Asus Beefs Up Triple-E

EddieC 0 Tallied Votes 178 Views Share

Asustek Computer on Saturday unveiled the Eee PC 900, a beefier version of the ultra-mobile PC it introduced late last year. The new unit is available with Xandros Linux or Windows XP, and is scheduled to begin shipping on May 12 with a sticker price of US$549.

Last year’s model 701—which at the time was offered only with Linux—could reportedly be had for $199, but is offered everywhere I’ve seen it for $399 or more. Both models are built around a 900 MHz Intel Celeron M processor and include a 4GB solid-state disk, three USB 2.0 ports and a VGA port. Neither unit offers an optical or magnetic drive. The Linux version of the 900 adds a 16GB flash unit for a total of 20 GB non-volatile storage. The Windows version is outfitted with an 8GB flash unit (12GB total).

The 900 series doubles the DDR2 RAM (to 1GB) and has more pixels than its 700-series predecessor, both in its built-in Web-cam (1.3 MP vs. 0.3 MP) and its backlit LED. The 8.9-inch panel can display 1024 x 600 compared with 800 x 480 of the 7-inch model. Both weigh around two pounds (.92 kg). ASUS claims 3.5 hours of battery life for newer units and two for the older.

You might be thinking that its $549 price tag puts the 900 in league with a number of low-end laptop models (Acer and Dell come to mind). But aside from a smaller screen and lack of optical storage, this diminutive (9 inches x 6.5 inches) unit is really more akin to Sony’s VAIO TZ or Toshiba’s Portege R500, which are priced in the thousands.

Asus was a frequent editor’s choice of the CRN Test Center during the 1990’s for its fast, feature-rich and well documented motherboards—its products were deemed friendly to retailers, VARs and other channel members.

I’ll be dusting off my contacts at Asus and seeking a review unit in the coming weeks. In the meantime, hands-on reviews can be found at bit tech, CNET, Trusted Reviews, and Tech Radar.

jbennet 1,618 Most Valuable Poster Team Colleague Featured Poster

why spend that much on an eee when you can ebay a laptop circa 2000 and get the same specs + more

e.g thinkpad r30

dvd drive
128 ram (up to 1gb max)
25gb disk
max 1024x768
pentium 3M 1ghz

this is like £30 on ebay so why pay hundreds more for an eee?

EddieC 0 Posting Whiz in Training

Fair point on the price, sure, but less cost also means more weight! :)

Thanks for the comment.

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