Dell Mini 10 with Broadcom Crystal HD Accelerator review

Editor's Note: This review has been updated since Flash 10.1 Beta 3 was released.
Look and feel

Beyond that, Dell scratched the previous chassis of its Minis for a more rounded, wedge-shaped lower half. But the odd shape has purpose -- the back of the system is wider so that it can house its six-cell battery, rather than have it hang off the back. We're into the design, but it's much chunkier than other netbooks. And the three-pound,1.3-inch thick Mini 10 is noticeably heavier and wider than the 2.6-pound Acer Aspire One 532h and Toshiba NB305. Of course, with all that extra space the Mini 10 has the room to house the standard netbook ports, including three USB ports, VGA, Ethernet, SD card slot, and a headphone and microphone jack. Unfortunately there's no HDMI port -- Dell tells us the Pineview chipset doesn't support it, despite its claimed HD prowess.
Keyboard, touchpad and screen

While we could have done with a smaller, less glossy bezel, the 1366 x 768 screen is high quality and much roomier than the usual 1024 x 600 netbook resolution. Watching a 1080p clip of Up in the Air was crisp, and viewing angles were decent, but the screen is so glossy that getting it set to an angle where you aren't staring at yourself takes skill.
Performance, HD playback and battery life

So, does the Broadcom Crystal HD accelerator put an end to our netbook HD woes? Our answer is a resounding "kind of."
Though the Mini 10 will not come preinstalled with Adobe's Flash 10.1 Beta 3 or the updated Broadcom drivers that support it, users can download those tools and enjoy watching streaming HD content. And after making sure everything was installed, that's exactly what we did! A number of 1080p movie trailers played surprisingly smoothly both in the smaller screen YouTube player and when upped to the full screen. Need some proof? Check out the video below of the Mini 10 handling YouTube HD and some other 1080p CBS.com HD clips. While the playback was nice and smooth, we did have a few browser crashes here and there which we will blame on Flash 10.1's beta status.
As for downloaded HD content, a 1080p WMV video of dolphins and the Iron Man 2 trailer from Apple's site played smoothly in Windows Media Player 11 -- something we'd hoped Pine Trail netbooks would do on their own. However, because Broadcom only supports Windows Media Player, that same MOV was like watching a slide-show in QuickTime. We're pretty happy we figured that out before we went and purchased Iron Man in HD from iTunes. In turn, because Windows Media Player 11 doesn't support Blu-ray playback, and Broadcom's other software partners haven't released players yet (we're told ArcSoft is working on one), playing a Blu-ray disc if you happen to have an external drive isn't an option at the moment.
Our sense here is that the Broadcom chip will be a fine solution for those who just want to watch online videos once Flash 10.1 Beta 3 and a supported Blu-ray player is out -- you'll be able to hit your favorite streaming sites and playback most local video you have. But it's still no more than a Band-Aid on Pine Trail's graphics woes -- unlike Ion, it won't help with gaming or video encoding, and the Mini 10's low 3DMark scores second that.
| PCMark05 | 3DMark06 | Battery Life | |
| Dell Mini 10 (Pine Trail, Broadcom Crystal HD) | 1264 | 132 | 5:58 |
| HP Mini 311 (Ion) | 2016 | 1464 | 3:53 |
| Toshiba Mini NB305 (Pine Trail) | 1272 | 156 | 6:30 |
| Acer Aspire One 523h (Pine Trail) | 1310 | 154 | 6:31 |
| ASUS Eee PC 1005PE (Pine Trail) | 1431 | 157 | 8:10 |
With a 56Wh, six-cell battery, the Mini 10 lasted 5 hours and 58 minutes on our video rundown test, which loops the same SD video at 65 percent brightness. While that'll let you leave the charger at home for most of the day, it isn't as long as the other Pine Trail netbooks, and nowhere near the Eee PC 1005PE's eight hours on that same test. When just used for surfing the web and listening to streaming music through YouTube, the Mini 10 lasted about seven and a half hours. We did really appreciate that Dell ships the system with a clean desktop, though the Dell dock is locked to the top of the screen for easy access to Windows applications.
Wrap-up




























