I bought a netbook today – specifically, an Asus Eee PC 1005P. Why that one? Well, it seemed to have a number of decent reviews around the Net, was reasonably up-to-date specs wise (though it could possibly do with another gig of RAM) and was reasonably priced.
A while back, I was under the impression that netbooks were particularly pointless. I even remember a number of us fairly mercilessly laying into our buddy Luke for picking one up – though this was largely due to the fact that at the time he bought one, netbooks were very much in their infancy, no-one really understood quite what they were for, no-one really understood Linux (which was all you could get them preinstalled with) and, of course, we all worked for Apple at the time.
Nowadays, they’re a different beast to what they were. This machine – which I’m typing on right now, in fact – runs Windows 7 Starter (with the opportunity to upgrade to Home Premium) and seems plenty quick enough to do most things on the Internet. The 10-inch widescreen is a comfortable size – not too small to be illegible, yet compact enough to be endearingly cute. The speakers are on a par with most laptops – i.e. shit – but they’re plenty loud enough to be able to hear the soundtrack on a video.
The reason I bought this was so that I actually have my own portable computer to take with me to PAX. My wife has a MacBook but I would only be able to pry that out of her cold, dead fingers – and I don’t particularly want to kill her purely for the sake of having something to blog on in Boston. We have several laptops in the house right now – my wife’s old ThinkPad (complete with that dumb “nipple” pointing device), a Sony Vaio laptop that switches on if it’s in the right mood (which it usually isn’t) and the MacBook – and now this.
Every time I buy a new computer, it strikes me how far things have come. This thing that’s sitting on my lap right now is about ten times more powerful than the first desktop PC that I owned, yet it’s an “entry-level” machine with “limited” use. Hell, I remember being excited the day we upgraded our 386 to a 486 DX2 66MHz – finally we were able to run DOOM in high detail mode.
I’ll be intrigued to see how well it handles various tasks. It’s certainly more than fine for email and web browsing – I’m going to be seeing if latest Squadron of Shame mission Machinarium will run on it as soon as it’s finished downloading. Reports will inevitably follow on Twitter.
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