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Asus chairman Jonney Shih sprang a surprise during Intel's Computex keynote today with the announcement of a $189 laptop.The notebook measures roughly 120 x 100 x 30mm (WDH) and weighs only 900g. We saw the notebook boot in 15 seconds from its solid-state hard disk.
There appear to be conflicting reports about the 3ePC's size. Much early web coverage sizes the device at about half as large as a normal laptop -- 4.7 x 3.9 x 1.2 inches (120 x 100 x 30mm). For its part, Asus lists the dimensions as 8.6 x 6.5 x 1.3 inches (225 x 165 x 21-35mm). Everyone seems to agree the device will weigh about two pounds (890gm), and have a 7-inch display.The 3epc is based on an unspecified Intel processor and chipset. Given the laptop's low cost, it may well be among the first products based on Tolopai, Intel's forthcoming Pentium M-powered SoC (system-on-chip). Along with a Pentium M core clocked between 600MHz and 1.2GHz, initial Tolopai chips are expected to integrate components traditionally found in PC northbridges and southbridges -- a graphics processing unit (GPU), external memory and storage controllers, and peripheral interfaces such as USB and Ethernet.
Eh, you can buy a used laptop for not much more money and get a whole heck of a lot more functionality.
Quote from: Punisher NCC-2000 on June 14, 2007, 08:26:33 pmEh, you can buy a used laptop for not much more money and get a whole heck of a lot more functionality. From what I have seen with used laptops the batteries are in terrible shape and they weigh far more than 2 pounds.
Adding $40 for the E-Bay battery raises the price of the used machine a substantial percentage.This isn't the "one laptop per child" machine this is aimed at the industrialized world.It would be lousy as a desktop replacement but excellent as a lightweight go everywhere notetaker. Think of it as a super PDA. Assuming that it has USB ports you can add additional capacity as needed you might even already have such drives. Also 2 GB is the baseline model with other higher capacities to 16GB.
But that's the problem isn't it. We already have PDA's that are small. This thing is big.
Quote from: Punisher NCC-2000 on June 16, 2007, 02:12:42 pmBut that's the problem isn't it. We already have PDA's that are small. This thing is big.It has a fully functional keyboard integrated in. A screen that you can do actual text editing on and is still light weight. I think that you underestimate its uses. I have a PDA and a laptop, in many cases I would prefer something like this to either. If I could have gotten something like this I wouldn't have bothered with the much heavier and far more expensive laptop. The PDA is great to carry when I have no real expectation of needing it (but still might). One of these would replace the laptop fully for me.
And you'd have a laptop for just text editing, and a laptop for maybe playing games or watching a DVD. See what I'm getting at?
Well, we shall see what the market decides. But every time they offer these low-cost, low-function models it never seems to work well. Remember E-Machines?
The most important information is of course the price. Here we have a small disappointment. The price of the Asus Eee PC starts at $299 and goes as high as $399 depending on the configuration.Back in June the price of the Asus Eee PC was communicated with $199, which would have really been hot. The lowest configuration of the Eee PC is dubbed Eee PC 2G Surf and has 256MB RAM, 2GB SSD, small battery and no camera. With 256MB you can forget running Windows XP.For power users the Asus Eee PC 8G is anyway the only choice. $399 is not that bad for a 7 inch notebook with 1GB RAM, 8GB SSD, webcam and 3.5h battery life. On the Eee PC 8G, I can imagine running Windows XP reasonably well.
The company will sell a version of the Eee PC with Windows XP in mature markets such as the U.S. and Europe for around $1,000, while a configuration aimed at emerging market nations will cost about $500, said Jerry Shen, president of Asustek, during an investors conference Tuesday in Beitou, Taiwan.
Asustek has shipped 100,000 Eee PCs so far this month to Taiwan, Hong Kong and Thailand, said Shen, and he is targeting 400,000 units by the end of this year.Next year, Asustek forecasts it will ship 3.8 million Eee PCs."We're in talks with a few governments and we have already confirmed orders for one million units next year," said Sunny Han, global marketing director at the company.Asustek also reaffirmed its commitment to pushing the cost of the Eee PC down to $199, nearly the same as the XO laptop developed by the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) Project. OLPC is pricing the laptops at $200 according to its Givemany and Laptopgiving donor programs.
Two higher-priced Eee PCs were also launched. The NT$11,100 version included a built-in camera and speakers, and can carry out simple voice commands such as "computer, access the Internet," or "computer, make a phone call." It contains a 900MHz Intel Celeron M processor, 512M bytes of DDR2 DRAM (double data rate, generation two dynamic RAM) and a 4G-byte flash drive. The other laptop, at NT$13,888 and due out at the end of November, carries an 8G-byte flash drive and 1G byte of DDR2 DRAM in addition to features similar to the NT$11,100 version.
The hardware on board was the same as for the NT$11,100 Linux-based Eee PC. The Windows Eee PC included Office 2003 versions of Excel, PowerPoint and Word.