Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for HP 3115M LJ527UT#ABA Notebook Laptop AMD E-300 APU 1.3GHz 4GB 320GB SEE NOTES at the best online prices at eBay! During the AMD processors suitable for computer hardware.
I have the Intel Core i3-2100, use with AMD processor? 45 The range which indicates that. 1.3GHz VISION E2 Technology from AMD with AMD Dual-Core E-300 Accelerated Processor.
Windows 10, AMD E 300 Discus and support AMD E 300 in Windows 10 Customization to solve the problem, I have a HP 2000 Laptop with AMD e 300 APU 1.30 Ghz and it is super slow, even slower than my old Core 2 duo. So my cheap one had the AMD AGESA Combo-AM4 1.
So my mom got a HP 2000 notebook PC for christmes. With regard to keep in graphics and more. Try going to whatever your LAN adaptor is support website, and see if they have drivers.
Then, while installing Win7 in a "where-to" browsing screen I had to format and delete ALL partions (including OEM, Recovery-ones), and only after that it prompted me to choose where to install Win7.Īlso, if you're going to install a different OS, don't forget to go to Asus website and download the network-adapter driver (it's Railink one, I believe), and then go to AMD-website and download proper drivers for VGA-chipset (search by a model or run "autodetection"-utility), in order for it to be properly recognized by Windows.Download Now HP 2000 PC AMD E-300 APU WITH RADEON DRIVER Aside from disabling Secure Boot in bios, enabling CSM, and setting SATA config to IDE, I had to pull out the laptop's hard-drive, plugging it in to my desktop, and manually wipe it clean, just to be sure. Overall Review: Regarding removing Win8: I had to read a whole bunch of different solutions, and it wasn't easy. Removing it and installing a different OS is a whole another story, look in Other thoughts.
Windows 8 :( I know some people like it, but I hated its awkward interface, its dependency on apps and multiple screen, and its use of tons of different partions on a single hard-drive.
Might be a good idea to invest into bigger and/or faster hard-drive though, depending on one's needs.Ĭons: - Touch-pad is overly sensitive and takes some time getting used to. Good for web-surfing, (not so) older games (hence a nice Radeon video-chipset) and just doing all regularities. Nice and bright screen, large keyboard buttons, battery life isn't too short. You can now boot to a Windows 7 or earlier OS installer DVD/USB drive and wipe the HDD and install a sane OS. Overall Review: Instructions for getting a real OS on this poor Windows 8-infected system:Ġ) Download drivers to a flash drive or other external device from the Asus site:, then choose Windows 7 64bit.ġ) Get into the UEFI (what most people would still call a BIOS) by pressing escape before the system starts up (may take a few tries).Ģ) Go to Security and Disable Secure Boot Control at the bottom.ģ) Go to Boot and Enable Launch CSM (CSM is a compatibility module, so UEFI acts like a regular BIOS).Ĥ) Go to Advanced, SATA Configuration, and set the mode to IDE. You also can't install Windows 7 using EFI mode (it crashes or loops at the Startup screen before the installer), but you can use the instructions in Other Thoughts below. The UEFI (BIOS) won't boot to a MBR device if you exit without saving, and you'll just end back up in it. I can't for the life of me get the media controls (play/pause, stop, back, and forward) to function, either.
The Wireless card's toggle switch is backwards with the software, it's on when the light's off and vice versa, and the OSD software does the same as the light, and not the wireless status. The software that disables all the special touch-features including the tap-click does NOT remember your settings until you re-apply them (at least on Windows 7). The touchpad is the type with "fake" buttons under the bottom bit of the touchpad, so you can actually left click by tapping on the right-click side. I haven't had a chance to test the webcam, but the one view I saw of its picture was clear and pretty clean for a webcam.Ĭons: The keyboard is cheap, and the arrow keys are strangely placed. You can also access the wireless card, the hard drive, and the RAM by taking out just two screws and sliding the panel forward on the bottom of the laptop. The screen's clear and bright, the keys aren't too small, and the USB3 is nice.
The Wireless card and hard drive are also adequate. It'll run most games quite well, and it'll store a good amount of data. The battery lasts three to five hours on average, and it's not particularly cheap-feeling. Pros: It's a good laptop with decent hardware.