


Does 2012 Mark the End of the Netbook? 336
Voline writes "Digitimes reports that Asus and Acer will not be producing netbooks in 2013, signaling the end of a product category that Asus began five years ago with its Eee PC. The Guardian looks at the rise and fall of the netbook and posits some reasons for its end. Reasons include: manufacturers shifting from Linux to Windows, causing an increase in price that brought netbooks into competition with full-on laptops that offered better specs for not much more money; the global recession beginning in 2008; and the introduction of the iPad and Android tablets."
Nah (Score:5, Insightful)
Samsung ChromeBooks, Apple 11 inch devices. Tablets with keyboards not running windows 8 or 7 for everything else...
Re:Nah (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, Apple's 11-inch devices are roughly a form factor that would be considered netbook-sized a few years ago. Slightly on the large end for screen size, since I think of 8-11" as typical netbook size, with the majority being 9-10". But spot-on for weight: the 11-inch Macbook Air weighs less than most 9-10-inch first-gen netbooks did. So the market got somewhat cannibalized from the top end by those kinds of devices. And from the bottom-end, the casual user who wants to browse the web occasionally in a coffee shop, everyone now has smartphones, and many people have iPads and similar.
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but had the keyboard dangling off the screen. They were fairly close to the same size and weight at the end of the day, and the tablets turned out to be quite a bit better for the couch-web.
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Dell sold a 12" netbook. It was the netbook guts with a bigger screen. 7 to 9 was the most common, but bigger ones existed.
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My thoughts exactly.
Google is pushing Chromebooks heavily right now.
I suspect the people predicting the demise of netbooks are working from a very narrow definition of these devices, and excluding from that definition tablets, (with or without keyboards), or those netbooks that are running web browsers as their only operating system.
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Samsung ChromeBooks
Yeah, I've seen some people who are really happy with their ChromeBooks. It does everything they need for a very low price.
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Here's a better citation from 2012, just a month ago:
http://mashable.com/2012/11/26/touch-chromebook/ [mashable.com]
Sales have so far been so small that NPD, a research company that measures sales of electronics, doesn't even bother mentioning them.
Do you or the OP have any citation stating that the sales of Chromebooks have been hurting netbooks?
Also, does anyone even remember the Chromebox?
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we as humans who speak language use specific terms like "netbook" to mean specific things. a netbook is a small, underpowered, cheap laptop. they had a wave of relative popularity, and now they're basically gone.
Netbook is a tablet with a built-in keyboard.
Netbooks can run PC applications. Tablets can't. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Those that can run windows are x86 based, and tend to be hugely more expensive, heavier and with inferior battery life to the ARM based tablets...
ARM based windows cannot really be called "full windows" because it cannot run 99% of the applications generally associated with windows, whereas ARM based linux can run 99% of linux applications without issues.
That said, most existing linux/windows apps are not designed for touchscreen input, so while they might work they won't be terribly usable.
If they really want an over 10x price premium (Score:5, Interesting)
there was no large market for ultra-portables with no power.
"No power"? An Atom could do everything that a comparably clocked P4 could do. I use mine for lightweight Python programming. I bought a 10" because it fits in a bag that isn't an obvious "mug me" magnet.
People buying ultra-portables were used to paying $5000
Once my $300 10" laptop finally breaks, I'll be severely disappointed if I have to pay $5,000 to replace it.
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No Vision (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is that they don't know how to make a netbook. I think there is a valid market for a device the size of the original Acer ZG5 netbook. The problem is that the hardware companies allowed Microsoft to define what a netbook was and not the market. I'd love something the size of my Acer ZG5 that had a quad i7 and 8GB of ram and came with linux installed but that never happened. Underpowered Atom based machines with 2GB ram at nearly the price of a dual core equiped laptop. Who wants that? No one and I can't believe they could not figure that out.
Re:No Vision (Score:5, Insightful)
So... you want a macbook air?
Yes, the dimensions are slightly different, but it does come with a UNIX pre-installed.
Apple isn't perfect, but they are the only company that has focused on high end hardware instead of racing to the bottom of every market.
