ViewSonic VOT120 PC Mini review
in Desktop PCs
Verdict
Tiny, efficient and attractively priced, if you just need the bare essentials it's ideal
Review Date: 8 Oct 2009
Reviewed By: David Bayon
Price when reviewed: £178 (£204 inc VAT)
Features & Design
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Value for Money
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Performance
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Since the Asus Eee Box started the nettop trend, recent mini PCs have taken one of two roads: either add Nvidia's Ion graphics to create a media nettop, or keep it as is and just miniaturise the thing as much as possible. ViewSonic's VOT120 takes the second option, cramming a fully functional Atom-based PC into a box that's a good deal smaller than a Mac Mini.
The internals are nothing particularly new. It's powered by a 1.6GHz Atom N270 with Hyper-Threading, assisted by 1GB of DDR2 memory and a 160GB, 5,400rpm laptop hard disk. This combination led to a standard score of 0.36 in our 2D benchmarks, which should tell you everything you need to know about the VOT120's intended use - don't try anything too intensive, but you should be fine for everyday tasks.
But power isn't the important factor for a mini PC such as this; what you want is an adequate feature set, and the ViewSonic makes a decent fist of this. It comes with both Gigabit Ethernet and 802.11n wireless, and along with a DVI output and four USB ports (two each on the front and back), there's also an eSATA port should you wish to expand the existing storage capacity.
The whole device sits upright in a neat little stand, and it uses an external power supply. Under full load the ViewSonic drew a staggeringly low 15W, which fell even further to just 10W when idle. And with all this power-efficiency in mind, it understandably comes pre-loaded with Windows XP Home SP3.
At £178, it's a fraction cheaper than a comparably specified Eee Box, and with its tiny dimensions and low power draw we can't see any compelling reason to choose the Asus over this little PC. It's efficient, cheap and small enough to throw in a bag or screw to the back of a TFT. It won't match any of the recent Ion nettops for media capabilities, but as a basic system it's an attractive purchase.
Author: David Bayon
From around the web
Power supply?
I would truly appreciate it if you could also publish pictures of those ugly power supply bricks accompanying those tiny nettop boxes.
Thank you in advance.
By stasi47 on 12 Oct 2009 ![]()
I'd really like to see one of these with two ethernet ports. I know that's a bit unusual, but two ports would allow us to use it as a firewall.
By bubbles16 on 13 Oct 2009 ![]()
It would be interesting to see one of there loaded with Linux and then some form of media centre software. I wonder if it would play videos well?
By DaChimp on 13 Oct 2009 ![]()
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