Showing posts with label netbook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label netbook. Show all posts

How would you change Dell's Inspiron Mini 10?


by Darren Murph,
After a rocky, if not comical launch, Dell's Inspiron Mini 10 is now shuffling out in full force to legions of soon-to-be netbook owners. For those of you who already bought in -- via QVC or the more traditional street corner vendor model -- we're wondering what you'd do differently if magically given a mythical Do Over token. Would you simply offer up the options (TV tuner, for one) promised during the machine's announcement? Would you tweak that trackpad at all? Add a little bulk in exchange for a beefier battery? Paint the whole thing fuschia and make it reek of week-old bananas? Feel free to get as crazy as you'd like in comments below; who knows, maybe Round Rock's tuning in to just see what you have to say.

engadget.com

Dell's Inspiron Mini 9 drops to a delicious $199


by Darren Murph,
Been brushing the idea of a netbook off for months now? Let's see you ignore this. Hot on the heels of the Inspiron Mini 10 going on sale, Dell has lowered the barrier to entry on its marginally smaller Mini 9 to a rather amazing $199. For under two bills, you can now grab yourself an Obsidian Black 8.9-inch netbook with a 1.6GHz Atom CPU, WiFi, a 4-cell battery, GMA950 graphics, 512MB of RAM, a 4GB SSD and a copy of Ubuntu Linux. Of course, that price heads up a hundred bucks if you just can't live without Windows XP, but if there's ever been a time for learning how to deal within an open source environment, we'd say this is it. Good luck with that whole "resisting the temptation" thing.

[Via technabob]

engadget.com

HP rumored to have new Mini-notes on the way, father still unknown


by Darren Murph,
While the Viviene Tam Edition Mini 1000 sure was pretty, it's hardly what you'd call "new." According to undisclosed sources cited by the always questionable DigiTimes, Hewlett-Packard is toying with the idea of bringing three new infants to market in the Mini-note line. If all goes to plan, the 10.1-inch Mini-note 2140 will hit the scene in February at around $567, while a WWAN-enabled Mini-note 2150 (13.3-inch, presumably) will follow in early June. For what it's worth, a new 11.6-inch model is also mentioned, and as expected, the whole trio is apt to arrive with Intel Atom's within. Guess we'll just wait and see, folks.

engadget.com