Gadling gear review - Gateway LT3103u 11.6" Netbook

Strange things happen when you walk into a Bestbuy store. More often than not, observant gadget hounds will find the newest, often unreleased products sitting on a shelf. Tonight was such a night - when looking through their assortment of overpriced laptops, I noticed the brand new Gateway LT3103u Netbook locked away in a cage.
A brief introduction about this machine - it is the first Netbook style machine sold by Gateway in the US, and is equipped with an AMD Athlon L110 64 bit, 1.2GHz processor. The version sold at Bestbuy comes with a 250GB hard drive and 2GB of ram.

As is often the case with Bestbuy, it took me longer to find a sales rep than it took for me to decide to buy this machine. I picked this machine for one simple reason - I am tired of the low resolution on most other Netbook size machines. HP was the only one offering a Netbook with a higher resolution screen, but when added to their Mini 2140, the price popped up to over $700.
The only other machine that was recently released that would fit my needs is the new 11.6" Acer Aspire One AO751h, but its horribly slow Intel Atom processor made it unsuitable for anything more than some basic web work.


The Gateway LT3103u has the usual shiny plastic case, and even just pulling it out of the box covered the poor thing in my greasy fingerprints. The machine uses a low power AMD Athlon chip, capable of running 64 bit Windows, though as delivered, it comes with Vista Basic 32bit. What makes the LT3103u interesting is its dedicated ATI Radeon X1270 graphics chip. As sold by Bestbuy, the LT3103u comes with a 6 cell Lithium-Ion battery pack (which sticks out the back a little), 802.11b/g WiFi, a webcam and microphone in the screen bezel, 3 USB ports and an 11.6" LED backlit display capable of 1366x768. The machine has a 3-in-1 card reader, a D-SUB VGA port, audio in/out and 10/100 Ethernet. There is no HDMI, no Bluetooth and no E-SATA as found on some high-end Netbooks.
As I mentioned earlier - it comes with Vista Basic, which also means it is ineligible for a free upgrade to Windows 7. Like with all Gateway machines, it comes with a supply of bloatware; Norton Internet Security Trial. Microsoft Works, Microsoft Office (trial), Google Desktop, Gateway Games, Windows Live, Money Essentials and a bunch of revenue generating icons on the desktop. I'll be installing Windows 7 (64 bit) on it, so none of that bloat is going to bother me one bit.

The keyboard on the LT3103u is good - not great, but certainly a step above using the tiny keys on the first generation Asus Eee PC. There is a very small amount of flex on the keyboard. Keys are well spaced and you get a decent size space bar and dedicated arrow buttons.
The trackpad on the machine supports multi-gesture, and is wide enough for normal use. The 2 mouse buttons are under a single silver pad on the bottom, and its response is very good.

You'll be happy to know that all parts of the machine can be easily accessed - the covers for ram, HDD and network card are all under user removable ports. The machine comes with a single 2GB Samsung module. The second MiniPCI slot does not have its port installed, but the open space means they might be planning a 3G enabled version (WWAN is specifically mentioned on the box as an option).
Performance is something I haven't spent too much time looking at - but one of the first things I wanted to test was video playback. I'm pleased to report that this little machine had no problems at all with a 720p MKV file played back in full screen. For the fun of it, I also tried a 1080P file (also in MKV) though that really did not work well (no surprise there).
Update: after some playing around with the video playback settings, I can happily reply that the Gateway has zero issues with 1080p video! Files from the WMV HD showcase play in full screen without a single frame dropped or stutter. The MKV file I originally tried was encoded in 1980x1080, which is still a little too much for the machine, the WMV files are 1440x1080.
Booting from power-off to the Windows Vista login screen takes 53 seconds and a shutdown to power off takes 19 seconds.
There are one or two minor annoyances on the machine - there is a really annoying WiFi indicator located at the front of the machine, which flashes with all wireless activity. The hard drive is also quite noisy, and produces more clicking than I'd like to hear. Finally - there are 2 small rubber bumpers located on either side of the machine, these are quite annoying when you have your palms resting while typing.
Other than those minor issues, I'm surprisingly impressed with the Gateway LT3103u. Its performance is quite decent, the screen is crisp and bright, battery life should be good (Vista reports 6 hours on a full charge) and its specifications are not bad at all for its price.
At $399, it is a mere $20 more than the retail price of the Asus Eee PC 1000HE, which comes with 1GB of memory and a 160GB hard drive (though its battery and CPU are better).
Time (and a plane trip) will tell whether the LT3103u is a winner, and whether it really is the Netbook I've been looking for, but so far I'm quite impressed with what Gateway produced.
UPDATE: Windows 7 installed nicely, I posted my experience with the 2 minor driver issues here.
Filed under: Gadling Gear Review












