A Netbook is a new type of laptop computer, defined by size, price, horsepower, and operating system. They are small, cheap, under-powered, and run either an old or unfamiliar operating system.
Netbooks run either Windows XP Home edition or Linux (not only is Linux unfamiliar to many, but the versions of Linux on Netbooks are not the mainstream popular distributions). They do not run XP Professional, Vista, or OS X. Microsoft arbitrarily restricts Netbooks from running the Professional Edition of Windows XP. Likewise, Apple arbitrarily restricts OS X to Apple hardware and it has never played in the low-end realm that Netbooks occupy.* Vista requires too much horsepower to run well on a Netbook. HP has been the only company to offer Vista on a Netbook. The price, however, was so high that it’s debatable whether such a machine qualifies as a Netbook. Size-wise, Netbooks have 9- or 10-inch screens, weigh from 2 to 3 pounds, and sport keyboards sized from 80 percent to 95 percent of normal.
Review:
The laptop market has changed in recent months. That was due to the introduction of the Asus Eee PC, which single-handedly created the low-cost mini-laptop market segment.
To support this market, Intel has now released its Atom processor, designed specifically for such laptops and the MSI Wind U100 is the first machine we’ve seen sporting the new chip.
In style, the Wind takes many of its designs queues from the Eee PC. It’s made from white plastic - a black version will ship in July - with a 3-cell battery taking up the back of the unit. It feels great in the hand and is certainly tough enough to carry around on a regular basis.
Weighing 1kg, its weight is nicely balanced, especially considering the use of a 10-inch Super-TFT screen that has a native resolution of 1024 x 600 pixels.
Images look great and even when running on battery power it looked sharp. The screen sits on hinges that make the screen cover the back of the unit, giving a slightly low line of sight.
The use of this screen means it feels a lot more like a standard laptop than either the Asus Eee PC or the HP 2133 Mini-Note PC. The keyboard is a good size and doesn’t feel as though you’re compromising usability for a smaller form factor.
The touchpad and single-strip mouse button is on the small side but it doesn’t take too much away from the usability.
When it comes to performance, you’ll find a state-of-the-art Intel Atom N270 processor that is the smallest mobile chip to date. As a pre-production unit we were unable to benchmark it but in daily use we found it quicker than the current options on the market. Running Windows XP Professional, the system loaded and ran with ease.
The Atom is a 45nm chip that measures just 22mm across and has been designed to run in fan-less systems. This means the MSI Wind runs exceptionally coolly and quietly.
The use of the ageing Intel 945GSE chipset will no-doubt keep development costs to a minimum for manufacturers but it does mean the Front Side Bus (FSB) is limited to a maximum of 533MHz. So, in real terms you won’t see much performance gain over the current Celeron M chips being used in the Asus Eee PC.
That may be an issue if you’re looking to use this laptop as your sole machine but that’s not its intended use. After all, Intel would be crazy to try and move market share to a sector of the market where there is less money to be made.
However, if short bursts of power are what you need, MSI has a trick in its armoury no one else seems to offer at this stage: Turbo Boost. This tool uses the company’s own Turbo Drive Engine Technology to physically overclock the CPU. We weren’t expecting this to play a part in The Wind but it has been included and pushes the N270 up to 1.9GHz.
Naturally, this only works when you’re plugged in. When you’re running on batteries it runs at the same clock speed but puts performance ahead of battery life, so screen brightness is typically higher. To deal with the extra power, you’ll notice the fan kicks in to life and stays on for the duration you run Turbo Boost.
The 80GB hard drive is a standard laptop hard disc that has been partitioned into two.
Summary
A Netbook is a new type of laptop computer, defined by size, price, horsepower, and operating system. They are small, cheap, under-powered, and run either an old or unfamiliar operating system.
Netbooks can run only on Windows XP Home or Linux. HP is the only company which offers Vista on Netbook. The price is very high and it has been debated that such high price machine can qualify as a netbook i.e. the screen varies from 9-10 inches, weight of the netbook varies from 2-3 pounds and similarly the keyboards sized from 80% - 95% of the normal.
The laptop market has changed in recent months. That was due to the introduction of the Asus Eee PC, which single-handedly created the low-cost mini-laptop market segment.
Intel has now released its Atom processor, designed specifically for such laptops and the MSI Wind U100 is the first machine we’ve seen sporting the new chip.
Wind takes many of its designs queues from the Eee PC. It’s made from white plastic - a black version will ship in July - with a 3-cell battery taking up the back of the unit.
Weighing 1kg, its weight is nicely balanced, 10-inch Super-TFT screen that has a native resolution of 1024 x 600 pixels. Images look great and even when running on battery power it looked sharp.
The use of this screen means it feels a lot more like a standard laptop than either the Asus Eee PC or the HP 2133 Mini-Note PC. The keyboard is a good size and doesn’t feel as though you’re compromising usability for a smaller form factor. Although the touchpad and single-strip mouse button is on the small side.
When it comes to performance, you’ll find a state-of-the-art Intel Atom N270 processor that is the smallest mobile chip to date. Running Windows XP Professional, the system loaded and ran with ease.
The Atom is a 45nm chip that measures just 22mm across and has been designed to run in fan-less systems. This means the MSI Wind runs exceptionally coolly and quietly.
The use of the ageing Intel 945GSE chipset will no-doubt keep development costs to a minimum for manufacturers but it does mean the Front Side Bus (FSB) is limited to a maximum of 533MHz. So, in real terms you won’t see much performance gain over the current Celeron M chips being used in the Asus Eee PC.
If you’re looking to use this laptop as your sole machine but that’s not its intended use. After all, Intel would be crazy to try and move market share to a sector of the market where there is less money to be made.
If short bursts of power are what you need, MSI has a trick in its armoury no one else seems to offer at this stage: Turbo Boost. This tool uses the company’s own Turbo Drive Engine Technology to physically overclock the CPU. We weren’t expecting this to play a part in The Wind but it has been included and pushes the N270 up to 1.9GHz.
When you’re running on batteries it runs at the same clock speed but puts performance ahead of battery life, so screen brightness is typically higher. To deal with the extra power, you’ll notice the fan kicks in to life and stays on for the duration you run Turbo Boost.
The 80GB hard drive is a standard laptop hard disc that has been partitioned into two.
Bottom-line…it’s worth buying. You can carry it anywhere like a mobile if you’re an internet person who wants to surf the net all day. Easy to handle, lightweight, the only best thing after laptop. This is a cheaper laptop you can get anywhere!!!!
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