October 6, 2009 2:09 AM PDT

A Netbook/ultramobile hybrid from Sharp

by Erica Ogg
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Sharp NetWalker

The NetWalker is part Netbook, part ultramobile PC.

(Credit: Erica Ogg/CNET)

CHIBA, Japan--The Sharp NetWalker comes off like a computer with an identity crisis.

It's part Asus Eee PC Netbook and part Samsung Q1 ultramobile PC.

And it's a little bit puzzling.

The NetWalker is dressed up like a super-petite Netbook, weighing less than a pound, with a five-inch touchscreen and a measly 512MB of memory and wireless LAN.

It's got a pretty robust battery life--up to 10 hours, according to Sharp--and runs Ubuntu. There's a Firefox browser, Thunderbird for e-mail, a Twitter app, and some open-source programs for word processing and reviewing spreadsheets, so you can perform some normal PC functions on a screen larger than an iPhone or BlackBerry, but smaller than the increasingly standard 10-inch Netbook display.

The way you use it, though, is more like an ultramobile PC. Holding the NetWalker with two hands, you type with your thumbs. On the right side above the keyboard is an optical pointer that, when you run a finger over it, functions as a mouse.

The price is a more Netbook-like $500, but it's unclear how consumers will respond. It's only been available here in Japan for a couple weeks, so there aren't any solid sales numbers yet to offer any picture of how customers are reacting.

Still, history shows that just hovering somewhere in between two established categories of computing can be an easy way to turn off a lot of potential buyers.

Erica Ogg is a CNET News reporter who covers Apple, HP, Dell, and other PC makers, as well as the consumer electronics industry. She's also one of the hosts of CNET News' Daily Podcast. In her non-work life, she's a history geek, a loyal Dodgers fan, and a mac-and-cheese connoisseur. E-mail Erica.
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by PandaSage1221 October 6, 2009 3:31 AM PDT
I'm baffled by that screen. If it filled the space, it'd be a pretty slick, sexy device. But.. all that extra space and that huge border... it's ugly.
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by jlt0x October 6, 2009 5:16 AM PDT
I don't know. I like it. The NetWalker plainly indicates that it's just a simple, small laptop. If the price were around $200-250 (including warranty), I'd bet it would be an interesting buy. Especially around the Christmas/New Year's season.

The light weight and footprint means in can be slipped into any small case, backpack, med-sized purse, etc. If the touchscreen works well, it's a good size for just tapping the screen to navigate the Internet or for updating speadsheet data. I'm sure a larger screen could be used to fill most of the display space and 1GB of RAM should be enough.
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by KeithBeucler October 6, 2009 6:12 AM PDT
I like the form factor, especially small enough to thumb type. The price is a problem though. No way there is more than $100 worth of components. Unit has no touch screen, free OS and no phone. So exactly how did they come up with the $500 price? There were a lot of these PDAs around in the early 90s and were around the same price point. Might be a nice product in the $200 price range but at $500, I wouldn't give it a chance.
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by rkpchi2 October 6, 2009 7:27 AM PDT
Now if they were to make this more power. then setting it up so you can tie in a external hard drive and full size keyboard and monitor - then they might have something
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by wshun0 October 6, 2009 10:19 AM PDT
It is not unique, there are other similar stuffs in Hong Kong and mainland China. I always scratch my head who will buy such machines, they are not cheap compared with netbooks!
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by alexkachanov November 4, 2009 6:15 PM PST
this device is a piece of sh..., really. I've tried it at local shop. Jesus, I could not manage to point cursor on a close button of a window! Thin pointing device is just NOT USABLE. Netwarker is slow when starting applications, and it crawled to death when opening OpenOffice. It took 2 minutes to open Abode Acrobat and 4 minutes to load a PDF document. Do not buy this sh..t. Spend your money on real computer
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About Circuit Breaker

The Circuit Breaker will keep you plugged into the world of consumer electronics and PC makers, with close attention to Apple, ever the trend-setter. Erica Ogg will try to make sense of the constant stream of new and increasingly connected devices we find in our homes, cars, and backpacks, as well as the companies that make them. Based in San Francisco, Erica is partial to gadgets that allow her to search for the best mac-and-cheese recipes, read grammar blogs, and watch "Mad Men" and the Los Angeles Dodgers whenever she wants.

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