
IBM NetVista S42 Review
Pretty Small, Pretty Speedy
November 27, 2002
By Eric Grevstad
Pretty Small, Pretty Speedy
The 16X DVD-ROM (HL-DT-ST model GDR8160B) and 1.44MB floppy drive occupy the front-accessible bays; the sole internal bay holds the 40GB IBM Deskstar 120GXP 7,200-rpm ATA/100 hard disk.
Replacing any of these drives would be a daunting surgical task, as you can see by twirling two thumbscrews and sliding off the top of the case to reveal the tightly packed insides and MSI MS-6557 motherboard, but the two DIMM sockets (one vacant, permitting a maximum 2GB of DDR266 memory) are fairly accessible. A riser card holds the two horizontally stacked PCI slots, while a 200-watt power supply with a, well, not really loud, but decidedly noticeable cooling fan keeps things running.
Graphics are handled by the Intel 845GV chipset, with no AGP slot for possible upgrades. By now the numbers 845 inspire knee-jerk derision of the chip giant's sluggish, integrated "Extreme Graphics," though the GV revision bumps the controller's clock speed to 266MHz and comes at least a little closer to game-worthy performance -- the trusty Quake III Arena benchmark yielded 44 frames per second in High-Quality 800 by 600 mode and 29 fps at 1,024 by 768. MadOnion.com's 3DMark 2001 SE Pro puttered to a score of 1,391, which is fine for the office applications the NetVista's meant for.

Indeed, the S42 should percolate through PowerPoint, Word, and Excel without a hitch; the 2.4GHz Pentium 4 and 7,200-rpm hard drive helped it post thoroughly respectable PCMark 2002 benchmark ratings of 5,808 (CPU), 4,454 (memory), and 787 (hard disk).
Look on the Bright Side
Along with Windows XP Professional, Norton AntiVirus 2002, and InterVideo's WinDVD, the NetVista comes with a likable, browsable (plenty of links and cross-references) online help system called Access IBM.
Another program supposed to save users' bacon and IT managers' time is Rapid Restore PC, a utility that uses a hidden partition (by default 20 percent of the hard disk) to save images for turn-back-the-clock recovery from software-installation-snafus, virus attacks, or other disasters. Unfortunately, we crossed off Rapid Restore when, although running on a Win XP system and labeled as the Win 2000/XP version, it popped up an "Insert Windows 98 Emergency Diskette" message. Memo to IBM: Ditch this turkey and license Roxio's similar but rock-solid GoBack.
Since a compact, "stealth black" PC deserves a matching LCD monitor, IBM also sent its T541 -- a 15-inch, 1,024 by 768-pixel flat panel with analog VGA connector and curvy control buttons on the bottom edge. It's an economy model, with just an analog VGA connector (versus IBM's analog-and-digital T541H), a tilt-but-no-swivel-or-height-adjustment base, and not the widest viewing angle we've seen. But once we turned its brightness and contrast up from the extremely dim defaults (32 apiece on the monitor's 100-point scale), the T541 was a perfectly pleasant screen as well as stylish space-saver. It adds $349 to the price of a PC.

All in all, remembering the office PCs we've been assigned in various jobs, we think the employee given a NetVista S42 is a lot luckier than average. The cooling fan's too noisy to put the system right next to the phone, but users will find the unit does an inarguable job of saving desk space while packing perky performance, while IT managers will like its use of standard, full-sized components. The NetVista brand is due to disappear before long, replaced by a ThinkCentre label to ride the coattails of ThinkPad notebooks, but the S42 proves IBM's still in the desktop business.
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