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Monday November 23, 2009 4:01 AM AEST
Skip Navigation LinksPC Authority > News > COMPUTEX 08: Why the Asus Eee PC 901/1000 beats the 900
COMPUTEX 08: Why the Asus Eee PC 901/1000 beats the 900
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COMPUTEX 08: Why the Asus Eee PC 901/1000 beats the 900

by Nebojsa Novakovic  on Jun 3, 2008
Tags: Asus | Eee | PC | 901 | Computex
So it'll probably be more expensive than the Eee 900, but take a look at the specs to see what's changed.
Asus recently pioneered the low-cost near-full-feature "Nettop" mobiles with its Eee PC. The breadth of the response can be seen by MSI, Acer and others quickly launching their own flavours of this approach - check MSI WindPC for instance - and, of course, Asus' sales figures.

Asus has announced here the next generation Eee based on the Intel Atom, the Eee PC 901, 100 and 1000H under the guise of "shockproof affordable computing" as one Asuser put it.

Interestingly, the firm chose the upmarket Shinkong Mitsukoshi department store near the old Computex ground - precisely, a club near the top of the building - for the event. You've got to get some rain walking along the way and no, there aren't big crowds to bump into non stop.

The near full hall hosted the hacks and plenty of Asus suits, and the response seemed generally positive. After all, the machines have longer batter life of up to 7.8 hours - remember: "up to" - refined power management, up to 20 GB SSD storage in total for the 9-inch model and 40 GB SSD for the 10-inch model and yeah, up to 2 GB memory. Also, the 1000H is the first HDD-based Eee PC.

Actually, except for the smallish 1024x600 wide SVGA graphics resolution, these little gadgets have pretty much all the standard notebook functionality: 802.11n wireless (WiMax isn't in yet), hi-def audio, webcam, stereo speakers and so on. As expected, the PC901 Linux version has more SSD storage than the Windows XP one - 20 GB vs 12 GB. So, the Windows "tax" takes away 8 GB in a flash, pun intended.

So OK, the newbies look good, and, in this US$300+ class of systems, they are a value for money, even the Windows version.
theinquirer.net (c) 2009 Incisive Media
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