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There’s not much to choose between all the tiny and power-efficient nettops on the market, but Sapphire’s Edge-HD2 is smaller and much better-looking than most. We weren’t blown away by its predecessor, the Sapphire Edge-HD Mini PC largely because of its fairly high price and lack of an installed operating system. The HD2, however, has a quicker processor and comes pre-installed with Windows 7 Ultimate 32-bit. It’s a little more powerful than the original Edge-HD, with a 1.8GHz instead of 1.66GHz dual-core Intel Atom D525 processor, but it’s still no powerhouse. It could only run our benchmarks at 16% the speed of our reference Intel Core i5-2500K – but if you need serious power, you shouldn’t be considering a nettop. What it can do is browse the web with multiple tabs open, run casual games with moderate system requirements, such as Popcap’s Plants vs. Zombies, and play Full HD 1080p video. We can’t compare its power to the previous Edge-HD as that was tested with the old version of our benchmarks, but the Edge-HD2 does feel snappier in general use.


The main problem is price. The original Sapphire Edge-HD was never the cheapest nettop around, but the HD2 is over £100 more. Considering Windows 7 Ultimate is £170, the PC and OS combination seems relatively good value, but Windows 7 Ultimate is overkill for most people. If you’re after a small PC to connect to your TV you’re better off buying the Edge-HD and adding a copy of Windows 7 Home Premium for £320, or the Zotac Zbox HD-ID40-U nettop and Windows 7 Home Premium for £260.