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View Full Version : Gladiator Atom Green PC Drivers



Rahxie
19-03-11, 14:37
If anyone needs drivers for the Gladiator Atom Green PC, use the link below. I was searching for the drivers but couldn't find it anywhere on the Aria website or forums, so posted here then found it in my bookmarks a few minutes later. Hope it helps.

http://support.euro.dell.com/support/downloads/driverslist.aspx?c=uk&cs=ukdhs1&l=en&s=dhs&ServiceTag=&SystemID=VOS_D_A100&os=WLH&osl=en&catid=&impid=

sibeer
19-03-11, 18:32
Windows 7 seemed to auto install everything I needed.

Rahxie
19-03-11, 18:47
Windows 7 does have drivers for this computer but for something more lightweight (Windows XP), you'll need to download the drivers yourself.

Pancake
19-03-11, 20:07
wtf, Aria are selling dells? what a fail

sibeer
20-03-11, 10:37
wtf, Aria are selling dells? what a fail

Unmarked Dells at as low as £50 for the case, PSU and mobo is pretty good ;)

I have one that is becoming a low power Untangle server :thumb:

Rahxie
20-03-11, 11:54
They were much cheaper than going directly to Dell and are very low power. Mine is being used as a multimedia server (Tversity) and backup server. :)

Sarky
20-03-11, 12:36
wtf, Aria are selling dells? what a fail
I know another competitor is doing the exact same, selling unbranded Dell's. Why not for a cheap build? :)

sibeer
20-03-11, 17:13
Only sad thing with them for low power servers is the lack of ability to add gigabit network and more than 2 SATA drives. For my Internet gateway server this is not a problem, but it put me off using one as the basis of a file server.

Aaron
20-03-11, 18:27
Windows 7 seemed to auto install everything I needed.Yeah, I was just thinking that. I've had 8 of these so far, and they just work straight off.


Unmarked Dells at as low as £50 for the case, PSU and mobo is pretty good ;)
Also agreed! Can't really go wrong. We paid £99 for ours, for a full system, including 500Gb hard drive, 2Gb RAM etc.. Who cares if they have a dell splash/bios screen at the start for that price! :lol:

sibeer
22-03-11, 12:25
It's all down to whether they are up to what is being done on them. For the average email and office user they are fine. With the power savings too the TCO on them is fantastic.

andyn
22-03-11, 12:38
It's all down to whether they are up to what is being done on them. For the average email and office user they are fine. With the power savings too the TCO on them is fantastic.

Yeah that's very much the market who buys them, I think. Obviously for most people on here who want a system they can build on and tinker with, they are pretty fail, but if you want to buy something cheap your gran can use to browse the web with they might not be a bad option.

Aaron
22-03-11, 12:45
Of all the ones I've bought, one is being used as a word processing machine, and the others are all running interactive whiteboards, and they're doing it really well. Big selling point was that they consume so little power as they're being left on all day!

sibeer
22-03-11, 15:10
It's the low power which I went for as they are being used for internet gateways at fairly small branches (5-30 users). With a decent Linux app package they offer amazing performance for the cost.