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Featherweight contender
Ultralight notebooks are nearing PDA territory, and the PC-UM20 is a leading example of this trend. It measures .8 inches at its thickest point, about the same as recent ultralights such as the Dell Latitude X200 and the Toshiba Portégé 2000. The PC-UM20 weighs a featherlight 2.9 pounds, and the power supply adds a little more than a half-pound to the total travel weight. The PC-UM20 even looks as good as it feels; the frosted, silver magnesium exterior and purplish inside casing give it a sophisticated appearance.
The $1,699 configuration we tested included Windows 2000, 256MB of memory (not expandable), a 20GB drive, an ATI Mobility P/M graphics controller with 4MB of its own memory, and a 12.1-inch display with a resolution of 1,024x768 pixels. Bucking the trend toward detachable "slices" that hold drives and other components, the PC-UM20 offers only external, optional peripherals, including a $99 USB floppy, a $229 USB CD-ROM drive, a $129 port replicator, or a second battery. Sharp doesn't offer a CD-RW drive, even as an option.
Wireless networking is also strictly à la carte. You'll have to install a third-party Wi-Fi module in the single PC Card slot. Finally, you'll find a pass-through port for Ethernet on the main unit but not the port replicator; when you return to your desk, you still have to plug in several wires.
One of the more innovative aspects of this ultraportable line is its keyboard, which rises slightly when you open the case and retracts when you close it to provide better key travel without fattening up the notebook. Though it looks cool, this feature is less than successful in practice. The keyboard sags disconcertingly under pressure, and though the keys are plenty large, they're packed uncomfortably close together. Another casualty of the ultrathin case is audio; even in a quiet room, the one tiny speaker barely makes a whisper.
Keeps going and going&
In CNET Labs' tests, the Sharp's performance fell midway between that of two comparable ultraportables, the Portégé 2000 and the Latitude X200. All three use Intel's low-voltage Pentium III-M (at 750MHz for the PC-UM20 and the Portégé 2000 and at 800MHz for the Latitude X200), but the Toshiba and the Dell both have integrated graphics controllers that rely on system memory.