The Lenovo S10 Netbook is here, count me in
The S10 is here, I ordered one yesterday and I'm psyched. The IdeaPad S10 is Lenovo's just-released entry in the Netbook market. "Netbook" is a new term that's applied to cheap small laptops that run either Windows XP Home Edition or Linux. No Vista or OS X here (neither is cheap).
One reason Netbooks are cheap is that they are underpowered, by current standards. Yet, they have more than sufficient horsepower to do the things most people do most of the time.
(Credit:
Lenovo)
I think Netbooks will drastically change the computing scene.
For some of us, they should make excellent secondary computers. For children, they could make great first computers. And, with prices starting at $325, Netbooks are almost an impulse buy. In contrast, the cheapest MacBook notebook costs $1,099. This may not be a good time to invest in Apple stock.
Netbooks are small, but I think people will find they are not so small as to be annoying.
The original Netbook, the Asus Eee had a 7-inch screen. It was wildly popular, but, to me, the screen was too small. Skype barely fit on the screen and Web pages required too much scrolling. Most Netbooks now have 9-inch screens, the S10 screen is 10.2 inches.
Another big thing to me about the S10 is the anti-glare screen. I'm wary that the glossy screens on the Acer Aspire One and the Dell Mini 9s may be a constant annoyance.
Keyboards are small too, roughly 80 percent to 90 percent of normal. The original Asus Eee keyboard was so small that I could barely type on it. My adult fingers just didn't fit. I haven't used the S10 yet, but if there ever was a company capable of making a good keyboard it's Lenovo. Their ThinkPads have excelled at keyboards for years. CNET said the S10 has a "decent-size keyboard (for a Netbook)". Wired said "Touch-typing is as easy as it gets in this category."
The keyboard on the Acer Aspire One has gotten good reviews but the placement of the mouse buttons is said to be sub-optimal. I fear that might be a constant annoyance especially for someone using the computer where an external mouse is not an option, such as on their lap. Interestingly, the Dell Mini 9 dealt with the small size of the keyboard by doing away with the row of Fx keys along the top. I've seen adults criticize the new Asus Netbooks for the keyboard still being too small. The HP Mini-Notes are said to have great keyboards, but not enough else to make them serious contenders.
When CNET wrote about the S10 way back on September 25th (2 weeks is a long time in the Netbook world) the only available model was $439. Now, there is also a $399 model for sale at Lenovo.com. CNET's demo unit had 1GB of ram and a 160GB hard disk. My only choices yesterday were 512MB of ram and an 80GB hard disk. I've run Windows XP on many computers with 512MB of ram and found it perfectly acceptable.
The two available models differ only in price and color. The $399 model is white, the $439 one is red (more colors are on way). I opted for white. Interestingly, other Netbooks are not priced by color. Comparable Dell Mini 9s are the same price regardless of the color. Newegg sells comparable models of both the Acer Aspire One and the Asus Eee for the same price regardless of the color.
Operating System
The S10 runs Windows XP Home Edition (Microsoft does not allow XP Professional on Netbook computers). Many competing Netbook vendors, such as Dell and Acer, offer both XP and Linux. In general, Linux is cheaper. The Linux version of the Acer Aspire One, for example, starts at $325. The Dell Inspiron Mini 9 starts at $349 with Linux. In each case, sister XP-based models are more expensive.
Linux needs less hard-disk space than Windows, thus many Linux-based Netbooks come with solid-state drives (SSDs). SSDs are the wave of the future but their cost limits their storage capacity in a cheap computer. Linux can fit in a few gigabytes, Windows XP can't. The one downside, to me, of the S10 is that it comes with a legacy spinning-platter hard disk. Hard disks are fragile compared to SSDs, and not the best choice for use on a moving train or bus.
One annoyance with Linux is choice, there's just too much of it. Some Netbook vendors, such as Acer and Asus, created their own versions of Linux. My preference is for one of the major Linux distributions and Dell has, to me, made the best choice here. Their Mini 9 comes with Ubuntu. I previously wrote about the Ubuntu user interface; suffice it say, I think Windows users will take to it very easily with hardly any learning curve. In fact, Ubuntu running Open Office may be a simpler transition for an XP user than moving to Vista with Office 2007.
