Samsung X520 review

Samsung's X520 is a bit heavier than we'd like, but its great battery life, comfortable keyboard and large hard disk make it a great choice if you want a comparatively light laptop with a large screen.
Written By
Published on 12 January 2010
Samsung X520
Our rating
Reviewed price £612 inc VAT

At 2.2kg, Samsung’s X520 isn’t really an ultraportable laptop. However, considering it has a 15.6in screen and a built-in DVD writer, it’s a good 0.5kg lighter than most laptops of this size. If you can put up with its extra weight you’ll be rewarded with surprisingly long battery life – it lasted seven hours in our light-use test. It doesn’t feel as sturdy as previous Samsung laptops we’ve seen though. The black, grey and chrome casing feels lower quality – even cheap. The keyboard has a number pad for convenient data entry in spreadsheets. Unlike many other laptops with numeric keypads, it doesn’t have any undersized keys and the pad shares the same standard layout as a desktop keyboard’s. The small touchpad and see-saw button doesn’t make use of the ample available space on the wrist rest. This is especially surprising considering it supports multitouch gestures which are easier to perform on a large pad, but at least it’s responsive. Although the display isn’t as bright as others we’ve seen, it’s by no means dim. Colours look accurate as long as you stay within a fairly narrow viewing range and the 1,366×768-pixel resolution is high enough for most tasks. The X520 is generously equipped with 4GB of RAM, although only comes with a 32-bit version of Windows 7. The large 500GB hard disk is welcome, though. The 1.3GHz Core 2 Duo U7300 processor isn’t substantially more powerful in our benchmarks than the Pentium Dual Core SU4100 processors in other CULV ultraportables. The Intel GMA 4500M HD graphics chip isn’t powerful enough for 3D gaming, but it can play 1080p video.

Samsung’s X520 may be a bit too big and heavy for carrying everywhere, but it’s a great choice if you want a reasonably light laptop with long battery life and a large screen. It has a comfortable keyboard, an integrated DVD writer and a large hard disk, all of which make it a great choice.

Written by

Alan Lu is currently external communications manager at Vodafone UK and has a background in corporate communications and media writing. An alumnus of The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), he has previously served as reviews editor for IT Pro and Computeractive.

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