Comments on: Faltering economy boosting Netbooks
A research report from DisplaySearch says the small form factor notebooks are expected to grow 65 percent to account for one fifth of the entire notebook market.
A research report from DisplaySearch says the small form factor notebooks are expected to grow 65 percent to account for one fifth of the entire notebook market.
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At 10" across it fits in a hotel room safe, it fits in a airline carry on bag, and in a pinch it will balance on one hand while I type with the other.
Any bigger than that, it would just live on a desk somewhere.
After carrying my ASUS701just about everywhere over the last year, I can't imagine switching back to an oversized machine loaded with a bunch of software and features that I seldom need or use.
http://www.wired.com/gadgets/wireless/magazine/17-03/mf_netbooks
Cost and size are advantages for a webmail/browsing computer. It travels well. Bluetooth pairs with my phone to download pictures. The six cell battery does well.
I've got a pre-high school and a pre-college student who both spend a lot of time on their netbooks actually studying. The netbook seems to keep them organized and digging into their interests online.
If you're downsizing everything, including costs, a netbook will fit your lifestyle to keep you connected.
The primary consideration for buying a netbook is not ONLY price but also size, weight, and in particular battery life. I have an Asus EeePC1000HE and with Asus's APU it gets a good 8-9 hours of life before it needs a charge.
Plus it and the power adapter and a bluetooth mouse (which I highly recommend) all fit in a case smaller than most womens purses aand doesn't weigh a ton.
I absolutely love my netbook and recommend them to those in our Institution that travel since you don't always have an ac power source handy.
The ideal configuration is a netbook with a cellular data adapter and plan.
- by Mindshadow April 16, 2009 2:46 PM PDT
- I have never purchased a laptop and never want to. The insecurity of having all of my computing on something that could so easily get lost, damaged, or stolen is unacceptable to me. Conversely, I am very happy with the ultra-quiet, rather large desktop that I have built for myself at home.
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(21 Comments)I have never purchased an iPhone. I have been tempted, a little, but not very much. I prefer to stick with devices that have fewer features but do them very, very well and very, very reliably. You won't find a timer on my coffeemaker, for instance - it's simple enough to start a pot myself, and a timer is just one more thing that could break.
So the Netbooks have me salivating. I would very much like a simple, small, lightweight laptop that I could take with me when I travel. All I want is something that could play a movie while I wait in an airport, download photos from my memory cards when I'm on vacation, and check my email every so often. For programming (what I do for a living) I will stick with my desktop. An iPhone wouldn't be quite enough to do the things I've listed. A Netbook, though... perfect.
Still waiting for that perfect combination of battery life, size, and price, but I think it's pretty definite that I'm going to get one. And the economy has nothing to do with it.