Which brings up an interesting question. Why pay $315 for the standard edition of Office 2007, when you can get an entire Netbook computer for just a bit more and install the free Open Office?
Linux, like OS X, benefits hugely just from not being Windows, and thus being immune to the vast majority of malicious software. A Linux-based Netbook would be appropriate for a child or anyone for whom antivirus and anti-spyware software is just too much to hassle with.
My shoulder is looking forward to carrying a 2.5-pound Netbook rather than a 6-or 7-pound laptop/notebook.
Update. October 11,2008. As an indicator of how quickly things change in the new Netbook world, take the pricing of the Lenovo S10. According to jkOnTheRun, both available colors (white and red) sold for $439 on October 7, 2008. On the 8th they noted that the white model dropped to $399. On the 10th, I noticed that the red one was down to $429. Then again, on October 7th, Wired wrote about a $469 S10 model, but with beefier specs. Circuit City is planning on selling one of these higher end S10s for $450, but, today at least, they don't have any in stock.
Update October 20, 2008. This did not end well.
See a summary of all my Defensive Computing postings.
Michael Horowitz is an independent computer consultant and the author of several classes on Defensive Computing. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. 




That may have been a preproduction model, but I don't have much confidence in the product. Lenovo hasn't really been known for build quality. Perhaps this will be the first unit to change that however. There's always a first time.
I am going to get S10 probably from Best Buy; Lenovo does charge $19 for shipping - not free like the author stated.
Lenovo's been hot-cold-hot-cold with Linux so far, I don't know how far I'd trust them if they DID include a LInux choice! At least Dell has been consistant, supportive and even has a "commercial" of the Mini 9 running Linux (don't konw if it's getting air play, or if it is internet-only). You have to look at the screen to really tell.
http://www.dell.com/content/topics/topic.aspx/global/shared/mediaplayer/large_screen_view?&mediaPlayerTarget=http://i.dell.com/images/global/video/mediaplayer/assets/video/laptop_inspn_mini_v3.flv
"This may not be a good time to invest in Apple stock."
Perhaps it is time to forward this report by Michael and CNET to the proper authorities for investigation. You may be owned by CBS but turning your stories into your extreme liberal positions and purposely trying to drive the value of Apple stock down doesn't sound like a responsible act.
"Michael Horowitz is an independent computer consultant and the author of several classes on Defensive Computing. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. "
Indeed, he says whatever the hell he wants.
Are you for real? Do people defending Apple really call PC users extreme liberals?
No it's not illegal for a lowly web review blog to state such a fact. They are not a SEC regulated resource nor does the company or a write a forum of weight for anyone to be concerned about.
You are silly.
Are you actually being serious? This guy is an independant blogger, he's not giving out financial advice. It's a sensible view of the tech market and the economy, there's nothing "extreme" or "liberal" about it. What do you even mean by "liberal"? Do you actually have any idea what you're on about? Or do you just see someone talking about Apple in a vaguely negative light and get all huffy? Anybody coming to these pages looking for financial advice is looking to lose a load of cash.
On the topic of the Lenovo, the question is what kind of market are they looking at? Certainly the business side, but I tend to find most business people will be willing to forego lightness for better specs. There's certainly a market out there for it, but I'm reckoning it's going to be rather niche.
Construct coherent sentences and I might be able to enlighten you.
Just a little bit of information about last week episode, and those folks are in a bit of hot water now for making false statements about Apple's CEO which also drove the stock down. CNET and their bloggers are not exempt from responsible journalism: UPDATE: Here's CNN's official statement. CNN says it removed the story because the community brought the story to its attention. Importantly, CNN also refers to the content as "fraudulent," which is much stronger than "inaccurate." The SEC has already launched an investigation.
This stuff gets picked up and runs rampant. It is irresponsible and the statement has nothing to do with the story about the Lenovo.
- by Seaspray0 October 10, 2008 4:00 PM PDT
- @MaggieRed. No. It's not illegal for the author to say, "This may not be a good time to invest in Apple stock." There is nothing fradulent in the author saying, "This may not be a good time to invest in Apple stock." The statement has relevance to the story about lenovo since it concerns computer laptops and both lenovo and apple make computer laptops as primary products of their business. Maybe you should go talk to the security guy in the parking lot so he can start a proper investigation.
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