetooth, despite both the Wind and even the cheaper Advent 4211 providing Draft-N wireless and Bluetooth 2.0. To compensate, LG does have 3G-ready versions of the LX110 - the SIM slot resides behind the battery - but there was no module inside our version. That said, one can't realistically expect a netbook under £300 to have integrated HSDPA.
The LX110's audio has also received a minor upgrade by way of SRS Labs' TruSurround HD, but this hasn't made an appreciable difference to the poor speaker performance put in by the original Wind. As such, Asus' Dolby Home Theater-enabled 1000HE still rules the roost when it comes to netbook audio performance.

As far as the non-glossy screen goes, it's fairly average. Though by no means bad for a netbook, it doesn't match up to some of the better examples we've seen. For instance, viewing angles are afflicted by noticeable contrast shift, there is very slight banding and some visible dithering.

Getting onto that all-important battery-life is perhaps the biggest disappointment, since LG's default configuration offers the same three-cell 2200mAh battery that held back the Wind. Admittedly, some consumers simply won't need more and while LG claims that a six-cell battery is available, finding a six-cell X110 configuration was impossible at the time of writing. Hopefully they will become available, since a netbook approaching the £300 mark with anything less than a six-cell is not that enticing, especially when the likes of Samsung's NC10 and Asus' Eee PC 1000H are vying for your hard-earned cash.
Just to give you some idea, the LG only managed two hours and five minutes running a video with the screen set to 50 per cent brightness and wireless enabled. And though compatible third-party high-capacity batteries are available, these will set you back around £70.

The one scenario where the X110 could still really shine is in the 3G mobile broadband sector where there is less competition. If the 3G-integrated versions come out on affordable plans, I'd certainly prefer one of these to the Dell Mini 9.
Verdict
Despite the attractive, sleek styling and excellent keyboard improving on what was already a fairly desirable netbook in its MSI Wind incarnation, LG's X110 falls down by costing as much as other 10in netbooks that offer more battery life.
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Tony Walker said on 26th February 2009
Jim said on 1st March 2009
"That said, one can't realistically expect a netbook under £300 to have integrated HSDPA." I have to disagree. The Advent 4213 from PC world/Currys/Dixons is only £2... more
Ardjuna said on 2nd March 2009
@Tony Walker: Thanks for your feedback. I assumed the touchpad to be Synaptics, but don't really care as it was excellent to use.
Matte screens like the Wind's and... more
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A fair number of Winds and Advent 4211 (and possibly other clones) *don't* have the "Draft-N" Wi-Fi. I belive there's is currently 2 known "G" cards u... more