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Asus Eee Windows review: Asus Eee Windows

Asus Eee Windows

Dan Ackerman Editorial Director / Computers and Gaming
Dan Ackerman leads CNET's coverage of computers and gaming hardware. A New York native and former radio DJ, he's also a regular TV talking head and the author of "The Tetris Effect" (Hachette/PublicAffairs), a non-fiction gaming and business history book that has earned rave reviews from the New York Times, Fortune, LA Review of Books, and many other publications. "Upends the standard Silicon Valley, Steve Jobs/Mark Zuckerberg technology-creation myth... the story shines." -- The New York Times
Expertise I've been testing and reviewing computer and gaming hardware for over 20 years, covering every console launch since the Dreamcast and every MacBook...ever. Credentials
  • Author of the award-winning, NY Times-reviewed nonfiction book The Tetris Effect; Longtime consumer technology expert for CBS Mornings
Dan Ackerman
6 min read

Asus first released the low-cost, low-power Eee PC in the fall of 2007, winning rave reviews for the 7-inch $399 laptop, which cut overhead by using a tiny 4GB solid-state hard drive and a custom Linux operating system with preinstalled software such as Firefox and Open Office. While it became a cult hit (Asus says it will have sold 5 million units worldwide by the end of 2008), the lack of a Windows-based operating system kept some shoppers away.

7.3

Asus Eee Windows

The Good

Small, light weight, and inexpensive; Windows XP for the same price as the Linux version.

The Bad

Cramped keyboard; very little hard-drive space; low screen resolution; new ultramobile CPUs are coming soon.

The Bottom Line

The popular low-cost Asus Eee PC makes a play for mainstream acceptance, adding Windows XP to create an impressive package for portable Web surfing and basic productivity, making it a near-flawless choice for a highly portable second laptop.

The company promised a Windows version was in the works, but in the meantime, other PC makers saw the potential for inexpensive small laptops, and we've seen Hewlett-Packard's 2133 Mini-Note and an revamped version of Intel's Classmate PC run Windows with similar hardware, creating a new category people are calling mininotebooks or Netbooks.

While Windows lends the Eee PC broader appeal, a larger 9-inch screen (expected later this year) would give it a boost in functionality because the larger screen would mean less horizontal scrolling, and a larger keyboard would mean fewer typos. Instead, this new Eee PC adds Windows XP to an otherwise identical system and manages to keep the same $399 price (probably because the actual hardware inside is the same as we saw six months ago in the original). Hence, we stand by our original judgment that the Eee PC is certainly worth a look as a second laptop for travelers, or perhaps a first laptop for children--one you won't be afraid to leave in accident-prone hands. It shows up bloated UMPCs, which can cost up to five times as much.

Price as reviewed $399
Processor 900MHz Intel Mobile CPU
Memory 512MB RAM
Hard drive 4GB SSD
Chipset/Graphics Intel 910
Operating System Windows XP Home
Dimensions (WDH) 8.8 x 6.5 x 0.9 inches
Screen size (diagonal) 7.0 inches
System weight / Weight with AC adapter [pounds] 2.0 / 2.4 pounds
Category Ultraportable

At first it's easy to mistake the Eee PC's plastic chassis for a toy, and the recent HP 2133 Mini-Note is a similar system with an upscale brushed aluminum look. But the Mini-Note, while starting at only $599, is also a step up in price from the Eee PC, which was designed to put price first and looks second. The Eee PC is still the smallest of the mininotebooks, about the size of a trade paperback book, and it can even fit in a large jacket pocket without too much trouble. At 2 pounds, it's almost a pound lighter than the 2.9-pound HP Mini-Note.

Cramming all the things one expects from a laptop into a package this small presents some difficult design issues, and the Asus Eee PC has some of the tiniest keys we've ever had to deal with (UMPCs not included, which tend more toward smartphone thumb-style keyboards). At least most of the space is saved for making sure the actual letter keys are a usable size, which makes typing at least possible, if not entirely easy. We're not sure we'd ever be able to touch-type on it, but then again a fifth-grader might. Other keys, including the backspace, tab, and control keys, are smaller--mere slivers of their usual selves, and especially hard to hit. This is one area where HP's 2133 Mini-Note succeeds, with a nearly full-size keyboard impressively engineered into an only slightly larger space.