@SolonLysander the booklet has a 720p screen...the extra pixels would be nice tho LOL
When is the mini 210 review coming out? It seems like the best netbook of the CES bunch and still no review?
@jovapo It's coming. I promise!
What is the obsession with HD video ?
This is a netbook not a cinema screen. Most people who buy netbooks can't tell HD from their backside and if you really are obsessed with video quality why would you want it on a small netbook ?
Someone get me a netbook that can run the standard office / productivity programs at a decent pace & I'd buy it.
@cottinghamm
Companies are just too stupid to understand that even if they put that PCI-E card inside Atom based laptops to boost video playback the damn things will still be missing HDMI to make sense.
What a bunch of no-brainers.
> What is the obsession with HD video ?
No more transcoding stuff just so your lame PMP can manage to play it.
"managing" video suddenly becomes much like "managing" your music files.
It's logical the touch pad would be too small with the screen hinge where it is. If the hinge were were a normal laptop hinge is, then you would have more room below the keyboard for a touch pad. Sure, the bezel along the bottom of the screen would be bigger, but it beats the alternative.
This netbook instantly reminded me of that scene from Predator when the alien takes off his mask...
"You're one ugly mother f@#!^$"
That thing's fatter than my mom.
This new design = poop. -.-
The hinge/screen design is just terrible. It looks like it is missing a piece or is broken. And I agree it looks very thick and fat. I think the white bottom was a very poor design choice because it accentuates or magnifies the thickness. The lack of am HDMI out is also terribly limiting.
Does this Dell have an BCM970012 or BCM970015?
I already have a 970012 in my Lenovo S10 which works pretty nice. If the 970015 proves to be better than the older one, I will go ahead and buy the newer card. I hope there would be a review for that.
The best part of this netbook is the 1366x768. Other netbook manufacturers, do you see that ;D there's 10" 1366x768 panels out there!!! Put them in your netbooks as well!! I'm looking at you Asus 1001p *nudge nudge*
It's like reading a review by designers who have no idea about technology, like some apple use.. well let's keep it at designers.
Why can't you simply say if it supports DXVA instead of this WMP nonsense? I'll go and guess it currently supports DXVA but not DXVA2 since it doesn't work with the flahplugin yet.
Isn't broadcom accelerator only $25 on ebay?
Why are people always so angry here.
@tomer Posted that on the wrong article :P
Wait a couple of days and it'll probably be true though.
can it really be playing back "full HD" video if the screen is only 1366 x 768? I thought only 1080p was "full HD"
It would seem that the only way you could actually get this thing to playback 1080p video is hooked up to a 1920x1080 or better monitor through the VGA port...which seems only marginally useful.
The old gn40 mobile chipset w/ the n280 had the ability to decode 720p easily. It would seem that the previous generation had better capability in this area.
@lazylazyjoe
It could decode 1080p too, to an extent.
I am glad to finally see Engadget review the new Mini 10 with the Broadcom Crystal HD chip. I am planning to get a netbook or laptop for school. It will be my only portable computer, so I want something with good media capabilities as well. The reviews of the Ion netbooks left me disappointed because of the slower performance using regular apps and the poor battery life. I was hoping Crystal HD would be a superior alternative to Ion, but now I know it is not. It seems netbooks will continue to suffer from the same performance woes they have always had for the foreseeable future. I don't understand why a netbook cannot be built with a switchable GPU. That would allow for HD and gaming graphics performance when needed, but without compromising performance or battery life while performing regular daily tasks.
Thanks for the very useful note on the upcoming Flash 10.1 Beta THREE and the need for a new Broadcom HD driver too. I have several netbooks and 3 of the BM7012 cards now - they are cheap via eBay from China - but only one installed, and I couldn't figure out why Hulu was still not working as expected.
All I want is Hulu at 480p full screen...and I'll be a happy camper.
My converted DVDs (Handbrake to convert, VLC to play) work great in any of my netbooks. VLC seems pretty efficient and DVD's converted to "normal" (baseline?) profile play easily. A few artifacts, but nice and sharp and free from stuttering.
Once I realized I could take at least some video along with me without lugging along a DVD player, I was quite happy.
BTW the GMA 3100 graphics has hardware DVD decode built in...pretty nice.
I am looking for a 10" netbook that is capable of showing power point presentations that have video embedded in them.
What is my best choice?
The broadcom chip works just fine with beta2. Ive been using it since December.
When you download the driver from broadcom, it comes with a program that will create an icon in the system tray, lighting up when the chip is in use. Flash playback *while still taking a little extra time to load* plays nearly flawless at any resolution. Definitely good enough for the 480p content on hulu.
Also didn't dell already create a blu-ray version of powerdvd that works with the broadcom chip? for the Studio 15?
hi,
its nice that dell is also started launching mini portable laptops. hope the price is affordable than Sony. just found similar portable laptops on http://www.best-laptops-deals.com/ultra-portable-laptops.php
thanks