Netbook Digest

news + analysis on the netbook megatrend

Google to Enter Netbook Market?

March 9th, 2009 · Uncategorized

imagesVia OSnews:

Search titan Google, not to be outdone by the countless other tech companies deciding that netbooks are the best next move for them, may be entering the market with their own subsidized netbook running, what else but Google’s own OS, Android.  The netbook will no doubt be running the OS traditionally reserved for phones under optimized settings for the netbook.

Everyone wants a piece of Microsoft’s lucrative netbook OS pie.  Linux couldn’t quite take out the chunk it wanted, but Google’s got as good a shot as any.  Microfoft CEO Steve Balmer is giving Google the unlikely luxury of being acknowledge as a competitor.  Which is something they’d be foolhardy not to do.

I assume we’re going to see Android-based, Linux-based laptops, in addition to phones. We’ll see Google more as a competitor in the desktop operating system business than we ever have before. The seams between what’s a phone operating system and a PC operating system will change, and so we have ramped the investment in the client operating system.

A google netbook running Android could give Windows 90% marketshare a run for its money.

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Asus To Release Fold/Unfold Design in 2009

March 9th, 2009 · Uncategorized

cesd2-1Via TrustedReviews:

Asus announced it’s fold/unfold design concept at the beginning of this year (video of design concept), and it seemed like a pipe dream.  Yet, on top of their several other machine announcements at CeBit this year, they’ve just announced that their oragami-esque concept netbooks will become a reality later on this year.  The machine will feature a recessed keyboard that raises when folded out to both improve ergonomics and aid in cooling.

Asus, not to be out done by Always Innovating’s much heralded TouchBook, has thus far announced three new concepts that will be retail realities in 2009.  The Eee PC Keyboard, PC1 Tablet and now this.  Without any knowledge of possible configuration, one can only speculate as to how these will stack up against current available models.

With two unique and truly innovative designs being released in the near future, Asus looks to be 2009’s front runner, but we’ll have to wait til we can get some actual hands-on time with these new designs.

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Apple to Succumb to Netbook Pressure?

March 9th, 2009 · Uncategorized

2192321716_258554b83dVia Engadget:

Everyone paying attention to the netbook market knew this was inevitable: rumors abound about the possibility of a touchscreen Apple netbook in Q3.  Two Taiwanese-based magazines, Commercial Times and DigiTimes, have sent the tech blogosphere into a tizzy by reporting that Qunta has been commissioned by Apple to construct a line of touchscreen netbooks.

We’ve talked about the possibility of an Apple netbook several times in the past, and by the looks of it Apple has done their own research.  Commenters and industry aficionados have had mixed thoughts about whether the Apple netbook is a good idea.  Some are convinced that every Apple netbook they sold would be taking a sale away from either a more expensive powerbook or an iPhone with a lucrative $30/month data plan.  Others are convinced there’s room in Apple’s business model for a netbook-type computer and that the Mac faithful would be inclined to purchase one in addition to their macbook pro and iPhone, completing what some would consider the trifecta of Mac fanboyism.  MacBook Pro, hypothetical Apple netbook, and iPhone.

If these reports are true we’ll get to see who was right, but in the mean time, sound off.  Is the Apple netbook a good idea, and if so, is the touchbook format a valid move?

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Netbook Bags Guide: You Can Take It With You

March 7th, 2009 · Uncategorized

Ok, so you’ve managed to whittle down the massive field of netbooks currently available to a single choice, decided on an operating system, and splurged that extra money you’ve been saving on a brand new netbook in all it’s tiny glory.  The day comes when your shipment arrives from whatever foreign country in was manufactured in and you tare open the box with glee to find your splendiferous new netbook ready to use in all it’s splendor.  You mess around for an hour or so, maybe change your Linux distro, or install a hacked OS X on it, and you think you’ve got it working pretty well.  You decide to take it out for it’s first test run.  In horror, you realize that the tiny, nylon zippered netbook sleeve your brand new machine came with is woefully inadequate.

Don’t worry, Netbook Digest is here to help, as long as you allow 6 to 8 weeks for delivery once we show you your options.

First of all, netbook are small computers and thus, they can’t pretty much fit in whatever carrying device you have lying around.  I have been known to tote my netbook around with me in a messenger bag I got for free from a campus give-away.  It’s about as functional as a plastic bag and only slightly more stylish.  This works for me, but I’m told business professionals and hip youngsters alike want the safety of their expansive pieces technology to be absolutely assured, and for that purpose a plastic bag does not fit the bill, even if it’s the biodegradable kind with the reinforced bottoms.