Apple Shareholders (Score:4, Interesting)
racing to the bottom of every market.
That is called competition and its why Apple logo is not selling computers anymore. Apple had their best quarter in 5 years and only sold 1 in 20 computers that has since has dropped, its market share for phones has dropped from a high of 23% now down to 14.9 and tablets have hit 50% hard. Its market cap had the value of 12 Dell companies wiped off its market cap in three months.
The reality is now that tablets; smartphones are simply commodity products, and its products are neither innovative or unique. It has to compete like everybody else...and that is price [and product range] as its high mark-ups become unsustainable . Seriously a macbook air...with its low resolution screen that costs the same as 5 nexus tablets they are out of touch.
As for the touch being Unix...seriously that old chestnut, Android is too I suppose??
Re:Apple Shareholders (Score:4, Informative)
I'm typing this up on a W7 i7 desktop I built myself. I don't wanna be accused of Apple fanboiism. Like most here, probably, I assemble my computers -- in my case mostly because my PSU is rocksolid and I can reuse certain components like my video card (not a gamer), SSD, harddrives, Blu-ray reader, and cardreader my from the last computer. But more than any of that, so I don't have to put up with the shitton of crapware that comes on a new computer. Last time I bought an Acer for someone (2007, not sure how it's these days), it was a fucking nightmare and next to impossible to remove (not to mention no recovery CD - that was $20 extra + s/h).
I think your post a bit ridiculous. Apple is selling better than before, sales slowed due to size. It's easy to grow 1000% when starting from next to nothing (smartphone market, not the company itself).
Don't mistake an expanding market/dropping market share as Apple failing. It's inevitable in every market: there are luxury manufacturers and and those that sell to the masses. Rarely can a company do both well. Even among car makers, like Honda and Toyota, they eventually had to make up a new marque (Acura and Lexus) to bridge that gap semi-successfully.
Japanese companies used to be all about marketshare too and by chasing every sale, even at a loss, they gained little but the weatherwave loyalty of people who now buy chinese products because they are 10 cents cheaper.
Apple already went the marketshare route in the 90s. They licensed out their OS and it was a disaster for them. Now it probably would be even worse - they are not a hardware company in the traditional sense and tehy will get trounced playing that game.
Apple is all about comfortable margins. They still have one advantage others don't, which they sell. Ecosystem and integration. Someone that buys an iPhone is likely to spring for an iPad sometime, more than any other tablet. After they get a tablet, they might go for notebook. It all works together rather seamlessly for the average bullshit that average people do. Developers of both physically accessories and software like it since there are few major models to target.
Apple has it's customers and they pay the premium and are apparently happy more or less. Since it's no longer the early 90s, marketshare doesn't matter that much anymore in terms of program availabilty except for video games (which has largely gone to the console market anyway - Apple is notebooks more than desktops and it's unlikely hardcore gamers are going to rely on those anytime soon anyway).
Or like my parents. They got an Apple notebook (completely devoid of the bullshit crapware mentioned above), it's been way more rock solid software wise than their windows PCs (admittedly pre-W7), the notebook never fucks up/hangs in standby/hibernate or whatever and they bought the rest of the Apple stuff as they went along. I didn't have to babysit their computer while visiting. Win/win.
Apple is never going to be dell, and emulating Dell was never the reason why they got so big.
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They DID figure it out. They just don't want to produce it.
Limiting a chipset to 2GB is deliberately crippling the product.
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Not all Atom's have that limitation.
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The problem is that the hardware companies allowed Microsoft to define what a netbook was and not the market.
Not sure Google is allowing Microsoft to define very much regarding their Chromebooks [google.com].
Better hardware (Score:3)
Had I anything to do with netbook manufacture and marketing, I would have made some hardware improvements.
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So basically what you want is an Asus Transformer?
