4.06.2009

Here come the Netbooks

Light and Cheap, Netbooks Are Poised to Reshape PC Industry

Excerpts:

Personal computers — and the companies that make their crucial components — are about to go through their biggest upheaval since the rise of the laptop. By the end of the year, consumers are likely to see laptops the size of thin paperback books that can run all day on a single charge and are equipped with touch screens or slide-out keyboards.

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As in any revolution, the current rulers of the kingdom — Intel and Microsoft, which make the chips and software that run most PCs — face an unprecedented challenge to their dominance. Microsoft is particularly vulnerable, since many of the new netbooks use Linux software instead of Windows.

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Netbooks have trouble running demanding software like games and photo-editing programs. They cater instead to people who spend most of their time dealing with online services and want a cheap, light device they can use on the go. Most of the netbooks sold today run on an Intel chip called Atom, which is a lower-cost, lower-power version of the company’s standard laptop chips. And about 80 percent of netbooks run Windows XP, the older version of Microsoft’s flagship software.

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Netbook makers have turned to Linux, an open-source operating system that costs $3 instead of the $25 that Microsoft typically charges for Windows XP. They are also exploring the possibility of using the Android operating system from Google, originally designed for cellphones. (Companies like Acer, Dell and Hewlett-Packard already sell some Atom-based netbooks with Linux.)


Comment: See pic of Dell Mini 9. We have a Dell Mini 9 running Linux.

1 comment:

  1. I checked out these things at the store. Personally, I find them amazing. People have very short memories! Let's pick any year, 1997 for example. In 1997 you would have paid well more than a thousand dollars (not even counting for inflation!) for a computer that was not as fast, not even close to as much RAM, and not as much hard drive. (The notebooks I saw had 160 G harddrives). In 1997 these "little netbooks" would have been a top-of-the-line computer! I find it amusing that these little powerhouses are advertised as "netbooks and not real computers" when only few short years ago they would have been very powerful desktop pc's.

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