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MSI GX620 Intel Core 2 Duo Processor | GX-720 Concept notebook

Posted by Mat Nayie on Nov 30th, 2008 and filed under Computer, Laptop. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

MSI will show its Green Concept notebook product design with Anion technology! Anion technology is a technology to purify the air and remove toxic substances. MSI is the first to combine anion technology with the advance computer technology to create World’s First Anion Notebook. Notebooks are often used in indoor spaces with insufficient ventilation; the MSI Anion notebook can provide users the benefits of clean air anywhere.

MSI developed the MSI PR620 Anion Notebook, which makes it world’s very first notebook that is capable to release anion to better your health. Using the latest in technology, the MSI PR620 Anion Notebook can release up to five hundred and fifty thousand ions/cc (50 cm from the air vent)*. This is more than if you were right next to mountains or the beach. The Anion module can also contain concentrated ozone lower than 0.02ppm. (UL & TUL regulations must be lower than 0.05ppm; high ozone concentration can be harmful to human bodies).

Aesthetics and practicality
In the box, the GX620 has a pretty good bundle — apart from the notebook and its charger, you also get an MSI gaming mouse and a game (Tom Clancy’s Rainbow 6 Vegas 2).

The notebook itself is a pretty large beast although unlike 17in desktop replacements, it’s still not too heavy to carry around. Aesthetically-speaking, the GX620’s design is not particularly attractive, as it has an anodised black body (which is nice) but with some red plastic trim around it (which is not so nice).

SOFT TOUCH: The MSI GX620 has a row of touch-sensitive buttons above the keyboard that allow you to control multimedia playback as well as boost the performance of the notebook.
Overall, the GX620 is not great-looking, but on the upside, build quality is actually pretty solid.

The advantage of having such a large footprint, of course, is that there’s lots of space for a big keyboard, and the GX620’s is about the best you can get on a notebook — you don’t just get the normal keys, but also a separate numeric keypad, just like in full-sized desktop PC keyboards.

My only complaint with the keyboard is the usual one — just like all MSI notebook keyboards, the Ctrl and Fn keys have switched places, which makes it a pain for touch typists and gamers alike, since you tend to hit the Fn key when you want to hit the Ctrl key.

The screen quality is not bad, as the glossy screen produces some very nice colours and black levels (at the expense of reflections) and viewing angles are good.

Apart from being a gaming notebook, the GX620 has a couple of features that make it a worthy multimedia machine as well, namely a HDMI port and a Blu-ray drive.

Although the screen itself is more a 720p compliant display than a true 1080p (which requires at least a 1920 x 1080pixel resolution), you can easily output the video and audio to a 1080p HDTV using the HDMI port. The Blu-ray drive itself only reads Blu-ray media, although it can burn data to DVD-R/RW and CD-R/RW discs. Together with the drive, MSI has also thoughtfully included a Blu-ray capable software player, namely Corel WinDVD which does the job just fine.

Performance
Let’s get right down to the crux of the matter — since this is a gaming notebook, just how does it perform when playing PC games? Well, to find out, I tried a couple of modern games on the notebook (namely, the Tomb Raider: Underworld demo and World in Conflict) just to see what I could or couldn’t run on it. The GeForce 9600M graphics processor on the GX620 is DirectX 10 capable, so World in Conflict is a good example of a modern DirectX 10 game to test.

I won’t bore you with numbers here, as my testing was based on actually playing the game and tweaking the settings to see whether I could get a playable experience with it.

The verdict? Well first off, the Tomb Raider: Underworld demo ran just fine on it at native resolution and was quite playable at the recommended settings.

However, World in Conflict, a real-time strategy game that really stretches even desktop gaming systems, did not fare so well.

In DirectX 9 mode, the game was just ­barely playable with very choppy frame rates (about 20 frames-per-second) while DirectX 10 mode was practically unplayable.

To be fair, this is pretty much representative of most notebook gaming-capable systems — for the price you pay, you can only expect to be able to play most last-generation games well and some less-graphics intensive modern ones.

This pretty much rules out playing Crysis, for example, at its best settings, although you can probably play Command & Conquer III at pretty high settings.

By the way, the GX620 can dynamically scale up its performance when plugged in to external power and has an extra Turbo mode for better performance, as well as an Eco mode to eke out as much battery life as possible when not plugged in.

Unplugged, you can expect the GX620 to last about 2.5 hours on a single charge, with the brightness set to a comfortable level — again, not great but in line with most game-capable notebooks.

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