Re:No Vision (Score:5, Interesting)
> I'd love something the size of my Acer ZG5 that had a quad i7 and 8GB of ram
That's not a netbook, it's an ultrabook and it's expensive as hell:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16834127833 [newegg.com]
Yeah, it's 11.6" and not 8.9" but seeing as it's the same weight I don't really see that as a major issue. (I, in fact, consider it a big win since I've always thought the 9" keyboards were basically unusable.)
> Underpowered Atom based machines with 2GB ram at nearly the price of a dual core equiped laptop.
That is the essence of a netbook: An ultra low end computer that ran a browser, an email client and maybe a text editor. They were supposed to be cheap, but pretty much started at $200 and rose to $300 when Windows butted in. A decent laptop would run about $400, and they never really made sense for (or were intended for) anything but a sort of secondary travel-ish computer.
(BTW, seeing as the Eee PC started with Linux and kept a Linux version through most of it's revisions, I don't really know why you say Microsoft defined the netbook design...)
> Who wants that? No one and I can't believe they could not figure that out.
Uh, yeah, they figured it out and that's why they aren't making them.
But people _did_ want them. Not because they were good, but because they were cheap and somewhat because they were small. People saw them as proper laptops that were cheaper because they were smaller and not because they were just altogether cheaper. They would buy one thinking they saved $100, only to realize that they wasted $300 because it was to slow to actually do what they wanted.
I don't believe it was intentional... I think they were introduced as trying to be the cheapest possible computer; about half the price of a normal one. Partly for travel, partly for people who didn't do much, partly for just having a computer you can use look up that actor in the TV show you're watching, and it didn't have to be your 'main computer'.
But it turned out to be a stunning bait and switch: If you put Windows on it, you could charge $300. People would buy it thinking they were getting a new laptop. Then they'd be back in the store spending $500 six months later when they found out they needed a real machine. I think that's why they really 'took off' and were pushed so hard. They were just printing money by dramatically shortening an upgrade cycle that had stalled because proper computers had become fast enough.
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That's not a netbook, it's an ultrabook and it's expensive as hell:
I wish I had mod points for you today. :-)
Microsoft defined ULCPC (Score:3)
That is the essence of a netbook: An ultra low end computer that ran a browser, an email client and maybe a text editor.
And an NES emulator (at full speed). And a text editor. And GNU Image Manipulation Program. And a 6502 assembler and a set of image conversion tools written in Python. And anything else that a Pentium 4 PC could run, as Atom was comparable in performance to a similarly clocked P4. You don't really need anything more than a netbook to develop a video game for a retro console, other than a way to test a nightly build on the actual console to make sure you aren't relying on emulator bugs. Developing a 2D game
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Acer came out with a nice netbook (AO722). 1366x768 11.6" screen, 320GB HD, chiclet keyboard with std size keys and spacing, AMD C-50 and later C-60 processor, that is faster than an atom, but sips power. $200 at Target almost 2yrs ago, but Target now only carries the intel atom version that is slower, worse battery life, and can't handle as much memory, for more money.
Added an 8GB sodimm for $40 shipped (newegg), and it is a very nice, very small portable box with fantastic battery life for under $250.
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AMD C-50 and later C-60 processor, that is faster than an atom, but sips power. $200 at Target almost 2yrs ago, but Target now only carries the intel atom version that is slower, worse battery life, and can't handle as much memory, for more money.
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My girlfriend has one of those Acer units with the C-50 and 2GB RAM, and it is a very nice little machine for her needs (taking notes at school). Meanwhile, I picked up an Acer a year earlier with the atom and 1GB RAM, and while it's, erm, usable... for school duties, it's no where near what the C-50 will do. Her machine will happily push a 1080p movie out the HDMI port, while the atom (which doesn't even have HDMI out) chokes horribly just trying to do 720p.
If I could find another C-50 or C-60 Acer, I'd gl
Its (Score:2)
For me, the iPad killed the netbook (Score:5, Interesting)
I bought a netbook because I figured it could do everything a tablet could do, and more.
It turned out to be frustratingly slow, largely due to Windows 7 needing too many resources, Microsoft putting ridiculous limitations on what kind of specs a netbook could have while still qualifying for Windows Starter 7, and the agonizingly slow hard drive (which was accessed far too often due to Windows 7 needing lots of RAM -- while at the same time, Microsoft demanding it not be allowed to have much RAM).
