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Linutop 2 Mini PC Review
| Author | Ardjuna Seghers |
| Published | 9th May 2009 |
| Manufacturer | Linutop |
| Price | From €280 ex VAT |
| Latest Price | Click here |
| Build Quality | ![]() |
| Design | ![]() |
| Features | ![]() |
| Performance | ![]() |
| Value | ![]() |
| Overall | ![]() |
Though the unnecessarily large white power and USB icons on the Linutop 2's front do detract somewhat from its look, overall the matte black styling is minimalist and quite attractive. Sure it won't win any design awards, but it has a rugged appeal.
At the unit's front we have four USB ports, two LEDs (a blue one to indicate if the machine is powered up and an orange one for drive activity), the power button and built-in speaker, and headphone plus microphone jacks.
The back is even sparser, with a 3.5mm audio-out jack, VGA (up to 1,920x1,440) an Ethernet connector and of course the power socket. Digital video connectivity is one of the sacrifices of the small form factor (unless you go the DisplayLink route), and considering the Linutop 2 is aimed at businesses and institutions rather than home use, having VGA instead of DVI or HDMI makes sense.
Inside its diminutive chassis, Linutop relies on an AMD Geode LX800 processor. This remarkable 500MHz X86 CPU uses less than one watt and is quite capable of running Windows XP, so we'll have to look elsewhere for the Linutop 2's supposed inability to do so.

It comes with 512MB of memory upgradeable to 1GB, which again is perfectly capable, but it's when we get to storage that we see the culprit: 1GB is barely enough to hold the Linux OS and included applications, leaving you with a mere 400MB free for storing files.
Naturally, you can and should store all your files (such as documents, pictures and videos) on an external memory stick, leaving the 400MB free for any other applications you might wish to install. However, there probably won't be too many of these, since the basics are well taken care of and the Linutop 2 is not really suitable for anything beyond the basics.
On top of a custom Linutop version of Ubuntu Linux, the small machine comes pre-installed with the latest version of OpenOffice for productivity, VLC for playing video files, FireFox for all your web-browsing needs and Pidgin Instant Messenger. Just keep in mind that like most miniature PCs out at the moment, the Linutop 2 can't handle Full HD video, with even efficiently-encoded 720p content causing stutter.
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John Dann said on 10th May 2009
darkspark88 said on 10th May 2009
Consumers are not very knowledgable people overall when it comes to technology. Seeing an extremely cheap desktop, purchasing it, then realising it does not perform will simply ali... more
Leander Quintelier said on 10th May 2009
I don't see why XP can not be installed on this kind of computer.
Neoware -now HP- used to sell Thin Clients with XP embedded on a 256 Mb flash disk. Near to impossibl... more
Technology changes, and so should you. said on 11th May 2009
@ John Dann
I can see where you're coming from, but the electronics market is too fragmented for any conspiracies.
I think you've missed the target market o... more
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@StephenW: I can sort of see why the Linutop case and custom engineering might add to its cost, what I was trying to say was that I can't quite make out why no PC maker is mar... more