![]() What do you gain and what do you lose with this more affordable model? Well, HP swaps out the multimedia dongle port in favor of a built-in VGA port (plus a built-in RJ-45 ethernet jack for good measure). On our WorldBench 6 test suite, the Mini 110 unsurprisingly notched a mark of 33–a hair better than the Mini 1000’s original score of 30. ![]() (Travelers’ advisory: Consider popping an extra 40 bones for the BX06 Mini Battery, to pick up a little extra on-the-go gusto.) That’s miles hours behind pack leaders such as the Toshiba NB205-310, which posted a magnificent 10-hour run-time. In our tests, the Mini 110 survived for 1 minute longer. The new model also comes loaded with a three-cell battery–as did the Mini 1000, which achieved a mediocre battery life of 2 hours, 47 minutes on a charge. The hardware hasn’t changed too much: The Mini 110 carries the same N270 Atom CPU, the same 1GB of RAM, the same 160GB hard drive, the same awesomely large 92-percent-of-full-size keyboard–even the same crummy mouse button layout that’s been driving me bonkers since HP introduced it on the HP Mini 2133. ![]()
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