Later, I bought an iPad, with a slower CPU and less RAM ... and I love it. Even though it's just a lowly iPad 2, the user experience is wonderful. I can't help but think Microsoft is partially responsible for making the iPad a success, because Microsoft were the ones responsible for ensuring a poor netbook experience. If my netbook experience hadn't sucked, I'd never have purchased an iPad.
Wish I hadn't wasted my money on a POS netbook.
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except the GP says the iPad has less CPU...
Thats what he says.. but its not reality.
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Yup. Mine came with Windows 7 Starter. Had plenty of spare Windows XP Pro licenses kicking around, so through one of those on it. It's got a 1 gb of RAM and a reasonably okay hard drive, so XP runs very well. I suppose if I wanted to, I could throw Ubuntu or Debian on it, and probably get even a few additional horsepower, but I do have a need to run MS-Office, and it's a member of my AD network, so it's just easier to go XP.
It had to do with the Atom (Score:2)
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PC users simply have more choices than that. We're not stuck with whatever singular choice one singular hardware vendor wants to ram down our throats. We have plenty of options and we can pick the one we think is right for us.
Nothing will seem to be some sort of "dominant winner" that the single vendor crowd might be looking for.
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I've had good luck with HP's dm1 with an AMD e-350. I upgraded it to 8GB, and can run VMs on it. The main area where I had issues with the speed are games (though it will play GW2 at 15-20 fps) and emulating an android device under eclipse.
Why I never bought a netbook... (Score:5, Insightful)
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I hope your third try at the fourth grade goes well for you, feel free to come back to us when you're done with that.
I love netbooks (Score:5, Interesting)
They serve as ideal small computers in all sorts of laboratory set-ups. Use them as network line-debuggers, use them as front-end mockups - I just love them!
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Reading this on my EeePC (Score:2)
Netbooks are more popular than ever now! (Score:3, Interesting)
WaitAminute (Score:5, Informative)
Replacement (Score:3)
What's all this 'was' and 'were'? My eee901 is still going strong
But once your Eee PC finally bites the dust, what will you replace it with?
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Another EEE 901 user here. I'm currently in chapter 10 of my second book, both of them written almost exclusively on my EEE and mostly outside. Try to do that with a tablet...
Ultrabooks (Score:3)
If you want a ultra slim and light but cheap laptop with basic functionality, Chromebook, if you want a small light full featured laptop, ultrabook, if you want "pick up and use instantly", tablet.
Frankly... (Score:2)
I love my $400 Lenovo X120e. The AMD E-350 chipset is fantastic. Weighs 3.2 lbs. 6-7 hours battery life. Does pretty much everything I need to do that I would do on a laptop. Before the X120e I owned an EEE which was equally fantastic.
They are abandoning the netbook market because the margins are too slim and the audience too few. Most people are information consumers that are happy with the tablet interface. The others tend to be professionals have the money for expensive powerful laptops with the netbook
Will be sorry To See Them Go (Score:3)
People forget that before netbooks appeared, the smallest regular notebooks were 12 inch models weighing nearly 4 pounds, which came at a price premium (upwards of $2K), and while smaller devices existed, they were expensive, quirky, and underpowered, yet Microsoft demanded that they only run Vista. The original eee PC obliterated the cost/weight barrier, which contributed to its extremely popularity in spite of its other shortcomings, and indicated that there was enormous latent demand for low-end mobile devices. Microsoft, demonstrating its continued cluelessness in the mobile market, took the minimal steps necessary to ensure that netbooks woudl run MS Windows, not Linux, but otherwise did nothing to promote or improve the platform, and sure enough, iPads, smartphones, and their ilk have taken over the market from the low end while pricing pressures have forced down the cost of traditional notebooks from the high end.
My Samsung netbook [Ubuntu NBR] hits the sweet spot for a full-featured "laptop", which I absolutely need when traveling, but is small and light enough that I no longer bother to check bags, even on the smallest regional jets. It will be tough finding a replacement that works as well.
