Forum Discussion
19 Replies
- MrWizardModeratorPossibly USB/MHL
MHL mobile high def link, aka digital video output
Uses a special cable micro USB connector to HDMI female - Tom_M1Explorer
JiminDenver wrote:
Usually the micro USB port is used for charging. Are you sure it's the HDMI port?
I had to look it up first but on my RCA tablet I can connect a external battery to the Micro HDMI. - JiminDenverExplorer III had to look it up first but on my RCA tablet I can connect a external battery to the Micro HDMI.
- Tom_M1ExplorerUpdate on my Nextbook:
Walmart Nextbook Flexx 10.1"
I did a clean install of Windows 10 but there were too many missing drivers so I did a factory reset to 8.1 and then did an upgrade to Win 10. I had no problems doing the upgrade.
I have installed the following programs:- Firefox browser
- Microsoft Office 2007
- Microsoft Streets & Trips 2013
- Microsoft Visual Studio 2010
- Paint.Net graphics software
- Calibre eBook management software
- VLC media player
- Foobar2000 music player
A few negatives:- The touchpad is way too sensitive. I am using a Bluetooth mouse instead.
- No USB-3 ports and the ports don't have enough power to handle a portable hard drive. I have to use a powered hub to use a hard drive.
- It has a separate charge port and can not be charged via USB. You have to use the supplied charger
- strollinExplorer
pconroy328 wrote:
strollin wrote:
I have a 7 year old netbook with an older Atom processor and 1.5GB of RAM. I ran Win 7 Pro on it for about 5 years and could easily have about a half-dozen programs running all at the same time. 2GB of RAM works even better.
Just to share a bit -- I had the opposite experience. My wife impulse-bought an HP Netbook. 1.8GHz Atom, 2GB, Windows 7 Starter (or was it 'Basic').
She's a light user and found it to be awful. I'm a heavy user and found it to be downright horrible.
Last year, I found it wasting away in some drawer and I put Lubuntu on it. Now it's tolerable. :)
I guess everyone's experiences are different.
I don't know exactly what software you tried to run but for "normal" everyday use (email, internet, word processing, spreadsheet, etc...) it did fine. It may just be a matter of expectations, you can't expect a netbook to run everything as fast as a desktop or laptop would.
I have tried several different flavors of Linux on my netbook (including Lubuntu) and wasn't wowed. I currently have 1 netbook running Win 10 and another running Chrome OS (between the 2, I prefer Win 10). - phaysExplorerI have one of these and run Silverleaf's VMSpc on it to monitor the diesel engine on my coach. Works great for my needs. Small enough with the keyboard removed to sit on my dash in front of my existing gauges. Upgraded it to Win 10.
- pconroy328Explorer
strollin wrote:
I have a 7 year old netbook with an older Atom processor and 1.5GB of RAM. I ran Win 7 Pro on it for about 5 years and could easily have about a half-dozen programs running all at the same time. 2GB of RAM works even better.
Just to share a bit -- I had the opposite experience. My wife impulse-bought an HP Netbook. 1.8GHz Atom, 2GB, Windows 7 Starter (or was it 'Basic').
She's a light user and found it to be awful. I'm a heavy user and found it to be downright horrible.
Last year, I found it wasting away in some drawer and I put Lubuntu on it. Now it's tolerable. :)
I guess everyone's experiences are different. - joebedfordNomad II
Gdetrailer wrote:
Where does this baloney come from? Sure some people probably had problems with updates but I'm sure the vast majority didn't. I have 3 PCs running 10, all on automatic updates - the updates have done nothing but improve performance.
Honestly, if you WANT a "tablet" buy something with Android, it is a very "light" OS with a very small foot print and you don't have the issue of MS borking your device with "updates" with no real "QA" before they send them out (yeah, they HAVE sent out several "updates" to "10" users which resulted in you LOSING your "wireless" access, try fixing that on a "tablet" with no wired network option).
YOU may have lost, but _I_ didn't. - strollinExplorer
Gdetrailer wrote:
...Honestly, if you WANT a "tablet" buy something with Android, it is a very "light" OS with a very small foot print ...
The first 3 tablets I owned ran Android and I liked them well enough but once I got a tablet with Windows 8.1, 2GB of RAM and a quad-core Atom processor I dumped the Android tablets. It's great to be able to run the exact same software on my tablet that I use on my desktop and laptop computers.
I have a 7 year old netbook with an older Atom processor and 1.5GB of RAM. I ran Win 7 Pro on it for about 5 years and could easily have about a half-dozen programs running all at the same time. 2GB of RAM works even better.
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