Archive for the '4g' Category

Eee PC Coming To Germany on January 24th

Sunday, January 20th, 2008 by ant

It appears as though the Eee PC will finally be for sale in Germany on January 24th. If you look at this thread, you can find this link [translated version] to an article that explains that ASUS will begin selling the Eee PC at 180 dealers, according to product manager Lars Sweden. The initial batch will be 20,000 units of the 4G models featuring Linux, costing 299 euros (or about $437 usd).

January 25th: Eee PC Launch in Japan; WinXP

Saturday, January 19th, 2008 by ant

If you live in Japan, you can look forward to buying your very own Eee PC 4G (without having to import it from a different country) in less than a week!

Bic Camera (a Japanese electronics store chain that makes Best Buy look like a mom and pop store) will begin to carry the Eee PC on January 25th. It appears as though they’ll be carrying them in black and white. Interestingly, they will also come with Windows XP preinstalled, instead of the default Linux distribution.

They will cost 49,800 yen, which is about $465 usd.

[Thanks, Richard!]

Asus details WiMax enabled Eee’s at CES 2008

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008 by astern

As reported on by Engadget, Asus in conjunction with Sprint and Intel announced today that they are going to be releasing Eee PC’s with WiMax connectivity at the CES 2008 conference in Las Vegas, NV.

Also mentioned at the conference were plans to upgrade the Eee’s LCD screen with multiple sizes ranging from the current 7 ” to 8″ and 8.9″.

Windows XP will be an officially supported/shipped operating system and a commitment to worldwide availability at launch and low-entry point MSRP’s was reiterated.

Eee PC 8G, 4G Surf, 2G Surf All Available

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 by ant

For those who regularly read the eeeuser forum, you probably know by now that the Eee PC 8G, 4G Surf, and 2G Surf are now all available for purchase in the United States.

There are reports that the 8G Eee PC has no onboard SSD storage, but instead uses a 8G SSD card in the mini-pcie slot. For more information, check out this forum thread. The 8G’ s price is $499.

The 4G surf model goes for $349- it has a smaller battery then the regular 4G, and does not have a webcam.

Finally, the 2G surf model costs $299, and according to this thread actaully features 512mb of ram instead of the anticipated 256mb of ram. Good news!

Black Eee PC 4G’s Now Available

Sunday, November 18th, 2007 by ant

It looks like several retailers are now offering the first batches of black colored ASUS Eee PC 4G’s. The finish is a matte black, and it looks really great! For pictures, check out this thread on the forums.

Eee PC Currently Amazon Computers & Hardware Best Seller

Sunday, November 18th, 2007 by ant

If you head on over to the Bestsellers list under Amazon’s Computers and Hardware section, you’ll notice that the ASUS Eee PC 4G is currently #1 on the list!

Newegg, Directron Both Have Eee PC 4G For Sale

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007 by ant

Finally ready to hold an Eee PC 4G? The final price comes in at $399 for the 512MB RAM/4G Hard Drive/Webcam model. Directron customers have already reported receiving the Eee PC, according to this post on the forums. Newegg also has it for sale, as of today. For more retailers in North America, check out the ASUS where to buy list.

Let’s Talk About The Eee PC BIOS

Saturday, October 27th, 2007 by ant

The Eee PC BIOS has five tabs: Main, Advanced, Security, Boot, and of course: Exit.

Main Tab of Eee PC 701 BIOSThe main tab gives a general system overview. You can find out your BIOS revision, core version, Eee PC build date, firmware version, processor type, system memory. This is also where you can set the system time and date. Of course, since my sample Eee PC is a 4G, I have 512mb of RAM shown. The build date was 10/5/07.

Advanced Tab of Eee PC BIOSThe advanced tab has 3 sections: IDE Configuration, Onboard Devices Configuration, and OS Installation. The IDE configuration section allows you to choose the IDE master and IDE slave devices. My IDE master is the SSD hard drive, known as “SILICONMOTION SM223AC.” There is no IDE Slave. Onboard Device Configuration allows you to turn on and off: usb ports, onboard LAN, onboard Audio, onboard WLAN, onboard Camera, onboard Speaker, and the onboard CardReader. Interestingly, all are enabled with the exception of the onboard Camera- even though it works fine once booted. Finally, the OS installation feature has the option of “Finished.” The help text states: “Please switch the option back to finished once the OS installation is complete.” I initially wondered if it had to do with boot device order, but that setting is under the Boot tab. Anybody have any idea what it does?

The security tab allows you to set and change supervisor and user passwords.

Boot Tab of Eee PC BIOSThe boot tab has sections for Boot Device Priority, Hard Disk Drives, Boot Settings Configuration, and OnBoard LAN Boot Rom. Boot device priority allows you to set the order in which your Eee PC will boot. The default is: Removable Dev., HDD, and ATAPI CD-ROM. Hard Disk Drives is the next option, and it shows that the 1st Drive is the HDD:SM-SILICONMOTI, while the second is the USB2.0 CardReader. Yes, you can boot from the SD card slot. Boot settings configuration has settings for Quick Boot and Quiet boot- both are enabled by default. Onboard LAN Boot ROM comes Disabled by default.

Exit allows you to save changes or quit without saving, as you would guess!

I hope this helps for those interested in the BIOS of the Eee PC. You can view the rest of the gallery right here.

It’s Worth The Wait: Eee PC First Impressions

Thursday, October 25th, 2007 by ant

[10/27/07 2:07am edit: had to switch the galleries to flickr as the self-hosted one uses up way too many resources]

[10/26/07 3:44pm edit: more pictures can be found here]

Full EeeEee PC and DVDEee PC and Nestle Crunch barsEee PC and a DVDWith a Nintendo DS liteRight side

Click here to view the first impressions gallery (more pictures coming tomorrow)…

Let me begin by summarizing the Eee PC in four words: It’s worth the wait.