I love my EEEPC. (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm still running my ASUS 1000HE eeepc as my everyday computing device. I chose it because it was the first EEEPC that really was completely Linux-compatible, needing no proprietary drivers at all. It's easy to carry around, it runs fast enough for most of what I want to do, and I run Debian testing on it. I've never had a problem with its battery life, and am glad that ASUS emphasized good battery life instead of overpowering it with hyper-fast processors and graphics -- mostly unnecessary for what I do. Yes, there's still a Windows lurking in a small corner on the hard drive, used only for running Adobe Digital Editions because Adobe broke their promise to implement it for Linux once the publishing industry standardised on it.
I'm not sure I want much changed about it, except maybe a bigger hard drive. But I do use sshfs to access a bulk storage machine in my basement, and that seems to take care of that. sshfs works even when I'm in a coffee shop.
I use it mostly for writing English text and for software development. It's the machine I wrote and debugged my Pixel cup Challenge game on last summer. It contains my working monotone and git repositories and a variety of programming language implementations.
I could use a larger screen, but only if the larger screen fits into the same form factor for carrying around in my backpack. Looking at a 18-inch screen can be good, but lugging it around isn't. I do a fair amount of writing and programming in coffee shops.
If I were to have to replace it, I'd want another like it. Too bad if they're disappearing from the market.
It's wonderful little machine.
I love my netbook (compaq hp mini 311) (Score:2)
32-bit (castrated) intel atom (N270?)
nvidia ion1-LE (castrated) till I gave it back it's testicles (nvidia ion LE vs. full fledged ION just a configuration issue, bios updated ) now my video playbacl is hardware accelerated
1gb ram
32-bit win7
very good keyboard could compete against Thinkpads!
it's small I take it everywhere I go, and it's fast to boot and so on...
sad that some people don't understand the term NETBOOK
Netbooks are alive and well in China (Score:5, Insightful)
Search Alibaba for "Netbook": [alibaba.com] "185,881 Product(s) from 2,239 Supplier(s)". You can buy individual items. "Hot sell Mini Notebook 10.2 inch laptop Atom D425 Processor 1.8G Memory 1GB HDD 160G netbook wifi camera - US $217.00 / piece " [aliexpress.com], from Shenzhen Lihaicheng Tech Co., Ltd. Many sellers will ship directly to the US. Quality may be iffy, but there are seller reputations, and it's probably no worse than eBay.
Some of these are probably the same machines the big names were selling.
They died when the definition of Netbook changed. (Score:4, Interesting)
The Netbook category was created by Asus when they made a machine that was smaller than typical, lower priced than typical, had a longer battery life than typical, had solid state storage (which was not typical), and ran Linux. The EEE-1000 (with no letter behind it) was just a fantastic machine for the money and was probably the last true Netbook.
The Netbook died the moment the manufacturers added hard drives and replaced Linux with MS-Windows. Because at that point, they were no longer Netbooks, they were just crippled, slow, MS-Windows notebooks. They lost what made them different. The MS-Windows slowed the machine down to being unusable. It also jacked the price up a bit (and with the low prices, even a bit was significant). The hard drive made it fragile and less battery friendly and even slower still.
I was waiting FOR YEARS for a replacement for the EEE-1000; a true Netbook without the MS-Windows tax, and with a bump of specs to match the year (more RAM, more CPU, larger solid state storage, more res, but similar price and same form-factor and battery life). It never came.
Oh well.
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I don't think that's a fair assessment. I'm a system administrator and bought one of these to help around the server room. It's much more than a cheap toy.
Re:2010 was the end (Score:5, Insightful)
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What do you call a $5 million cluster at a top tier university, then?
You're claiming you've got a $5 million cluster of netbooks? If not... how is that a relevant response to his statement?
It sounds like you bought ONE netbook to use for "help around" the server room. Even if a lot of sysadmins did this, it's not going to be more than the smallest of bumps in the sales records.
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What do you call a $5 million cluster at a top tier university, then?
