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To: kingu
I'm looking to get one for my fiance (birthday this Friday). She's interested because it is light and does what she needs when she's on the go.

Leaning to the cheaper end, any you'd suggest?

5 posted on 03/04/2009 9:07:02 AM PST by NativeSon (Fight for America - if you don't, who will?)
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To: NativeSon
Leaning to the cheaper end, any you'd suggest?

I'm an Asus 900 fan, I mean, got three of them solid enough construction, price point under $300, bright wide screen. The one we got with XP was just too frustrating, so I put on Eeebuntu onto it, but sticking in a 2gb ram board, and making sure that Windows doesn't cache to the HD, it'd probably be worthwhile going back to it.

Umm, really, really recommend Eeebuntu for those looking at the EeePCs, the little tweaks in the OS improve battery life impressively, and it's relatively fast and extremely easy to use.

Also, DO NOT lose the DVD-Rom that comes with your laptop - if something goes wrong, the software on it can recover from the worst situation and restore it.

The Dell ones also appear to be quite good from friends that have them, but if fat finger syndrome is an issue, the HP's have the largest keys on the keyboard, which could be easier for those with large hands, but not extremely happy with the quality.

Pitfalls on the EeePC from nearly a year of ownership: Keyboard is unsealed - keep drinks away from it, else you'll be looking for a new keyboard in short order. SSD, if it crashes, can pretty much only be restored by the DVD-Rom that comes with the machine. User support, while very good from Asus, is best on Eeeuser.com's forums - pretty much anything that's can be done to an EeePC has been done, and support replies can be extremely swift. If you're looking for speed, make sure you get a 1.6mhz or faster processor, but I've found the 900mhz ones to be just fine for me - aftermarket SSD drives are now available that are much faster, worthwhile if you really, really need the speed, but to me, it's a disposable computer.

15 posted on 03/04/2009 9:25:26 AM PST by kingu (Party for rent - conservative opinions not required.)
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To: NativeSon

I’ve got a little Asus Eee with a half gig of memory and plenty of storage. It runs XP while my current laptop is saddled with Vista. Good for computing on the go and I keep it as a ‘live backup’ for my laptop. I just power it up every few days to keep my email current on it, and email any documents I’ve been working on to myself. Only thing missing is its ability to run the full Microsoft Office suite, though I can pass documents back and forth and work on them adequately. Oh, yeah, it also doesn’t have its own dvd/cd-rom drive, but I’ve got one at home I can attach to it and I don’t need one on the road.


30 posted on 03/04/2009 9:57:14 AM PST by 9YearLurker
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