Great video,i like that you take the time to show and explain the steps .im an computer geek from the windows 95 era and i appreciate your details. Keep up the good work and the cool little units.😎
Imagine they made a newer version with latest tech.. 5G, USB-C dock and charging and stuff. Gyros, accelerometers etc etc.... I think this thing would sell!
I think this is a pretty quality vid. Some takeaways Chapters: fantastic detail: quality in depth and succinct presentation: no flasher then it needs to be, good lighting nails cut and clean: I have seen vids where this is not taken into consideration and its a shame (could use a file but thats just so you dont get snags) pretty complete: overall I feel after watching this I could work on this myself without having ever touched one Small complainants Dry hands: little goes a long way as no one likes ashy skin also I can just imagine them crack and bleed (aveeno daily moisturizing is good but wait a little bit so your hands can dry0 timing of voice over and showing of IO or say that you will revisit IO later in vid; its like the beat of a drum to get the timing, (read the script to yourself wile pointing out things) showing docked with mouse, keyboard and monitor? although you may not have a VGA monitor Brain game I think has the same person/main dude/game as "Brain Age" for the Nitendo DS from 05 Thanks for the vid I look forward to more in the future and I hope you have fun making these. Cheers
Thanks for the detailed review and suggestions. I do like making these videos, it started with the Libretto W100 video I made on a whim since it's fairly rare and I couldn't find anything anywhere on it. Initially it was just a teardown with no audio, but I added the voice over and additional details and decided to cover all these little PCs. Things do get a bit dry in the cold winter months. I record the teardowns without any audio and then do the voice over afterwards where I have a better audio setup with some notes but not really a script, just doing multiple takes where needed. But it probably would be better to plan the I/O parts since it's a lot of details to try to sync up after the fact without a time to play with
I have another video going over all the flash solutions I use with links here: ruclips.net/video/wJ7kzYa8isY/видео.html That ZIF mSata adapter I only found on eBay, he has other sizes (this is only if you had a factory SSD) www.ebay.com/itm/321866763439 This was the CF adapter, though I never used it, looks like it's shipping from overseas so can maybe get it cheaper from aliexpress directly www.amazon.com/gp/product/B085C66G9H My compact flash I just buy used on eBay - get industrial, all transcend industrial seems to be fixed disk
It's not really possible to upgrade this machine like that. It'll always be pretty outdated and slow at this point and not really possible to do modern tasks. If you want one as a collector it can be cheaper to pick up from japan auction sites, though better to buy a few things since shipping is high. You'd be much better off picking up a used laptop for a cheap modern PC
@@HristoVidinov it's not really possible, everything is soldered down, while you could put in a faster atom processor, it's impossible to put in a newer generation since the motherboard is custom and the bios / circuity won't work with newer hardware
It could probably use it, but I don't think is possible, at least easily, since it's soldered down and atom processors weren't ever sold directly. There were slightly faster atom processors available though
@@jasonnovak2121 UX never shipped with Atom. They all initially had either Core Solo or Core 2 Solo. There is a way to upgrade it to Core 2 Duo U7700 using a hot air station, however it requires skills and experience.
My thoughts on the video format is to have it how I wish others would do sometimes when I'm looking for instructions on how to do something, ie basically the entire process without any cuts (I only really do cuts when I'm going for tools etc). There have been times when I'm watching a video and they say "and pop the top cover off" and just cut to the end so you don't see how it should slide, where the clips are, etc. In the past I've also gone looking for videos because say a part feel off when I was doing something and I'm not sure where it goes, and though the video is the same hardware, it's on another topic so right when they show what I need to see they do cuts and are laser focused. I figure worst case people can jump ahead via timestamps or playback at a faster speed is parts are dragging on, but I suspect as you say these long videos also do scare people away.
@@jasonnovak2121 Don't listen to comments like these, this video was so incredibly valuable because you didn't skip steps. I'm making a video discussing and upgrading this device and appreciate how thorough you were in explaining everything while showing it. It's made my life so much easier in terms of planning and execution.
That mouse button click is way too satisfying.
Great video,i like that you take the time to show and explain the steps .im an computer geek from the windows 95 era and i appreciate your details. Keep up the good work and the cool little units.😎
Device that one could only dream of at the time of release, as was the case with the "gameboy"
Imagine they made a newer version with latest tech.. 5G, USB-C dock and charging and stuff. Gyros, accelerometers etc etc.... I think this thing would sell!