For the remainder of this post, I’m going to identify some options for netbook-specific bag providers, classified by whether your going to turn heads with your fancy hip new netbook bag or whether the bag is going to be able to withstand any sort of punishment your no doubt dangerous work environment puts it in.  Let’s get started.meuemb-beauty

MobileEdge has a set of seriously sturdy netbook bags.  Available here for around $50, these are sturdy, efficient and functional buggers that are far and away from the various netbooks sleeves-masquerading-as-bags that are commonplace in this particular market.  As far as style as concerned, well, I hope you like black and grey.  Besides coming in messenger bag, briefcase, or backpack form, these guys won’t give you much in the way of aesthetic value.

For the ladies out there looking for a fashionable way to carry around their new netbook, no doubt with designer cbsheba-frontcase-mod.  Designer Maddie Powers has released a creative line of laptop bags that will fit a netbook just fine.  These are also available through MobileEdge and feature a classic 1950s pin-up girl design.  These are definetely form over function, but will no doubt be fine for daily use.  Somehow I doubt anyone who owns one of these will be taking it on a construction site or anything that requires elaborate protective measures for their laptop/netbook.

sb08_mangrove_eee_400x400For those looking for a netbook specific solution, UrbanTool just released it’s slotBar all-purpose/netbook bag that first all of your favorite tech tools.  The bag is available in four colors, all with new-agey urban names, Black, Mangrove, Eggplant and Mudd.  Also known as black, turquoise purple and brown.  Pretentious naming conventions aside, the unique construction of this bag offers style while sacrificing space.  Without actually owning one, the pictures look like it would struggle to fit any of the larger-sized netbooks now offered as the norm.  Check it out here.

Then there’s the sleeve option.  Via Amazon, you can get your average single solid color netbook sleeve for as low as $15, but the single layer neoprene cover will not do much in the way of protection, it’s barely even waterproof.  Dirt cheap, and comes in a variety of colors.

Last, and least, for those looking for the cheapest solution possible and are willing to sacrifice hardiness and any aesthetic value whatsoever Case Logic offers the 7″ to 10″ Mini-Laptop Attache.  This thing is probably only a few steps up from the plastic bag I mentioned earlier.  It comes in black, black or black and doesn’t offer much else in the way of storage or protection for your netbook.  Also, if you’ve got anything over 10” you won’t even be able to use it at all.  It’s one redeeming factor is the price, a mere $30.  You’ll be getting what you pay for here.

There isn’t a lot out there that is netbook specific, but the diminutive stature of our beloved technological companions allows for versatility in choice of your carrying aid.  The plethora of laptop bags available to the general public are all well suited to carrying around a netbook of any size you could conceivably find.

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Samsung’s UMPC Ruined by Thriftier Netbooks/Tablets

March 5th, 2009 · Uncategorized

samsung_pmp_q1ex_01Via RegHardware:

Not quite a netbook tablet, Samsung’s UMPC is going to be a miss with the innovation hungry consumer crowd for one reason, price.

The sleekly designed UMPC tablet features everything you’d find in a tablet and everything you wouldn’t (keyboard of any kind).  It’s got some respectable specs, 2GB DDR2 RAM, 60GB HDD storage, a VIA Nano 1.2GHZ proccesor, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and even a GPS receiver, unfortunately, it comes at the steep price of $780 standard.

When your tablet’s price gets closer to notebook range, it stops being cute and portable and start’s being just a really expensive netbook.  When you can get everything this tablet promises, plus the option of a keyboard for significantly less it looks more like a rip-off than an efficient set-up.

Samsung is going to swing and miss with this thing.

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From Now on We’re Calling This the Eee Anti-Tablet PC

March 5th, 2009 · Uncategorized

Via Wired:

We mentioned the Eee PCT T91, Asus’ first tablet netbook coming out in the near future that won second place at the CeBit Preview Awards, now here’s the contraption that won first place.

asuseeekeyboardpcThe Eee PC Keyboard is the anti-tablet, all keyboard - no screen.

Well, that’s not entirely true, this new-fangled contraption boasts all the specs of your average netbook except the full size monitor.  Instead, it uses a keyboard and a tiny touch screen for display purposes when you can’t plug it into a monitor with the built in HDMI port or access any monitor wirelessly with the more expensive model.

This is innovation.  Asus is taking the normal netbook model and standing it on its head.  Instead of doing away with the keyboard entirely like Always Innovating and Samsung’s new UMPC, this thing is all keyboard with the addition of a snazzy little touchscreen.  We forsee this as being the true competition to Always Innovating’s Touch Book, not to mention being the one piece of upcoming new technology that I really really want.

