Warning this short article may well have opinions in the writer that you just and iTWire never agree with.
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By Stan Beer
Monday,
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Viewpoint and Evaluation
The release from the very great Asus Eee Computer 1000HE signals a turning position within the sub-notebook market and it's one particular that Linux desktop advocates will not likely like. It looks like the 10 inch netbook has hit the sweet spot for buyers and that sweet spot contains Windows but not Linux.
As many have noticed,
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Windows 7 Sale, Asus has shipped the 1000HE only with Windows XP and there's no Linux edition to date.
The Asustek PR representative in Australia has informed iTWire that there's no word from Asus when or if a Linux model of 1000HE will be shipped. I haven't checked with Acer with what it intends to accomplish but I reckon it is a fair wager that a Linux 10-inch netbook from that firm is about probable as rain from the Sahara tomorrow.
In his exceptional latest write-up UnderNetbook: A tale of two markets iTWire author and reviewer Stephen Withers pointed out that "netbook" is a somewhat nebulous term.
A netbook 18 months ago was 1 of those original Eee Computer 701 boxes that were little more than oversized mobile phone that couldn't make calls but could surf the net while travelling, could make skype calls and do some basic computing tasks. The 7 inch screen, tiny keyboard, limited storage and lack of computing power made them a very limited device.
In fact, the original Eee Laptop concept - Easy to Work,
Buy Windows 7 Home Basic, Easy to Learn,
Windows 7 Starter Sale, Easy to Play - seemed to be targeted at kids. However,
Office 2010 Standard Product Key, because the early devices were only available on Linux they became a favourite of the Linux geeks who lauded the fact that at very last the Linux desktop had arrived.
Then - shock, horror - Asus started shipping Windows XP versions of its new breakthrough product. The rate at which its netbook market place multiplied when the Windows versions started shipping no doubt caused Asus, Acer and others to realise on which side the bread was buttered.
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