A niche customer. Next question?
What instead? (Score:2)
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Re:2010 was the end (Score:5, Insightful)
The make it now (Score:3)
Get either an iPad or a Surface, which ever one with a keyboard case. That's as high-end in power and build quality as any netbook ever was, and they have around nine-inch screens.
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Yeah, except if you want a keyboard (mandatory for actual work: touch screens still suck and always will) it becomes as expensive as a good, cheap Lenovo laptop with much more power and storage, and a much better keyboard and a real OS as well.
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Agreed. I once had a Aspire One and it was not convenient. Now I have a Lenovo X220 (the laptop one, not convertible). It is tiny, very reliable, big workhorse and 14h battery life. Just over a thousand bucks.
However nowadays with ultrabooks it's a no-brainer to get a 12-inch beast instead. For those who don't want a Mac: Asus, Samsung and Toshiba have ultrabooks that are thinner and lighter than a Macbook Air and also offer much more performance for less money. The Zenbook is pretty awesome.
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Get a Chromebook instead. Much cheaper and you get a full keyboard. My mom loves hers compared to the Asus Netbook she was using.
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Yeah except both have shit operating systems for doing real actual stuff.
But you're right, they do make this sort of thing now. Most PC manufacturers (Dell, HP, Samsung, Sony, Toshiba, Lenovo, etc.) all make small form factor laptops.
NetBooks haven't died, they've just stopped being called NetBooks and become a standard part of most manufacturer's laptop range and come with a range of spec options from low end to high end.
There's no point going for a crippled tablet OS based device and trying to turn it int
Re:2010 was the end (Score:5, Interesting)
I agree. The netbook was nothing but a quick bait and switch by manufacturers that wanted to make a quick buck off of the recession. The image of a business person using a netbook is just that. Users of netbooks were people with little money looking for a new toy, and nothing more.
They aren't a desktop replacement. Normal laptops can be, but netbooks aren't (although I have stretched one to it, with a 24" monitor and keyboard.... worked alright, slightly underpowered but not terribly so for simple work). They never were intended to be. They were intended to be super light-weight, super small, super mobile, and have long battery life with decent specs. For portable web use, nothing was better. Tablets? Sure, if you never intend to type anything and don't mind cradling it uncomfortably in your arms, plus paying quite a lot more for similar or less power.
What killed the netbook was the manufacturers. They wanted higher margins, which meant shoving in more features and power (mostly completely unnecessary). That kills the battery life, raises cost, and completely destroys the whole point of the device. But the original netbooks, for simple web usage, email browsing, and light document editing? Incredibly useful.
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Tablets? Sure, if you never intend to type anything and don't mind cradling it uncomfortably in your arms, plus paying quite a lot more for similar or less power.
A9 quad core Android tablets with a keyboard carying case are a tablet and netbook all in one, and priced at or better than a netbook, with better graphics, larger screen, longer battery life.
It seems silly to complain about tablets being uncomfortable. That's like saying that convertibles are worse than hard-tops because you can get sunburned with the top down. With the convertible, you can put the top up (put the tablet on a desk), but you can't take the top off the hard-top (use the netbook one-hand
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Yes. Typing any text at all on a touchscreen is infuriating. Anything without a hardware keyboard is effectively a read-only device; unless one is a silent consumer drone, the web is a read/write medium.
Silent consumer drone = $$$ (Score:3)
Re:2010 was the end (Score:5, Informative)
The funny thing is I still take a lot of my work meeting notes on a Dell Inspiron Mini 9 that was given to me last year. I constantly get people asking me what it is, where to get one, etc. Its keyboard isn't amazing, but it beats a lot of the add-on keyboards people are using (or trying to use) with their tablets, plus it's a lot more durable. It's also running a full Linux setup which I've used for some light development, writing sd cards for a couple embedded projects, and had no trouble with a lot of USB peripherals.
