The Samsung RF511 is a mid-range laptop which offers solid yet unspectacular performance, at a less than inspiring price. With so many great laptop bargains on the market this year boasting new Intel chips, we reckon that Samsung has missed the mark with this middle-of-the-road outing.
With its muted grey metal trim around the keyboard and austere black-on-silver keys, the kind of room which would suit Samsung's RF511 will have black leather couches and smoked glass tables. It's a world away from the designer minimalism of something like the Asus Zenbook and a design that will repel as many as it attracts.
But once you look at the glossy baked plastic lid, you begin to wonder who exactly the RF511 is aimed at. Is it a workhorse machine for open plan offices? Or something that could be a desktop replacement for the family home? We're just not sure – and the problem is that Samsung doesn't seem to have the answer, either.
If you're shopping around, there are two versions of the RF511 available: one has a discrete graphics processor supplied by Nvidia for extra gaming power; the other relies on Intel's HD Graphics 3000 GPU that's built into a Sandy Bridge chip. This is the latter incarnation, meaning that the latest games are going to be beyond your aspirations.
Like the Packard Bell TS13HR, you'll be able to get some older games running at a playable rate, but forget your secret ambition to be a soldier in Battlefield 3 if you choose to arm yourself with the RF511. Far Cry 2 runs fairly well on it, though.
So, if it's not extra games performance that Samsung is offering punters, how does it distinguish itself from the almost £180 cheaper Packard Bell TS13HR? For the extra outlay here you get a Core i5 processor (rather than the Core i3 in the Packard Bell) and an extra 250GB of hard drive space.
It's not much lighter, though, and the battery life isn't any better if you're running video or doing anything more challenging than browsing the web.
We can report, however, that the RF511's screen is an improvement over the TS13HR. The contrast levels are even better for richer colours all round, but it's not that much better. Certainly not £150 so.
Limited benefit
So what about those differences between the Core i5 and Core i3? With the former, you get Hyper Threading and Intel's Turbo Boost technology. That's reflected in the benchmarks, but they don't have as much real world benefit as you might imagine – certainly not unless you're encoding a lot of video or doing the kinds of high intensity workloads that this laptop really isn't otherwise designed for.
TechRadar Labs
Battery Eater '05: 168 minutes
Cinebench: 9960
3DMark 2006: 4740
As far as using the the RF511 or the TS13HR for photo editing, watching videos, surfing the web and office suites, there's not a huge performance advantage to be gained by spending the extra money.
What you do get for the extra money is a lot of bundled software. Unfortunately, most of this borders on the intrusive rather than the genuinely useful. Internet security pop-ups and notifications about Wi-Fi also have a habit of knocking out other running applications. If you're after a no-frillls 15-incher, there's little reason to buy the RF511 over the cheaper TS13HR.
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