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Asus Counter To Always Innovating That No One Talked About

March 5th, 2009 · Uncategorized

asus_eee_pct91_tabletpcVia ITPortal:

The Eee PCT T91 won second place at the CeBit-Preview Awards and no one has said anything about it.  The remarkable machine is Asus first tablet PC release in the Eee line and comes on the heels of Always Innovating’s Touch Book that we talked about here.

The T91 is sporting an 8.9′ touchscreen, 5 hours of battery life, and is utilizing Intel’s Atom proccesor.

Anything that Asus releases in the Eee line promises to be a contender in the Tolkien-esque netbook battle that looms on the horizon.  With MSI, Dell, Asus, Acer, and Always Innovating all releasing new products that promise to “revolutionize the ultra-portable computer.”

On the tablet PC in particular, it seems like a natural direction for netbooks to go in.  The problem always having been the lack of room for a full-sized keyboard, netbooks are now phasing them out to some degree.  Since the iPhone has already made the touchscreen cool, netbooks are following suit.

Would you consider purchasing a touchscreen tablet netbook like the Touch Book or Eee PCT T91?

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LG to Enter Netbook Market with X110 and X120

March 5th, 2009 · Uncategorized

Via Forbes.com:

We covered Samsung last week, now a new company is entering the fray.  Next up on the massive list of tech manufacturers entering the netbook market in the US is LG, who just announced their X110 and X120 netbooks.

The X120 will be onsale in Europe sometime this month, and the X110 will retail for $400 unsubsidized when it goes on sale across the pond in July.  Specs on the LG X110 can be found here, and very basic specs on the X120 here.

There’s nothing particularly impressive about either of these besides the fact that you can’t get them in the US yet, which is remarkable in and of itself.  Why LG hasn’t tapped the tech equivalent of a Yukon gold mine is a mystery, and being late to the game isn’t going to help them, especially with the rash of new notebooks being released in the coming months.

In the saturated market you need to innovate in order to stand out and sell, that’s basic marketing 101.  Releasing a generic notebook isn’t going to do much for the company that focuses in on appliances more than full-on computers.  Look at the recent laptop that Always Innovating has just announced for information on how to do that.

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Need Worker’s Comp? Tell Your Boss You Have “Netbook Fatigue”

March 5th, 2009 · Uncategorized

42-16073427Via jkOnTheRun:

Those of us looking for the easy way out of of your nine-to-five cubicle job now have a new office based ailment to list on their Worker’s Compensation form.  “Netbook Fatigue” is all the rage amongst those folks who aren’t used to typing up a TPS Reports on a their new netbook.

Staring at your average 15.4″ notebook screen and attempting to squeeze your hands onto a smaller than normal keyboard on your standard laptop was bad enough, now cramp all of those keys onto a netbook with a 7″ screen and keyboard 90% the size of your standard ergonomic office cubicle keyboard.

Most everyone from the computer generation is going to have severe carpal tunnel 20 years from now.  “Netbook fatigue” can be alleviated using the same typing posture you were taught in your typing class; fingers on the home keys, arms bent at the elbows and wrists straight.

I will admit that it took longer to adapt to the Eee PC keyboard than your average notebook keyboard, but as long as I remember to blink and remove my fingers from the keys every once in a while, I’m fine.  Were netbooks even built with the intention of extended work?  Most netbook keyboards have keyboards of comparable size to your average notebook now anyway.  People are able to bring them almost anywhere just means that they’re looking at their screens more often, thus this imaginary ailment manifests itself.

“Netbook fatigue” is a fallacy.

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MSI’s New Operating System is Called Winki

March 5th, 2009 · Uncategorized

winkiVia Wired.com:

MSI’s new OS sounds like a game for the Nintendo Wii, but operates like OS X.

The new OS, based off of the Linux kernel is being developed for MSI’s newest line of Wind netbooks, which reportedly will be closer to an iPhone-esque smart phone than a larger notebook. It will focus on VoIP, picture sharing and web browsing above other features like video which new Acer and Asus netbooks will be focusing on.

Perhaps the most intriguing feature of Winki is that it will be an “Instant-On” and it’s boot-up time will once again be more similar to that of a smartphone than a laptop. In addition, netbooks running Winki will have higher battery life due to the OS consuming less electricity than Windows or standard Linux.

It seems the various top companies are experiencing some sort of schism in regards to which direction their netbooks are heading. Some moving closer to a smart phone and some closer to a notebook attempting to carve out a niche in the wide range of netbook sizes now available to the public. Expect to see more of these instant-on custom OS’s.

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