The 7-inch screen looks even smaller than it is, thanks to the large black screen bezel that frames it. At least the extra space around the screen serves a purpose--a Webcam sits above the screen and tiny speakers reside on the left and right side of the display, emitting tinny but passable sound for the occasional YouTube video but not much else. With a resolution of 800x480, there's not a lot of screen real estate to spare. The Windows XP desktop fits well into the small resolution, but some menus and control panels don't fit on the screen perfectly (you'll want to switch to the "small icons" view in the XP Start Menu, for example).

  Asus Eee PC 4G Average for category [ultraportable]
Video VGA-out VGA-out
Audio Stereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacks headphone/microphone jacks
Data 3 USB 2.0, SD card reader 2 USB 2.0, mini-FireWire, SD or multiformat memory card reader
Expansion None Type I/II PC Card or ExpressCard
Networking Modem, Ethernet, 802.11 a/b/g Wi-Fi modem, Ethernet, 802.11 a/b/g Wi-Fi, optional Bluetooth, optional WWAN
Optical drive None None, or DVD burner

With three USB ports, a VGA out, and standard headphone and mic jacks, the Asus Eee offers decent connectivity. The SD card slot offers a good opportunity to boost the hard-drive space, letting you pop in your own flash memory, easily doubling the system's 4GB drive (less than half of which is actually free), with your own 4GB SD card, which you can get for less than $50.

Our standard laptop benchmark tests wouldn't run on the original Linux-based Eee PC, but the new Windows versions gives us a chance to put the hardware through its paces. It has the same Intel Celeron M processor as the Classmate PC, and both easily beat HP's VIA-powered 2133 Mini-Note. Both Intel (with Atom) and VIA (with Isaiah) have new low-power chips coming out soon for Netbook-style laptops, and though it will be several months before we see those in action, we're nevertheless disappointed to be stuck with essentially outdated hardware. Still, for basic Web surfing and working on Office docs, the Eee PC's underpowered processor suffices (as does the even slower processor in the HP Mini-Note). As long as you keep your expectations modest, and think of systems like this as Internet and word-processing tools, a Netbook can be the perfect travel companion.

On our video playback battery test, the Eee PC lasted 3 hours and 12 minutes with its four-cell battery, which is decent for an ultraportable laptop, especially one this inexpensive. Both the HP 2133 Mini-Note and the (much more expensive) HTC Shift fared much worse, each lasting for less than two hours, while Intel's Classmate passed the four-hour mark, proving this particular combination of components is capable of impressive battery life.

Asus covers its laptops with a standard, one-year parts-and-labor warranty, and it offers online Web-based help and a toll-free phone number. The company's support Web site includes the expected driver downloads and a brief FAQ but lacks useful features such as user forums or the chance to chat in real time with a technician.

Multimedia multitasking test
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
HTC Shift
5,340 
ASUS Eee PC 4G (Windows XP)
6,120 

Apple iTunes encoding test
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
HTC Shift
760 
ASUS Eee PC 4G (Windows XP)
941 

DVD battery drain test (in minutes)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
ASUS Eee PC 4G (Windows XP)
192 
HTC Shift
106 

Find out more about how we test laptops.

ASUS Eee PC 4G (Windows XP)
Windows XP Home Edition SP2; 900MHz Intel Celeron Ultra Low Voltage M353; 512MB DDR2 SDRAM 400MHz; 128MB Mobile Intel 915GMS Express; 4GB SiliconMotion SM223A Solid State Drive

HP 2133 Mini-Note
Windows Vista Business Edition; 1.6GHz VIA C7-M Ultra Low Voltage; 2048MB DDR2 SDRAM 667MHz; --MB VIA/SG3 UniChrome Pro II IGP; 120GB Seagate 7,200rpm

Intel Classmate PC 9-inch
Windows XP Professional SP2; 900MHz Intel Celeron Ultra Low Voltage M353; 512MB DDR2 SDRAM 400MHz; 128MB Mobile Intel 915GMS Express; 30GB Seagate 3,600rpm

HTC Shift
Windows Vista Business Edition; 800MHz Intel A110; 1024MB DDR2 SDRAM 400MHz; 256MB Mobile Intel 945GM/GU Express; 40GB Toshiba 4,200rpm

7.3

Asus Eee Windows

Score Breakdown

Design 8Features 8Performance 7Battery 7Support 5