Four months ago, ASUS announced the Eee PC- a tiny, affordable, full-featured laptop. It was music to our ears- the ultimate portable gadget. Most of us have spent those last four months “guestimating” on when they would be released- and tormenting ourselves with excitement over speculation. To be fair, four months is actually pretty fast in getting a product to the market- much faster than many recent tech items. The Eee PC 4G was recently released in Taiwan on October 16th, and will be launching in the United States in the coming days.

Thanks to the folks at ASUS, an Eee PC arrived at my doorstep this morning. It was love at first sight.

The first shock came while opening the mailing package. Inside was the Eee PC product box. It was small- about the same size as a motherboard box. For some reason, I expected it to be much bigger.

Soon, I had the ASUS Eee PC 701 4G in my hand. It’s tiny. Good tiny. Tiny as in: take two DVD cases and put them on top of each other and the result is just slightly smaller than the Eee PC. From front to back, the Eee PC is about the size of a Nestle Crunch candy bar and from left to right it’s about 1 1/3 Nestle Crunch candy bars. I put the Eee PC in my shoulder bag today and barely noticed it in there, unlike how i always can notice when i carry my current 12″ notebook.

Also in the box were guidebooks, an AC adapter, and a case. I haven’t had a chance to read the guidebooks yet, so I’ll get back to you on that later. A quick glance did show that they include instructions for installing Windows XP, instructions for doing a system restore, and a CD with the manual and Windows XP drivers on it. The AC adapter is great- small enough that you can take it with you without taking up much space. But even better: the plug prongs are both small (instead of the one small one large variety) so you can plug it in an electrical outlet upside down if needed. The case is a form fitting neoprene sleeve- something that I would have actually paid extra money for as an accessory. It’s nice quality.

The best way to describe the Eee PC would be: proportional. The keyboard, screen, and touchpad all seem to be the proper size. Nothing is too big or too small. I’m not saying that a larger screen size on it wouldn’t be a welcome addition for some- but the screen is great how it is. The keyboard is not that much of a switch from typing on my Dell 710m laptop, just a little smaller. The touch pad is nice as well. I’m not too fond of the tightness of the physical mouse button(s)- i know that sounds ridiculous- but the button is a little tough to push down and it makes a loud clicking noise. I’m sure that over time it will soften up- and besides- I tend to do the tap-on-the-touchpad for a click anyway. By the way- the physical button is both a left and a right mouse button depending on which side you press it at.

Turning on and off the Eee PC is shockingly fast. It turns on in about 20-22 seconds and off in about 9 seconds.

The screen is absolutely gorgeous. It can go from very dim to very bright with many settings in between. I’m interested to see how the different brightness levels affect battery life. Whites are especially vivid and crisp. The screen is definitely high quality and makes the Eee PC a pleasure to use. The resolution is good as well. There’s enough screen real estate for almost all websites to work perfectly. PDF files look great on the Eee PC as well, so long as you view one page at a time. If you try to view pages side by side, it is still readable, but the text is a bit too small for me.

Of course, to the left and right of the screen are the rather large speakers. Unfortunately, if you turn the Eee PC against light properly, you can see that there are only speaker openings at the top- the bottom is just decor. Still, the sound quality is good- they are your typical laptop speakers.

The Eee PC comes loaded with software- Firefox, OpenOffice, Pidgin, etc. The Linux interface is really nice- very polished. There are plenty of different settings to play with as well, and four different “themes” for the Eee PC interface. I was surprised not to see a “terminal” application- in fact, I still can’t even find the Linux terminal. It must be around there somewhere…

The wireless networking card is great. It found many more networks than my other wireless devices can find, and the range appears to be superb. The network manager too is solid and works well, remembering the networks that you connect to often.

I’ve shown the Eee PC to several of my friends in person and all of the responses are always positive, even from people who are not extremely interested in technology. People are impressed with the size and functionality, and sold once they hear the price range. Many people guess that it is much more expensive.

There are, however, several quirks. The battery indicator only shows the percentage left- but does not estimate the time left. I suppose after I use it for a while, I’ll have my own idea of how much time is left, so it’s not too big of an issue. The clock in my system tray is in 24h mode rather than 12h am/pm. Not sure if I just missed a setting, maybe? Also, there is no ~` key in the top left of the keyboard. [Edit: The ~` key is oddly placed to the right of the esc key.] Granted, in all the years of computing I’ve probably used that key only once or twice. What makes it odd on the Eee PC, however, is that the “1″ key is where the ~` key normally is, so i’ve been hitting “2″ instead of “1″ accidentally. [edit: Also, F1 is not directly next to Esc.] No big deal- just a little something to get used to.

Ultimately, the Eee PC meets all of my personal expectations and actually exceeds many as well. I’m really pleased with the size of the Eee PC along with the high quality screen. The software interface is also easy to operate. I’m excited to explore further the features of this device in an upcoming full review, where I will focus on battery life, benchmarks, wireless ranges, and many other things.

ASUS Posts Launch Timeframes For Eee PC Models

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007 by ant

On the official ASUS Eee PC website, ASUS updated the product information table to include launch dates:

  • Eee PC 8G: End of November
  • Eee PC 4G: 10/16/07 Global Launch
  • Eee PC 4G Surf: Middle of November
  • Eee PC 2G Surf : End of November

As expected, the Eee PC 4G will be the first model to be released in the United States on November 1st.