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First Reviews of the MSI Wind Ultra-Portable Laptop
Posted by
timothy
on Thu May 29, 2008 10:33 AM
from the when-ndas-expire-you-sorta-win dept.
from the when-ndas-expire-you-sorta-win dept.
Ken E. writes "UK tech website Mobile Computer has an early hands-on review of the MSI Wind — a £329 ultraportable notebook that will compete head-on with the Asus Eee PC 900. In its favour are a 10in screen, better keyboard and, perhaps most important of all, an Intel Atom 1.6GHz dual-core processor (though the site shies away from mentioning this open secret due to what sound like NDA constraints). They like it a lot — is this finally a worthy Eee PC alternative?" (£329 is about $650US at the moment.) An anonymous reader points to CNET's hands-on photo gallery of the Wind; CNET's reviewer says the MSI Wind is the first mini notebook with an overclock button. Barence adds another review at PC Pro.
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Submission: Early review of the MSI Wind ultra-portable by Anonymous Coward
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"Green" Laptop (Score:3, Insightful)
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I read it and thought (Score:3, Funny)
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Or taking it one step further ... (Score:2, Funny)
Reading in dollars? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Reading in dollars? (Score:5, Informative)
Linux version: $560
WinXP version: $604
and the UK prices as:
Linux version: £320 (~630 USD)
WinXP version: £350 (~690 USD)
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Re:Reading in dollars? (Score:5, Informative)
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page (Score:4, Insightful)
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Between the one mouse button, lack of pgup/pgdn keys, and numerous hardware problems, my macbook pro is really pissing me off. I wish everyone would stop manufacturing crap.
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Doesn't work on older macbooks, but there's a driver floating around that will give you the feature.
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Re:page (Score:5, Funny)
A pencil? May I suggest something to help [enzyte.com] grow that pencil to something more substantial...
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It's possible to do much better. (Score:2)
I don't. And to add insult to injury mine's the 17" so there's plenty of room for a full sized keyboard.
This keyboard has what's close to the layout I'd like on a laptop:
http://www.adesso.com/images/big/bigger/MCK-91.jpg [adesso.com]
The older model I have at home, no longer available, has no "Fn" key or fake numeric keypad... which is another think I'd like to see laptop manufacturers give up on. Either way, this keyboard is about the same size as a regular laptop ke
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Weird scaling (Score:5, Interesting)
I find it interesting that this laptop more or less falls right in between your standard fare laptop and an Eee PC in terms of portability and raw power, but is the most expensive of the crop.
Using the base Vostro 1500 for the "average laptop" and the Eee PC 8G we have:
I realize the comparison is odd since they all hit different intended markets, but it seems that something that is between the two in specs would be closer to either of the two in terms of price than it currently is.
Re:Weird scaling -- Not. (Score:5, Insightful)
I find it interesting that this laptop more or less falls right in between your standard fare laptop and an Eee PC in terms of portability and raw power, but is the most expensive of the crop.
Using the base Vostro 1500 for the "average laptop" and the Eee PC 8G we have:
I realize the comparison is odd since they all hit different intended markets, but it seems that something that is between the two in specs would be closer to either of the two in terms of price than it currently is.
Compared to the EEE, you are paying for the larger 10" screen & faster processor.
All in all, it makes perfect sense to me the price placement from your list.
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Your Eee PC specs are off for the Eee 8G: 900mhz celeron and it is $499. The Eee 900 is 900mhz, 8.9" screen, 4GB + 16GB (or 8GB if you go with winxp) at $549.
The Wind is a little overpriced but is slightly different... hard drive vs ssd, slightly larger display (in dimensions, not pixels) and slightly larger keyboard. I can see some people paying the premium to have the large hard disk instead of the small ssd. The keyboard on the eee also takes a while to get used to and is very hard to touch-type on be
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http://blog.laptopmag.com/msi-wind-revealed-10-inch-mini-notebook-to-hit-us-in-june [laptopmag.com]
The Linux version, running Novel's SUSE, will have 512MB RAM and an 80GB hard drive. It will retail for $399. The Windows XP version will have 1GB RAM, an 80GB hard drive, and Bluetooth, retailing for $549. However according to MSI a base configuration of the Windows XP product will be available for under $500.
Awesome battery life, assuming it meets up to spec (Score:2)
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Back in my day... (Score:4, Funny)
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$400 in the US (Score:3, Informative)
I don't know... (Score:4, Funny)
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Benchmarks? (Score:5, Insightful)
FTA:
How can you claim performance is good without running quantitative benchmarks?
I am interested in the performance of the new Atom processor because it uses a new chip design that prioritizes cost (to manufacture) and power efficiency, but not necessarily performance.
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This MSI laptop is only slightly smaller and has less use (no dvdrw than their already small subnotebooks.
I'm thinking it's a marketing gimmick only.
Re:OLPC (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Motherboard (Score:5, Informative)
MSI is certainly not a top brand but they're not complete junk either, in my experience.
=Smidge=
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Motherboards: Gigabyte (2 boards + 1 R
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Re:Motherboard (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Motherboard (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Motherboard (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Antique analog VGA (Score:5, Informative)
As for the enter/backspace key, I hate those huge L-shaped enter keys and a regular-sized backspace key is a problem. In fact, on my Apple keyboard right here, the delete key is just a tad shorter than the return key.
If you rarely use backspace, more power to you. But for the rest of us, a regular-sized backspace key would be too much trouble. In fact, I'd even say that if you can't hit a non-L-shaped enter key, you're the one with a problem.
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And while I'm at it, I'd be interested to hear other people's perception of the oversized backspace key (yeah, I know, this is at the bottom of the list of considerations for purchasing a new laptop, but I've got lots of free time to kill today). I've always preferred keyboards with a large "L-shaped" Enter key, and a standard size backspace key (so that the \| key is right at the top row, between the =+ key and the backspace). I've never really understood why some people like to shrink the size of a heavily used key (Enter) to make room for a key that is rarely used (backspace).
Personally, I consider what they have on that laptop the "standard" layout. Microsoft uses it, Logitech uses it, my HP laptop uses it, and whatever cheapo OEM made this Dell keyboard that I'm typing on now uses it.
:).
I'm surpised that there are actually people that prefer their keyboard any other way
Personally, I tend to mentally seperate my keys by rows. A key should never span more than one row, so the "L" shaped Enter key is an immediate abomination. The standard size shown on this laptop keeps it