Pegasus Ti
Laptop Magazine (Sepember '04)
Recommended Award
The TI is one of the newest breeds
of Centrino system, boasting a faster and more efficient
Dothan core Pentium M - a 2GHz chip. While the
original Banias processor had 1 MB of L2 cache and topped
out at 1.7GHz, Dothan doubles this and increases the
clockspeed to 1.8GHz and beyond.
Because the new strained silicon used in this machine
has been made using a 90 nanometre someone process,
Intel has been able to reduce transistor size, thereby
increasing the number of transistors (from 77 million
to 140 million) for greater performance. Yes, the 1.7GHz
Banias core chips were good, but Dothan is potentially
even better.
Teamed with 1GB of RAM and 60GB 7200rpm hard disk, the
TI notches up a sky-high score of 212 in its MobileMark
test, while its six-cell lithium-ion battery lasts for
a solid 172 minutes. Admittedly, the battery life is
less than the 3 to 4 hours we’re used to from
the older Banias core Centrino systems, but turning
the battery-saving feature on will doubtless extend
longevity.
The new processor isn’t the be-all and end-all
of the system, and although it’s not the biggest
chassis, a DVD/RW drive, three USB 2.0 ports, one FireWire
jack and a lone PCMCIA interface are incorporated. The
15.4-inch screen is a good compromise between a bog-standard
15-inch and a bulky, power-sucking 17-inch panel. Other
notable features include a dual-mode 802.11b/g module
to take advantage of faster wireless speeds, and a 3-in-1
card reader hosted on the front panel.
In terms of graphical whiz, the ATi Mobility Radeon
9700 records a score of 10,470 in the 3Dmark 2001SE
test. We also test visual performance with 3Dmark 2003,
and here the Pegasus TI scored an equally lofty 2,930,
meaning it will make light work of everything from Excel
to Everquest.
To Dothan or not to Dothan? That is the question. For
now, the first Dothan chips are nothing to get too excited
about. They’re ‘evolutionary’ rather
than ‘revolutionary’ and we won’t
see a big impact on laptop design until Dothan is incorporated
alongside Intel’s Alviso chipset in the ‘Centrino
2’ Sonoma platform. Nevertheless, this 2GHz machine
forms an impressive overall page - good-looking,
uber-powerful, quiet notebook.
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