www.testfreaks.com

Reviews, reviews, reviews...

6.7* out of 10

OCZ DIY Neutrino

 

Information found in: from 3 sources in 1 countries

Best Price at Amazon

  • Expert Score (2)
    8.0 8.0 from 2 reviewers
More grades Less grades
  • Best Deals on eBay

  • Expert Reviews

  1. Testfreaks blog

    Testfreaks blog
    9.0/10
    11 June 2009

    The OCZ Neutrino 10″ DIY Netbook is an excellent choice overall, it’s feature rich and it performs well overall. As is it’s an inexpensive choice, especially if you have the needed parts lying around, and even if you don’t the parts can be had inexpensively, keeping the price below other comparable netbooks on the market today. Read more

    • +Inexpensive, +Decent sound, +Easy to assemble, +Includes tools, +Bright display, works in bright light, +Decent performance, +Nicely made
    • Short battery life, Must have parts or extra cost is added to total
  2. PC Magazine

    PC Magazine
    7.0/10
    23 April 2009

    It might not be as DIY as we'd like it to be, but the Neutrino is still a terrific option if you're in the market for a netbook. Read more

    • About equal in value to other netbooks. Responsive and speedy. Nice battery life. Easy to set up and use. Overall a terrific product.
    • Not much of a DIY project. Few options for customization. No option for multi-core CPU. Intel integrated graphics.
  3. HotHardware

    HotHardware
    11 June 2009

    Do you have no experience installing computer parts or operating systems? Do you not have any spare PC parts laying around waiting to be used? If you answered 'no' to those questions, this is not the netbook for you. There are plenty of other options out there that don't require this much effort on your part to get up and running. There's also no financial benefit to buying this along with those extra parts individually. Read more

    • Good bargain, Solid battery life, Flexibility, A DIY'ers delight, Beautiful matte display
    • Chipset is aged, Poor multimedia/gaming capability, Lackluster trackpad, Plain styling
  • WikiFreak Description

OCZ DIY Neutrino

The DIY Neutrino is a net book by OCZ Technology Group, Inc., and is built to allow users to configure and build their own personalized netbook. The Neutrino Do-It-Yourself netbooks is based on Intel Atom technology that allows users to design and configure their own solution tailored to their own needs. The Neutrino DIY netbook allows the consumer to configure a feature rich netbook with their own memory, storage, and preferred OS.

Features

Based on the Intel® Atom™ processo…

See more

OCZ DIY Neutrino

The DIY Neutrino is a net book by OCZ Technology Group, Inc., and is built to allow users to configure and build their own personalized netbook. The Neutrino Do-It-Yourself netbooks is based on Intel Atom technology that allows users to design and configure their own solution tailored to their own needs. The Neutrino DIY netbook allows the consumer to configure a feature rich netbook with their own memory, storage, and preferred OS.

Features

Based on the Intel® Atom™ processor, the Neutrino provides all the day-to-day necessities for on-the-go traveling, education, office or home use. The Neutrino allows users to have control of the cost/performance ratio of their netbook via a simple and easy to follow procedure. It comes equipped with the CPU, but at the same time enables users to maximize netbook-computing efficiency by supporting up to 2GB of memory and hard drive or SSD capacities up to 250GB. The OCZ’s program allows users to build their own notebook by detailing validated components and the assembling process. The OCZ Neutrino will come with a 10-inch LED backlit LCD display with a resolution of 1024 x 600; memory comes in the form of 2 GB, and processing power from standard Intel Atom N270 1.6GHz processor. The basic model comes with a 250GB hard drive, with the option to have a 250GB SSD at an additional cost, built in WiFi, Ethernet, a 1.3MP web camera and a 4-in-1 card reader. The OCZ Neutrino will come with either am choice of Windows XP or Linux.

See less

Ask the community

Need more advice? Ask the community a question.

Video Reviews