Review: #ASUS Eee PC T91 #Netbook

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 12-10-2009

asus eee pc t91 netbook

The latest model from ASUS is a new addition to their Eee PC line. The EeePC T91 is the first in the line to come with a 8.9” swivel touch-screen, as well as the touch-optimized software that is specially designed to maximize the potential of the touch screen. First unveiled at the CES 2009, the new Eee PC™ T91 was a sensation, given its new cutting-edge technological innovations.
With the TouchSuite software that comes with the EeePCT91, you’ll be able to perform a wide variety of tasks using only your fingertips, such as working on digital photos, leaving handwritten notes and sketching cartoons or emoticons.
With the excellent, easy-to-carry design, you can cradle the EeePC T91 in just one arm, allowing you to easily carry it and read documents, make notes and surf the web while travelling by foot. The addition of a TV tuner * and GPS system to the unit means that you’ll have access to a wide array of entertainment options and navigational capabilities no matter where you are. The Eee PC  T91 is available in both Black and White colours.

#Netbook Car Mount REVIEW – for netbooks 7-13″

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 11-10-2009

People use their netbooks for a variety of purposes. Some use it for Internet surfing on-the-go and some for basic office editing. There are many of us, who use these nice little devices for GPS navigation. Netbook screens are perfect for this as they are smaller than the big and bulky notebooks and have bigger displays than the usual in-car GPS devices.

ASUS EEE 701 sitting on netbook car mountASUS EEE 701 sitting on netbook car mount

Features:

Dedicated netbook mount
Ideal for most of 7-13 netbooks
Fits netbooks with standard and extended battery
Flexible bracket, can adjust the direction you need
Worldwide patent design
Strong suction
Fantastic design
Easy to operate
Can be setup for short or long gooseneck

The netbook sits on it nicely and securely. The gooseneck that comes with this car mount can be adjusted the way you want.

This netbook car mount can take upto 7-inch to 13-inch netbooks. I tested the first EEE PC, 701 on it and it looked fantastic sitting on it.

IMG_0802

Then, I used one of the heaviest netbooks ever made, the ASUS EEE 1000H on it and without a hitch, it was there sitting wonderfully. Gratifying, I must say to see my netbook guiding me with the GPS’s directions. Also, now I can see movies in my car!

IMG_0804

One word, get this thing! You will love it.

Preview of #Windows7 #netbooks, PCs from #Asus, #Samsung, and #ViewSonic

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 23-09-2009

ViewSonic VPC100 all-in-one Windows 7-based PC

In a flashback to the more prosperous years before the current “deep recession,” hordes of truly enthused journalists crowded dozens of vendors’ booths at a revitalized Pepcom pre-holiday event in New York City last week, waiting for their turns to get up close and personal with forthcoming consumer electronics wares.

ViewSonic, a company known until now mostly for its monitors, introduced a total of four new PCs at Pepcom’s press event Thursday night.

The ViewSonic entries include the Windows XP-driven All-in-One PC VPC100 (shown above), plus three Windows 7 systems: the 13-inch ViewBook Pro VNB131 notebook; 10-inch ViewBook VNB102 netbook; and PC mini VOT132 (below), an Intel Dual Core Atom 330 processor-based mini-netbook aimed at serving as the centerpiece for building your own all-in-one system.

ViewSonic VOT132 wireless PC hubViewSonic’s 10-inch VNB102 wraps an Atom N270 CPU, 1 GB of RAM and a 160 GB hard drive in a traditional netbook form factor, for $349 with a three-cell battery or $399 for a six-cell version.

Also in its bustling booth, ViewSonic showed off two new palm-sized MovieBooks for playing back movies on a 4.3-or 5-inch screen while you’re on the go.

ViewSonic MovieBook VPD400

For its part, Samsung gave its first US look at two more Windows 7 netbooks: the N140, a 10.1-inch, 2.8-pound replacement for the NC10, touted as raising battery life from five hours to 11 hours; and the N510, an 11.6-inch device featuring an HDMI port, along with an Nvidia Ion graphics chip for running high-definition movies and 3D games.

Slated for US shipment in November, the N140 will run Windows 7 Starter Edition while the N510 will run Windows 7 Home Premium Edition, said Jason B. Redmond, a senior manager at Samsung for marketing communications. The N140 will come in both black and burgundy flavors.

Redmond told Betanews that Samsung will also update its existing Go netbooks, first rolled out last summer, with both 3G wireless and Windows 7 Starter Edition following Microsoft’s launch of Win7 on October 22.

