Toshiba BRnR LX.FR406.035 User Manual

Page 31

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Barry’s Rigs ‘n Reviews

http://www.barrys-rigs-n-reviews.com

All trademarks used are properties of their respective owners.

Copyright © 2003-2007 by Barry Little. All Rights Reserved.

performance, she preferred the keyboard of her IBM ThinkPad over the Ferrari 4000
keyboard.

The touch pad on the Ferrari 4000 was the most responsive I’ve ever used, but for

doing any work for an extended period of time, a mouse is still a better choice—
which is why Acer included the Bluetooth wireless mouse with the Ferrari 4000.

Although the size and styling of the mouse is a plus compared to some mice, the lack
of any kind of indicator showing how much charge is left—whether built into the

mouse itself similar to some of Logitech’s cordless mice, or even a software-based
System Tray icon, is hardly reassuring. And contrary to the documentation, it did not

work as a regular USB mouse with the batteries removed and the charging cable
attached (which could have been a bit longer). With batteries, the mouse is heavier
than a regular full-sized corded mouse, with responsiveness that varies between

average and below-average. I personally prefer something lighter to carry around in
my bag on a daily basis that has much more responsive performance and better

precision, so my Salamander Red Razer Diamondback mouse is now occupying the
compartment in my notebook bag where the Acer Bluetooth mouse used to be. The

mouse also flaked out on numerous occasions, forcing me to push the Bluetooth
button at the front of the notebook on and off several times and underneath the

mouse, before it finally started working again.

I was surprised to find that the Ferrari 4000’s 100 GB hard drive was split into two
50 GB FAT32 partitions. As it turns out, Acer eRecovery requires the second, empty

FAT32 partition to store backup images—the rationale being that all of your
programs and data would reside on the C: partition, while the eRecovery backups
would be stored on the D: partition. Storing backup images on another partition on

the same hard drive may be fast and convenient, but if the hard drive crashes, not
only do you lose your current data, but everything you backed up as well. Since I

make image backups of all my systems to my Buffalo TeraStation NAS on a regular
basis with Acronis True Image, needed the full 100 GB disk space and prefer

Windows XP’s NTFS file system over FAT32 for its better performance and reliability,
I used Vcom’s Partition Commander Version 9 to convert the drive into a single

100GB NTFS partition, while still maintaining the option of using eRecovery from the
Acer’s hidden partition or CDs to return the notebook to factory condition if I choose.

One totally bizarre and unexpected issue I encountered with the Acer Ferrari 4000

was with NTI’s Backup NOW! 4. When backing up and restoring files with Backup
NOW! the program changes the case of files that it backs up. For example, backing
up a file named mywordfile.doc would be backed up and restored as Mywordfile.doc.

I was able to duplicate this anomaly on several other machines that I installed the
software on.

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