Choosing the Right Netbook
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Max Slowik
Brian
N/A
Jan. 6, 2009
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The Real Competition
MSI was the second company to make widely available an Atom-based netbook, so the Wind, too, has a large following. Acer's Aspire One is new and less popular, partly because it's so hard to mod. Some people think it was a little rushed, but both of these have production values that exceed Asus'; the Eee is often likened towards toys, where as MSI and Acer make "adult" netbooks. Both are lighter than your average Atomic Eee, and Acer has not stopped impressing people with their excellent display, where the Wind is popular in the modding community and has serious overclocking options built-in. Of these two, I prefer the MSI Wind, but it's hard to beat the Aspire One's price--which is so agreeable that Acer's sales officially overtook Asus' in the netbook market.
The Wind and the One alike have LED-backlit 1024x600 (WSVGA) displays, but they're not touch screens.
Acer Aspire One at a Glance, Linux Models
Light at 2.2lbs
Cheapest Atom-based netbook
Excellent LED-backlit display
Small SSDs
3hr, 3-cell battery
No Bluetooth
Linux Configurations:
8GB SSD, 512MB RAM, $300
16GB SSD, 1GB RAM, $350
Acer Aspire One at a Glance, XP Models
Excellent LED-backlit display
120 or 160GB 5,400RPM hard drive
Still pretty cheap
5hr, 6-cell batteries available
No Bluetooth
XP Configurations:
120GB, 3-cell battery, 2.2lbs (2.5hr) $350
120GB, 6-cell battery, 2.5lbs (5hr) $360
160GB, 6-cell battery, 2.5lbs (5hr) $380
MSI Wind at a Glance
Fast 120GB or 160GB 5,400RPM hard drive
Large keyboard and screen
LED backlit
Bluetooth
Overclocking options
XP-only Configurations:
120GB HDD, 3-cell battery, 2.3lbs, 2.5hr, $350
160GB HDD, 6-cell battery, 2.6lbs, 5.5hr, $430
1 - Posted by
Anthony
on December 14, 2008 - 1:37 am
I got my Dell Mini9 for $300 - XP, 8GB SSD, 512MB. I upgraded the RAM to 2GB and the new 16GB SSD will be here next week hopefully. Of course I'm just going to hack it and put OSX on it... =^)
Also, the Mini9 has has BTO Bluetooth option.
2 - Posted by
roberton
on December 14, 2008 - 2:25 pm
Funny you should mention nethack. I've got the original Eee (700?) and I do indeed play nethack on it a lot! This is partly on an installed copy, but more so now just using telnet to nethack.alt.org.
3 - Posted by
saxuntu
on December 14, 2008 - 5:05 pm
I don't know what the hell your talking about with the SSD being slower. I'm writing this on a Dell Mini 9. It loads Open Office faster than my computer with a standard HD, 3GHz processor, and the same amount of RAM. As for the keyboard its a 9 inch computer, what do expect. Complaining about netbooks being small is kind of missing the point.
4 - Posted by
paulb
on December 14, 2008 - 6:15 pm
Talking about missing the point (even when your intro touches on it) - netbooks' success are a classic case of the marketeers missing their own market ... the first generation were apparently thought of as low cost devices for students etc - hence their abysmal battery life. But the Atom generation brought with it some more serious battery specs ... particularly the Eee 901, creating for the first time a viable low cost alternative to high end sub notebooks. For those of us who have to do serious but simple work on the move (using Office-type tools rather than Photoshop etc) they were a godsend.
I'm with you on the preference for a decent hard disk rather than a cramped SSD. I had a 901 and liked it well enough but when my "proper" Toshiba failed I looked hard at the options and realised that a Samsung NC10 actually did pretty much everything I wanted from a mobile computer - a good keyboard, pleasant screen and more than enough poke to cope with office apps, even from Microsoft (I don't know what you're talking about there).
Netbooks aren't toys for geek modders - they are good, serious tools for work, and a sudden outburst of rational design and specification. In that sense the Samsung is not distinguished by particular features - it's just the best execution of the concept (for the moment).
5 - Posted by
Kurtis
on December 15, 2008 - 2:44 pm
I think I can speak for Max when I say that we know netbooks aren't just toys for geek modders. As writers, we very much realize the value of these little lunchbox 'puters, and I'm really glad to see that we finally have portable work computers with decent battery life that don't cost $3k.
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