Asus made the first public display anywhere of its already announced 14-inch UL80V ultraportable and 16-inch N61Vg multimedia notebooks, along with its 20-inch EeeTop ET2002 HD entertainment center and two new netbooks: the 8.9-inch Disney Netpal for kids and the 10.1-inch Eee PC 1008HA Seashell.

Although the Asus notebooks were outfitted with Windows 7, the Disney Netpal still sported Windows XP. In sort of a proof-of-concept, though, Asus installed Windows 7 on the Seashell just for the Pepcom event, to show that the new OS will work on a netbook.

Josh Norem, senior technical marketing specialist at Asus, told Betanews that all of Asus’ recently announced notebooks and netbooks will be running Windows 7 by the November time frame.

He hedged a bit, however, when asked about other future products from Asus, perhaps in reaction to press leaks of an Asus product roadmap, widely circulated a few weeks ago.

Will Asus release additional Windows 7 products in November? “Probably,” Norem answered on Thursday. Are any more Linux netbooks on Asus’ drawing boards? “Not at this time,” he replied.

As for the revamped Skype video phone, a major update to the “industry first” announced at a Pepcom event last year, the new and more streamlined unit — known as the AiGuru SV1T — features a touch screen and other enhancements for much easier dialing and navigation.

Norem said Asus is targeting its latest desktop VoIP videophone at senior citizens and others who are daunted at the thought of making Skype calls on a PC. The phone runs its own WebOS, produced by Asus, according to Norem.

Meanwhile, other vendors, including Lenovo have also been pre-announcing Windows 7 PCs over the past month or so.

As sort of a counterpoint to the Windows 7 frenzy, HTC gave hands-on demos in New York City on Thursday of the Hero, an Android phone set for release by Sprint in October. But will the new consumer electronics products — whether Windows 7- or Android-driven — stimulate consumer spending enough this holiday season to give the economy a significant jolt? No doubt we could all use a little Christmas this Christmas.

#Toshiba’s new netbook, which aims to solve some common #netbook issues

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 07-08-2009

The brightest spot for Windows PC makers in this awful economy has been the relatively new category of small, light, minimalist and cheap laptops called netbooks.

But there are some significant compromises for consumers who rely on netbooks, which typically sell for between $300 and $500, have screens of 8” or 10,” and weigh under three pounds.

Mossberg Reviews Toshiba’s First Netbook

5:00Toshiba introduces a new netbook in the American market, which comes with the best keyboard Walt Mossberg has seen on a net book. The netbook also boasts a large, responsive touch pad and an impressive battery life.

Because their screens are not only small, but also tend to offer low resolution, they can’t show as much of a Web page, or document, as a normal laptop screen, so a lot of scrolling is required. Many have cramped, flimsy-feeling keyboards, and undersized touchpads with small, stiff buttons. And many have lousy battery life.

I’ve been testing a new netbook from Toshiba, the last major Windows brand to join the category in the U.S., but a company with long experience in making diminutive, albeit far costlier, laptops. And this new $400 Toshiba, inelegantly called the NB205-N310, stands out for solving some of these common netbook problems, including offering the best netbook keyboard I’ve tested.

The Toshiba shares most of the characteristics of competing netbooks. It has a 10” screen; uses the low-power Intel Atom processor; sports a 160-gigabyte hard disk; and has a built-in Webcam. Like almost all netbooks, it runs the aging but familiar Windows XP Home operating system. Its one gigabyte of memory is sub-par for a standard laptop, but generous for a netbook. It has a decent complement of ports and connectors, including three USB ports, one of which can charge accessories like cellphones even while the PC is in sleep mode.

While not the smallest or lightest competitor on the shelf, the new Toshiba’s overall dimensions qualify it as a true netbook: it weighs 2.9 pounds, and is 10.4 inches wide, 7.6 inches deep, and an inch thick at its thinnest point. It fits nicely on the tray in a coach plane seat, and comes in a variety of colors.

But this machine breaks from the pack in several areas. First, it has by far the best keyboard I’ve seen in a netbook. The keyboard design resembles that on Apple’s MacBook Pro laptops —big, raised keys with lots of room in between, and good vertical movement. The space bar, and the “Enter” and “Backspace” keys are wide, and there are even dedicated “Page Up” and “Page Down” keys.

