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The ThinkStation S10 workstation is designed to offer Lenovo’s highest performance and reliability for professionals in the most demanding data and graphics intensive environments, such as computer-aided design / engineering, digital content creation, oil and gas exploration and electronic design automation. The ThinkStation S10 combines the latest technology with Think design attributes to give you a high-performance, cost effective workstation that provides a better overall experience. Using the latest technology, the ThinkStation S10 delivers performance that can save time and increase productivity.
Features
• Intel Atom N270 / 1.6 GHz
• 10.2″
• TFT
• 1.5 GB (max) RAM
• 80 GB HD
• 2.4 lbs
• Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition
Review By Superwarehouse
Lenovo’s new ThinkStation workstations use the legendary Think-design to improve the customer experience, and are engineered to give you the performance needed to reach your potential. Earth-shattering performance is provided with Intel’s latest multi-core processor technology. If quad core, high-speed processors weren’t enough, features like Intel Wide Dynamic Execution and Intel Advanced Smart Cache ensure you get the most out of the platform. A workstation wouldn’t be complete without robust graphics solutions.
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Review By Desktopreview
The case design for the ThinkStation S10 is very basic, but also stylish at the same time. It is a standard tower design with two exposed 5.25†bays, and one 3.5†floppy bay. It also features quick access to headphone/ microphone jacks, two USB ports, and 1 fullsize Firewire port located right under the optical bays. The front bezel is designed with a honeycomb structure which gives it a nice modern look, and is polished off with its standard IBM black finish all around.
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Review By Pcworld
Positioning it as a workstation machine, Lenovo has given the S10 a midrange 512MB nVidia Quadro FX1700 graphics card. A little pricier than regular consumer GeForce cards, Quadro boards have drivers specifically optimized to support high-end software, such as computer aided design (CAD) tools. For mainstream gaming however, the ThinkStation S10 gets smoked by numerous other Power desktops on our gaming benchmarks, offering a barely playable 39 frames per second on our Doom 3 benchmark and a low 60 frames per second on our Far Cry benchmark (both at 1280-by-1024 resolutions, with anti-aliasing).
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Review By Gcn.com
The Lenovo has plenty of room for expansion. The 2G of RAM uses only two of the four memory slots, so as much as 4G could be added without the need for replacement. It has an open PCI Express x16 slot in addition to the one used by the graphics card, a PCI Express x8 slot, and two regular PCI slots. It has two additional 3.5-inch internal bays, one 5.25-inch external bay and four free Serial ATA ports. The 650-watt capacity power supply has power to spare for practically any upgrade.
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Review By Trustedreviews
The ThinkStation D10 takes over from where the S10 leaves off with a move from consumer chipset and CPU options to proper server level equipment. Specifically, the motherboard chipset is now based on the Intel 5400a, which supports and has room for two Intel Xeon CPUs (that’s two physical CPUs, not just more cores), and 64GB RAM. Other options are largely the same but because the case is larger, to accommodate the bigger motherboard, there’s room for a couple of extra drive bays and the case is rack mountable.
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Review By Technet.com
The great thing about working with a new computer is opening it for the first time, plugging all the cables in and the margaritas. So as I was firing up the blender Keith was unpacking the very large shipping box and getting the system turned on. As he was turning it on, I thought he had brought another blender with him. The initial startup of the system can be very loud as all the system fans startup on the initial boot. The system then does quiet done quite a bit after just a few seconds but the primary boot. Just that initial can catch you by surprise a bit.
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