Reader Comments (Page 3 of 3)
ron williams Jul 11th 2009 9:04AM
I just finished installing Windows 7RC 32 It was pretty straight follow install on driver that im having problem with is the ethernet card.... the wireless and all the others installed fine any suggestions here?
Stephen Jul 12th 2009 2:39PM
Have you had any more experience with HD video other than WMV HD? I'm really happy with the machine so far, and I'm upgraded it to Windows 7 x64, but I cannot get h264 working well enough to be considered playable. Obviously, WMP is able to offload the work to the GPU for those WMV files, but I can't get DXVA working on anything else, either through WMP or through MPC-HC.
You said you could play back 720p MKV without issue, but I'm finding that to be very difficult. Is there something I'm missing? Thanks.
JamesT Jul 12th 2009 2:59PM
Maybe you can try CoreAVC and provide some feedback on playable bitrates for different media on your Gateway. - Thanks, James
JamesT Jul 12th 2009 2:51PM
Battery/ charging: What is the maximum possible battery life you can extract out of it doing simple word processing etc for example (No wifi & ~25% brightness). How much time does it take to charge from empty to full? Is the AAO 751 battery the same that is used on the Gateway? I am thinking of going for an aftermarket 9 cell battery from ebay and it would be awesome if somebody could confirm.
Video decoding: Can you provide some feedback on 720p and 1080p videos using CoreAVC (www.coreavc.com). Also what is the maximum bitrate that it can play smoothly using the latest catalyst drivers? Can you check the GPU frequencies under load/idle using GPUZ? Is it really limited to 16/44 Mhz?
CPU: Does the cpu throttle to maximize battery life. What are the numbers? Can you check voltage/ frequency for different load conditions using something like RM clock (cpu.rightmark.org) Also is it possible to underclock it 'further' to increase the battery life?
Keith Jul 13th 2009 12:28AM
had the Gateway LT3103u for four days. could not get it to function on the internet without 7 to 15 second delays scrolling and typing on websites (ebay etc). after a coupe text chats & phone conversations with Gateway customer service/tech support. Gateway recommended i return it to Best Buy where despite my best efforts i was charged 15% for restocking. i'll contest it through the credit card company and let them handle it. i'm going to wait and see how it's configured when available through some other retailer, and hope Gateway will get's the bugs out.
Bruce Jul 13th 2009 9:09PM
Has anyone though about / tried loading Windows XP on the Gateway? You can get XP for next to nothing these days, and I'm running it on 3 other computers at home, so it would be a desirable alternative to Vista for me.
alkivar Jul 21st 2009 1:34PM
Running XP Pro 32bit on this just fine... follow the tutorial from here:
http://www.netbooktech.com/2009/07/02/installing-windows-xp-professional-on-gateway-lt3103u/
Stephen Jul 17th 2009 9:09PM
How does Netflix's streaming site work with this netbook? Specifically, the Silverlight version.
thanks
wbalesto Jul 31st 2009 5:12PM
Is the screen glossy ?
How viewable is the screen outside in the sun ?
Edie Aug 3rd 2009 3:47AM
please recommend me. The Gateway or HP dv2-1010 ?? thanks
Paul Robichaux Aug 14th 2009 1:52PM
Scott, what were the "playback tweaks" you mention above? I haven't found anything tweakable yet and playback is stuttering on YouTube, Hulu, and on local 720p files from disk or USB stick.
matt Aug 15th 2009 2:22PM
i really don't want vista as my operating system. Im more of a linux guy actually so which version of linux works the most efficiently with this laptop.
dan Sep 12th 2009 3:10PM
i have been fighting with this netbook for days trying to get 720p mkvs to play without being choppy and i cannot fix the problem. tried everything from different codec packs, to switching to windows ultimate 7 64bit (currently running). nothing has worked. anyone who has gotten 720p mkvs to play smoothly please let me know how you've done it... thanks