My only major gripe with this keyboard was a baffling decision to shrink the Tab key, which is heavily used to navigate forms on Web pages, to less than half the size of a normal letter key. It is so small I kept hitting the adjacent “Q” key until I got used to it. But, otherwise, this is a great netbook keyboard.

The company offers a model of the NB205 with a flat keyboard for $50 less, but I think the extra $50 is worth it.

The Toshiba’s second big plus is its touchpad and buttons. The pad itself is much roomier and easier to use than on any other netbook I’ve tested, a crucial benefit given that its typical low-resolution netbook screen, while bright and crisp, forces you to scroll a lot. (There’s a button that can zoom out, but I found it clumsy to use.) And the twin buttons, in stark contrast to those on many netbooks, are large and very responsive.

[PTECH] ToshibaThe Toshiba NB205-N310

Mossberg’s Mailbox

The third big plus on this new netbook is battery life, which I found to be outstanding. This model comes standard with one of those protruding, six-cell batteries, though it doesn’t stick out as far as some I’ve seen. Toshiba claims you can get up to an impressive nine hours and five minutes of life between charges. (There’s a $330 model with a battery Toshiba claims lasts just 3.5 hours.)

In my standard battery test, where I turn off all power-saving features, crank up the screen to full brightness, leave on the Wi-Fi, and play music continuously, the Toshiba NB205-N310 lasted a whopping six hours and 32 minutes. That means you would likely top eight hours, and maybe approach Toshiba’s claim, in a more normal usage pattern.

The machine properly handled a variety of common programs I tested, including Microsoft Office, Firefox, iTunes, Picasa and the TweetDeck program for using Twitter.

But there were some drawbacks. One was performance. Streaming of Web videos stuttered a bit more often than I would have liked. Wi-Fi speed was noticeably less than what I get on a standard Windows laptop.

Startup and reboot speeds were very slow. With one Word document open, two Web sites open in Firefox and iTunes playing a song, it took the Toshiba over two minutes to reboot, compared to about a minute and a half on my last-generation Acer Aspire One netbook running the same things. Starting up cold also took about 30 seconds longer than on the Acer.

This may be because Toshiba has loaded the machine with software many people won’t use, including the Skype communications program and a networking utility that duplicates some of Windows’ built-in functions. Also, the speakers are feeble, even for a netbook.

Still, Toshiba has advanced the netbook category in key respects.

Find all of Walt Mossberg’s columns and videos online, free, at the All Things Digital Web site, walt.allthingsd.com. Email him at mossberg@wsj.com.

Netbook Car Kit Mount

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 13-04-2009

This universal netbook car kit mount will hold most 7″-10″ netbooks securely to your dashboard via either the rigid suction mount or the extra long flexi suction mount. This car it is ideal for anyone that requires to use their netbook in a vehicle, keep your netbook of your laptop and make it easier to operate.

You have the option of getting a rigid mount or long flexi mount.

Features:

  • Lightweight
  • Durable
  • Secure
  • 2 x connection points
  • 2x different suction mount options
  • Sudden Weight Load: 15kg
  • Constant Weight Load: 5kg
  • Suitable width of device: 150~250mm
  • Suitable height of device: 175mm
  • Operating Temperature: -40 – 65
  • Lever Lifetime: 10,000 times

It costs just £19.99 and worldwide shipping is supported.

You can order from the following link

[Netbook Car Kit Mount]

Netbook comparison – which has the better battery life?

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 10-04-2009

“Which netbook has the better battery life?” It’s a question I haven’t heard too often but it’s one you should be asking yourself when you’re about to buy a netbook. The term “netbook” is being thrown about a lot but it doesn’t mean the same thing for battery life.

So far, we’ve tested a pretty decent range of netbooks available on the market not only for performance but also for battery life and we’ve found a considerable range of run times from the supplied batteries from as little as 1hr55mins to a massive 6hrs56mins.

