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Old 02-07-2011, 03:39 PM   #77
devilsadvocate
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Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Madiganistan
Device: HP Mini 1101, Droid X rooted, GTab rooted/VEGAnTAB Ginger Edition/CM7
Quote:
Originally Posted by Namekuseijin View Post
yup. Plus, with that tiny keyboard, unless you're a kid surfing the web is your only bet really. Tablets just get that out of the way altogether.

strangely enough, I've had a far easier time with the virtual swype keyboard in my smartphone than with the damned tiny and useless netbook keyboards... I can only imagine it's the same with tablets...
It's not just the size of the keyboard but the architecture (for lack of a better word). My typing on my Droid X is similar (meaning I typo just as often ) to my typing on my HP Mini whose keyboard, according to HP, is 93% standard size. On the other hand, my Acer Aspire One had a full-size keyboard, but they weren't keys; it felt like typing on a jigsaw puzzle.

Quote:
Originally Posted by CWatkinsNash View Post
It's a little fuzzier than that. Generally, a true netbook has a different screen resolution (more scrolling), less memory and a netbook processor (ie, Atom). Many of them run XP or a stripped down Vista / Win7. There are some extremely small laptop/notebook computers with full or HD resolution screens, more memory and a more powerful (though still CULV) processor. They don't have optical drives, but they aren't true netbooks either. I'm typing this on one right now - a Dell Inspiron 11z.
I don't know that there has ever been any true industry-standard definition, but the rule retailers in the U.S. follow is, it's a netbook if:
  1. it doesn't have an optical drive, and
  2. the screen size is 11.6" or smaller.
Again, this is in the U.S., it might be different elsewhere. I've seen them with full versions of XP, my own runs a full version of Win7 Home Premium with Aero; even the Grand Vizier of bloat known as Vista has been installed OEM on some Acers. I've seen them with Core Duos as well as VIA C7's. Mine dual-boots Xubuntu; I've installed Arch and Debian on them as well, and even got a copy of Mandriva to fly on that Aspire One. The biggest Acer netbooks (by their definition) can do 720p HD, so I'm not sure that's a deciding factor either.

Quote:
Originally Posted by CWatkinsNash View Post
I wanted the smallest laptop I could find that was not a netbook, and this fit the bill. With the battery upgrade, it gets up to 6 hours on a charge (in reality, not just on paper). I've owned a lot of computers over the years, and this one is by far my favorite.
The exact same device you have is called a notebook by Dell but a netbook by Acer. I've noticed that a lot of retailers have given up on the term netbook entirely; maybe it was hurting sales. Maybe this fragmentation is why the market is having such an identity crisis, and not the nebulous definition(s).

Quote:
Originally Posted by Worldwalker View Post
It's an EEE PC 901. I'm inordinately fond of the strange flavor of Linux it came with (sort of a mutant Xandros) but since ASUS seems to have forgotten that they ever created such a machine (to the point of removing compatible Linux software from their website; now if you try the "get more software" link, it takes you to a really useless Windows website!) I have to find the time to figure out which other Linux distro will work best for it. There seem to be innumerable supposedly compatible varieties, and sorting through them is going to take a lot of time.
Xandros has a (not entirely undeserved) reputation for being trialware; similar to Mandriva and VectorLinux, you can buy "upgrades" (which are basically drivers and maybe a copy of Crossover Office) to make everything work whereas most mainstream distros will merely try to make you feel guilty for using codecs that don't meet Richard Stallman's definition of "free". For a few reasons I'm not fond of that method of doing business but that's not my decision to make. Anyway, since the 901 has either the GMA950 or 945GME chipset (Asus doesn't seem to want anyone to know which), it should run pretty much any flavor of Linux, the big difference being getting the wireless drivers to play nice. The *buntu versions are good for that but tend to run a bit slow on 1GB netbooks. One that I found worked really well was called ArchBang; it's ArchLinux preassembled with the Openbox window manager. Not a lot of flashiness but it's quick and it works.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Worldwalker View Post
Incidentally, I have small hands (very handy for working on the engines of Honda Civics!) so I don't have a problem typing on my 901, but yes, someone with larger hands would probably have a problem.
My wife has the T91MT and very small hands. She can't stand typing on it.
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