I think this is a pretty quality vid. Some takeaways
Chapters: fantastic
detail: quality in depth and succinct
presentation: no flasher then it needs to be, good lighting
nails cut and clean: I have seen vids where this is not taken into consideration and its a shame (could use a file but thats just so you dont get snags)
pretty complete: overall I feel after watching this I could work on this myself without having ever touched one
Small complainants
Dry hands: little goes a long way as no one likes ashy skin also I can just imagine them crack and bleed (aveeno daily moisturizing is good but wait a little bit so your hands can dry0
timing of voice over and showing of IO or say that you will revisit IO later in vid; its like the beat of a drum to get the timing, (read the script to yourself wile pointing out things)
showing docked with mouse, keyboard and monitor? although you may not have a VGA monitor
Brain game I think has the same person/main dude/game as "Brain Age" for the Nitendo DS from 05
Thanks for the vid I look forward to more in the future and I hope you have fun making these. Cheers
Thanks for the detailed review and suggestions. I do like making these videos, it started with the Libretto W100 video I made on a whim since it's fairly rare and I couldn't find anything anywhere on it. Initially it was just a teardown with no audio, but I added the voice over and additional details and decided to cover all these little PCs.
Things do get a bit dry in the cold winter months. I record the teardowns without any audio and then do the voice over afterwards where I have a better audio setup with some notes but not really a script, just doing multiple takes where needed. But it probably would be better to plan the I/O parts since it's a lot of details to try to sync up after the fact without a time to play with
💪🏻
One of mine has the Samsung original SSD 30GB hdd
Where did you buy the CF card and the adapter board?
I have another video going over all the flash solutions I use with links here:
ruclips.net/video/wJ7kzYa8isY/видео.html
That ZIF mSata adapter I only found on eBay, he has other sizes (this is only if you had a factory SSD)
www.ebay.com/itm/321866763439
This was the CF adapter, though I never used it, looks like it's shipping from overseas so can maybe get it cheaper from aliexpress directly
www.amazon.com/gp/product/B085C66G9H
My compact flash I just buy used on eBay - get industrial, all transcend industrial seems to be fixed disk
Jason can you install this vaio sony micro pc 8GB ram and new intel i5 processor with a new video plssss
It's not really possible to upgrade this machine like that. It'll always be pretty outdated and slow at this point and not really possible to do modern tasks. If you want one as a collector it can be cheaper to pick up from japan auction sites, though better to buy a few things since shipping is high. You'd be much better off picking up a used laptop for a cheap modern PC
Alright but pls try to put intel i3 or i5 or just put 8GB ram it will be a really faster and smoother
@@jasonnovak2121ok put pls man I really wanted to see if it's faster than the older cpu
@@HristoVidinov it's not really possible, everything is soldered down, while you could put in a faster atom processor, it's impossible to put in a newer generation since the motherboard is custom and the bios / circuity won't work with newer hardware
@@jasonnovak2121ok well can you try atleast install windows 11 or windows 10 with a new video pls can I get shoutout
Don't forget to upgrade CPU!
It could probably use it, but I don't think is possible, at least easily, since it's soldered down and atom processors weren't ever sold directly. There were slightly faster atom processors available though
@@jasonnovak2121nah, its not an atom, you need Core 2 Duo U7700 to max out this machine.
@@jasonnovak2121 UX never shipped with Atom. They all initially had either Core Solo or Core 2 Solo. There is a way to upgrade it to Core 2 Duo U7700 using a hot air station, however it requires skills and experience.
@@jasonnovak2121just put a new ssd with 1TB of STORAGE or make VHDX get storage
Wish these videos were shorter. :(
My thoughts on the video format is to have it how I wish others would do sometimes when I'm looking for instructions on how to do something, ie basically the entire process without any cuts (I only really do cuts when I'm going for tools etc). There have been times when I'm watching a video and they say "and pop the top cover off" and just cut to the end so you don't see how it should slide, where the clips are, etc. In the past I've also gone looking for videos because say a part feel off when I was doing something and I'm not sure where it goes, and though the video is the same hardware, it's on another topic so right when they show what I need to see they do cuts and are laser focused. I figure worst case people can jump ahead via timestamps or playback at a faster speed is parts are dragging on, but I suspect as you say these long videos also do scare people away.
@@jasonnovak2121 Don't listen to comments like these, this video was so incredibly valuable because you didn't skip steps. I'm making a video discussing and upgrading this device and appreciate how thorough you were in explaining everything while showing it. It's made my life so much easier in terms of planning and execution.
@@SalemTechsperts thanks, glad it was helpful. I'm looking forward to seeing your video