Model
Battery Capacity
Battery Life (hours:mins)
MSI Wind U115 Hybrid
11.1V/5100mAh
6:56
Asus Eee PC 1000HD
7.4V/6600mAh
4:12
Asus Eee PC 901
7.4V/6600mAh
3:59
MSI Wind U100
11.1V/4400mAh
3:40
Asus Eee PC 1000H
7.4V/6600mAh
3:33
Asus N10J
11.1V/4800mAh
3:05
Dell Inspiron Mini 9
11.1V/2142mAh
3:05
Asus Eee PC S101
7.4V/4900mAh
2:41
Acer Aspire One AOA110
11.1V/2200mAh
2:19
Toshiba NB100
N/A
2:14
HP Mini 1001TU
11.1V/2342mAh
2:05
Lenovo IdeaPad S10
11.1V/2522mAh
1:55
Dell Inspiron Mini 12
14.4V/2200mAh
1:47

So far, MSI’s Wind U115 Hybrid is on top with an excellent 6hrs56mins followed by the Asus Eee PC 1000HD and 901 models. It shouldn’t surprise you that all three of these units feature six-cell batteries. HP, Lenovo and the Dell Inspiron Mini 12 share the bottom three places on the ladder with their three-cell batteries limiting run time.

Each netbook was tested with Australian PC User magazine’s UserBench Battery 2008 benchmark that I developed for the magazine in 2007.

The test involves continual playback of a WMV video clip with battery life being monitored until the battery gives up. Power management was set to “always on” with the screen and hard drive set to never switch off. These settings were chosen to give a worst-case scenario. With more aggressive power management settings, better battery life can be obtained but it should not get worse than this.

This obviously isn’t an exhaustive test but it does show that six-cell battery netbooks should last well over three hours while those with three-cell batteries will struggle, on average, to deliver better than two hours.

[EDIT: Why does the Wind U115 Hybrid get such a good result? It's C: drive is an 8GB Solid-State Drive (SSD), which enables the unit to switch off the 160GB D: hard drive if it's not being used. That, and the fact it uses a higher-capacity 5100mAh six-cell battery, also helps but certainly the SSD appears to make a difference here.]

Source: http://netbookreview.darrenyates.com.au/?p=329

REVIEW: HP Mini 2140 Netbook

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 20-01-2009

hp_mini_2140

Hewlett-Packard unveiled its Mini 2140 netbook at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, and it’s cool.

I had a chance to play with it at HP’s booth, and its style is definitely impressive, thanks to the sleek aluminum casing, which is similar to the older 2133.

HP has also made a lot of other improvements on this netbook over its 2133 and Mini 1000, all of which it hopes business professionals will find enticing. The Mini 2140 will launch later this month.

Aside from the sleek silver casing, the Mini 2140 will have a 6-cell battery option, a first for HP and a key feature, in my opinion. Netbooks are made for mobility, and 3-cell batteries often give you just a few hours of life.

An HP representative at the booth said the 6-cell battery can run the Mini 2140 for about eight hours, but I didn’t have time to test that claim. The 6-cell batteries on most netbooks last five or more hours, and time varies depending on the makeup of the machine.

For example, the Mini 2140 comes with either a 160GB HDD (hard disk drive) or an 80GB SSD (solid state drive). The SSD option will save a bit of power for a user.

Another bonus for the Mini 2140 is its OS options.

The Mini 2140 I tested was running Windows Vista Business, which performed fine on most of the easy applications I tried out, including Word and Internet Explorer, but still posted a poor boot-up time of 77 seconds.

Luckily, HP also offers Windows XP and XP Professional on the Mini 2140, as well as SUSE Linux.

The 10.1-inch screen on the Mini 2140 was nice, similar to other netbooks I’ve tried out, and the QWERTY keyboard, which is 92 percent of the size of a standard laptop PC keyboard, is among the most comfortable I’ve tested.

Price may again be a factor weighing against HP with the Mini 2140. Many of HP’s early attempts at netbooks have been a bit expensive, in my opinion. However, with the 2140’s aluminum casing, OS options and component options, it may end up being worth the money.

Prices for the device start at US$499 for a basic configuration including a 3-cell battery, and go up to about $700, the HP representative said.

One other consideration to take note of on the Mini 2140 is weight. The device I tested was heavy.

Although it is listed at 2.6 pounds (1.18 kilograms) for the basic system, the one I tested was far heavier than that. The 6-cell battery made a difference, and the HP representative said the one I was using probably weighed 3 pounds, but it seemed even heavier than that. The difference may be the aluminum casing, which offers durability and style but also more weight than the plastic normally used with netbooks.

The other main parts inside the Mini 2140 are the 1.6GHz Intel Atom microprocessor, and the device can hold as much as 2GB of DRAM. The configuration I tested did have 2GB of DRAM, as well as a 160GB HDD.