It may not be as cool as a lot of new tablets, and its battery life may not be up to what it was when it was new, but it's been a great thing for me. I have a 7" Android tablet too and haven't found a decent keyboard for it yet that isn't more than I want to pay. But the tablet does do media a lot better, Youtube and Netflix and such. So I tend to keep the netbook for work and the tablet for lying in bed watching something on Netflix. /csb
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I bought a used Acer Aspire 1 earlier this year on Ebay, and it's a great little machine. Not terribly fast, but for what I need; taking notes, reading documents, email and the like it does the job nicely. I bought a low-end Bluetooth keyboard for when I need to do a bit more typing or coding. Probably the best $150 I've ever spent.
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I did not have a good experience with the Aspire One. Felt cheap and battery went dead quickly, plus it came with a watered-down Linux distro and it took a long time to install something else because the hardware is cheap.
For work I just got an Iconia W5. It's a 10-inch table that comes with a keyboard that looks a lot like the Aspire One keyboard. But the tablet has better performance than a netbook. This one comes with Windows 8 which is interesting in tablet mode (graphics are nice and smooth) but become
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Not to mention razor thin margins since this was something chipzilla enabled ODMs with almost from day 1. Who'd want to get in that market, and who'd want something that worked so poorly?
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The "netbook" was nothing more than a marketing term for hardware that was available at the turn of the millenium but with a lower pricetag. In 2001, a netbook was considered a desktop replacement and cost $2000. A netbook was nothing more than the same hardware with a different label and a bargain pricetag.
We still have slim laptops. Nothing really changed.
The MBA is just the Apple netbook.
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This isn't true at all. Netbooks were made possible by super low-power, low-cost Intel Atom CPUs. A $300 netbook had about the same power as an old laptop, but coupled it with a small screen and halfway decent battery to create a small, cheap, modern laptop with 8 hour battery life at about 3 pounds.
There was no Atom in 2000. There were CPUs about as powerful as an Atom, but they used 10 times the power.
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Netbooks were made possible by super low-power, low-cost Intel Atom CPUs. A $300 netbook had about the same power as an old laptop, but coupled it with a small screen and halfway decent battery to create a small, cheap, modern laptop with 8 hour battery life at about 3 pounds.
One problem I found is a number of our faculty (we're an engineering department) purchased these, not really looking at the specs other than weight and battery life. Then when they couldn't usefully run a lot of their normal software (Matlab comes to mind), they quickly discarded them. I also saw a lot of students come to school with them... then, a month later, they were back to using their MacBooks.
It's not really the fault of the manufacturers or Intel, per se, but - people didn't really seem to grok the
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Your engineering faculty couldn't spec out a computer?
Would you mind telling us what they've built recently so we can stay away from it?
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This isn't true at all. Netbooks were made possible by super low-power, low-cost Intel Atom CPUs.
...which gave you all the actual horsepower of a mid-range Pentium 4 (benchmarks be damned). Intel had to make compromises somewhere in order to get the longevity, and performance took the biggest hit. That was GP's point: It wasn't that they were packing actual P4's with RAMBUS in there**, but that they packed in 2008-9's equivalent to that into the things.
I used an HP Mini for awhile - worked well enough for what it did (best described as a 'glorified SSH terminal and occasional WiFi detecting device'), b
Re: (Score:2)
It wasn't that they were packing actual P4's with RAMBUS in there**, but that they packed in 2008-9's equivalent to that into the things.
[...]
** good lord - the heat factor alone would've burned the skin right off your lap...
About 10 years ago I had a Compaq Presario laptop that came with a desktop P4 CPU. That thing was getting so hot, I am surprised that it never caused a fire one of the few times I fell asleep and left it running on the bed.
I never knew if Speedfan was right but it showed a temperature of 90 Celsius for the CPU. With the fan spinning loudly all the time. Awesome piece of engineering for which I spent over $3k.
Re: (Score:2)
"Will 2013 mark the end of the redundant apostrophe"
Wish for something more likely to happen, such as honest government or world peace.
Re: (Score:3)
Nobody cares about some underpowered turd running Windows 7 or 8 when the primary niche of netbooks, media consumption and web browsing, is done far better on an iPad or a decent Android tablet.
I purchased my first netbook ( a 1st gen EeePC) long before tablets were out. Of course I used it for consumption, but the primary purpose for me was getting work done while traveling. It was (and still is) much easier to cart around something I could put on an airplane tray table and work than it was to lug around my 15 inch laptop and end up slumping in my seat to view the screen.
A lot of other traveling workers did the same. Sure, I would never edit video or music on one, but any kind of document proce
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, the original Eee PC (the one with the Celeron processor), was surprisingly good at editing video. I was forced to use one for this when my desktop took a dive, and I was shocked at how fast it was. It wouldn't hold up to anything more modern, but I was able to get done what I needed to without spending hundreds of hours waiting (which was what I expected before I actually tried it).
Re: (Score:2)
The end was when XP was no longer available on netbooks.
It's unfortuneate that Linux never really got much of a market on netbooks. Asus used to have it as an option on their models, however they happened to chose a really bad distribution (Xandros).
Sicked in my mouth (Score:3, Interesting)
My next purchase will be an 11" Macbook Air.
I gave serious consideration to the iPads, Nexus, et al, but
in the end I need a machine which doesn't limit what I can do.
Your seriously going to mention a $1000 next to a $200, that is completely different form factor. I bought a nexus 7 because it didn't limit me like the Air notice it now can run Ubuntu and WebOS as well as Stock Android, that does not sound limiting to me...and I can buy 5 for the price of the macbook air...no wonder people have stopped buying them.
Its still there (Score:2)
Google this year were going to announce [pre hurricane] some good value Chromebooks, but decided to push its Nexus range with its 4,7,10 instead...and it was a good move. We know that the Chromebook next year is coming with touchscreen [and I suspect Android compatibility], so I suspect Google will not push Chrome until then, and I suspect we are going to see it more as a Google Docs device or whatever they market it as.
Re:We can't have anything nice (Score:4, Interesting)
Netbooks and tablets, while seeming to be similar, are really designed for very different uses. A tablet is designed to conusme media and it's really good for that. A netbook is essentially a scaled-down laptop that allows you to produce things as well as consume them.
I have an Acer netbook, and a Nexus 7. The tablet is great as a "carry it around with me" computing device that lets me browse the internet, keep up with my email, write short replies, etc. It's also great for watching videos, and even reading books. Even better, it does all this and will last 8 hours or more on a single charge. This is fantastic if you're spending a day in an airport and on planes. It's an entertainment device that also allows for some productivity. And sure, I can do much of this on my small andriod phone, having the larger screen makes it enjoyable to use.
The netbook, on the other hand, is a lightweight and portable working computer. It's great if you have some place to sit down and actually use it. But it's not so handy when you're standing on a train or trying to look something up quickly. I use mine for school and have done quite a bit of programming on it. I put Linux Mint on it, and frankly, I think it IS sexy, especially when I can run Virtualbox to do whatever windows things I need to do.
If I had to give up one, I'd grudgingly give up the tablet. Though I'd strongly consider giving up the netbook and my larger laptop (home computer) for a smaller but more powerful laptop and keep the tablet.
It's not a matter of people being sheep, but wanting to do different things. A friend of mine was complaining for quite a while that her old laptop was slow and wanted me to work on it. She got a larger android phone and stopped talking about her laptop. Pretty much everything she needed to do computer-wise was on her phone - and for her, a netbook wouldn't fit her needs as well as her min-tablet phone.
Re: (Score:3)
Netbooks and tablets, while seeming to be similar, are really designed for very different uses. A tablet is designed to conusme media and it's really good for that. A netbook is essentially a scaled-down laptop that allows you to produce things as well as consume them.
I don't understand why so many people try to make everything a one size fits all device. A device is either an amazing success, or it's a complete failure. Desktops, laptops, netbooks, tablets, smartphones: no one device is the best, they're good at different things, but people have problems with niche devices.
Certainly tablets seem to be good for couch surfing, and along with smartphones, both can be pulled out and used quickly, while a laptop or netbook has more inherent "setup" involved. A smartphone can