Source: http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/156850/article.html?tk=nl_wbxrvw

Windows 7 Much Better Than Vista On a Netbook

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 17-01-2009

dell-windows7I’ve tested Vista on two netbooks, and it’s never been good (not counting the Vaio P). In fact, Vista has been unusable in both circumstances. Then I loaded Windows 7 onto the Mini 12.

If you look back at my original review of the Dell Inspiron Mini 12, a 12-inch Atom netbook with 1GB of RAM, I liked the hardware just fine but complained that Vista was too slow to even be considered as the OS. The system often lagged when just opening the Start menu, let alone launching real programs. It, like Vista on most netbooks, was little more than a novelty—something to be chuckled at for a few moments before formatting and installing XP. So I loaded the mini 12 with Windows 7. What did I have to lose?

The experience is night and day.

With Aero deactivated (and actually, totally inaccessible after an auto-configuration installation despite screwing with the registry), the Start menu now pops right up (like it should), Firefox takes about 3.5 seconds to open (which is reasonable) and light multitasking is smooth enough. The computer is by no means fast, but it’s reasonably functional. And I can use the system without pounding my head against the screen or loading an old OS. Keep in mind, this testing is just with 1GB of memory, not even 2GB.

The system still struggles a bit with both full screen Flash video and XviD clips. Heavily dropped frames remain a fact of life, and don’t expect to fast forward through high quality content at will. But that’s a hardware limitation that I can accept, or at least not blame on Microsoft. Intel, I’m looking in your direction now.

I loaded Windows 7 onto the Mini 12 as a Hail Mary maneuver, hoping to play with the system a little more without resorting to XP. And I have to admit, the results were pretty close to miraculous.

Source: http://i.gizmodo.com/5133092/windows-7-runs-so-much-better-than-vista-on-a-netbook

Review: Asus EeePC 1002HA netbook

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 02-01-2009

1002HA.jpgAsus’s 1002HA is an attractive little laptop that could easily pass for something several times its $500 price. It’s only when you open it up and find a more-or-less standard netbook that it becomes clear it’s not a new rival for the MacBook Air or Vaio TT.

But a netbook it is, albeit one that’s pretty good by the category’s standards. The 1.6 GHz Atom CPU, gig of ram, Bluetooth, 10.2″ 1024×600 display, 160GB hard drive, three USB ports and a 1.3 megapixel webcam are to be expected; the ultra-thin form and its gorgeous brushed-metal chassis are the big bonuses. It’s much prettier than the 1000HA it replaces.

It runs Windows XP and has Sun StarOffice and Microsoft Works pre-installed, as well as Asus’s one-click power management tray utility. You’ll want to jump out of the battery-saving modes to watch video or play casual games: even YouTube was a bit choppy on the lowest setting.

WiFi-n is a pleasing upgrade (many netbooks still just have b/g) but the 2-cell battery is disappointing. Though it got fair enough life for its tiny size — about 3 hours — the lack of a more substantial upgrade option is a shame.

It also falls short of perfection of other fronts. Asus still insists on a tiny right-shift key, the trackpad has a “sticky” response, and there’s no 3G option. After seeing the HP Mini 1000’s stunning, MacBook-like “Infinity” display, the 1002HA’s thick, extruded bevels are a bit disappointing, too.

Source: http://gadgets.boingboing.net/2008/12/31/review-a-week-with-a-1.html

Get the 1002HA if you want a decent netbook with unparalleled good looks. Stick with the Samsung NC10 for better battery life or HP’s Mini 1000 for a better all-round machine.

MSI U115 Hybrid SSD / HDD netbook could be awesome

Posted by | Posted in Product Reviews | Posted on 31-12-2008


MSI’s officially launched the U115 Hybrid netbook we saw not too long ago, which can operate both SSD and HDD drives at the same time. The 10-inch (1024 x 600 resolution) laptop primarily uses the SSD, reserving the HDD for storage, and boasts an “Eco Mode” button which will temporarily disconnect the HDD to save power. The hybrid functions should provide both a faster OS and longer battery life — but we’ll wait till the test results are in to form our opinions. If you’ve forgotten, spec-wise the U115’s got a 1.60GHz Intel Atom CPU, up to 2GB of DDR2 RAM, plus 8GB SSD / 80GB HDD, 16GB SSD / 120GB HDD, and 32GB SSD / 160GB HDD storage options, and a 2 megapixel webcam. No word on pricing or release date for this bad boy yet. We’ll keep our eyes peeled.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2008/12/29/msi-u115-hybrid-ssd-hdd-netbook-unleashed-upon-the-world-coul/