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Eee PC Review (and reminiscing about the Portfolio)

I bought an Asus Eee PC this week because I just loved the idea behind it. It’s a 2lb ultraportable PC, and it’s probably going to become my main portable machine. There’s just no need to carry a 15″ laptop around with me everywhere I go just in case I need to take some notes or put something on my calendar.

Atari PortfolioIn many ways, it reminds me of the Atari Portfolio. You’ve probably seen a Portfolio, although you probably didn’t know what it was at the time. It was the portable computer young John Connor used to hack the ATM and later Cyberdyne’s vault in Terminator 2. The Portfolio came out in 1989, around the time 80386-based DOS machines were starting to take over the desktop. Sure, there were laptops. But the only ultraportables of the day were overgrown calculators with calendars and address books running custom operating systems.

Atari’s machine actually featured a 80C88 processor and a customized variant of MS-DOS 2.11, and could run DOS programs that could fit in its 128k of RAM and didn’t try to bypass the BIOS and operating system to access hardware. It came with useful software, including a spreadsheet that could read Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheets. Oh, and it had a QWERTY keyboard with tiny keys.

Eee PC with a CD showing sizeThe Eee PC is the modern incarnation of this sort of PC. It’s a tiny laptop, measuring only 8.86″ x 6.46″, with a 7″ diagonal screen. It has a QWERTY keyboard with tiny keys, just like the Portfolio. The hardware is a little more modern though: a 900MHz Celeron M underclocked to about 600MHz and 512MB RAM (expandable to 2GB). It has 802.11b/g wifi and a 100baseT ethernet port. There’s a VGA connector in case you want to use it with a real monitor or hook it up to a projector to make that big presentation for the board of directors.

The Portfolio didn’t come with a hard or floppy drive, but instead used battery-backed RAM “portfolio cards” and a RAM disk set up in its built-in memory. The Eee PC uses built-in flash memory (4gb in my model) and an SD/MMC card slot. It also has three USB ports which can be used for USB flash drives, among other things (I do still have that USB “back massager” Katie gave me a few years ago).

Watching a Google Video movie on the Eee PCSo what’s the Eee PC good for? Anything, really, as long as it can be done comfortably on a 7″ 800×480 screen. It comes with open source productivity programs, web programs (Firefox, Skype…), various media players, and games. Everything is accessed through a simple menu system or through voice commands. Plus, it’s running Linux, and I can hit ctrl-alt-t to get a shell window where I can access the operating system and do fun things like SSH into the servers at work.

If that’s not enough, it comes with drivers for Windows XP, and people have installed other operating systems on it including Ubuntu Linux and AmigaOS. It is, after all, a 600MHz PC.

The model I got comes with a 2.8hr battery. But, really, if I’m going to be using a computer for hours on end, that’s when I’d grab my Dell on the way out the door.

I’ve only messed around with the Eee PC for about an hour so far, but I’m loving it. It’s really portable but still powerful enough for a web geek like me.

3 Responses to “Eee PC Review (and reminiscing about the Portfolio)”

  1. Bookmarks Tagged Portfolio Says:

    [...] bookmarks tagged portfolio EeePc Review (and reminiscing about the Portfolio) saved by 1 others     orgasimicCookie bookmarked on 12/30/07 | [...]

  2. James Hernon Says:

    The Atari Portfolio was the first miniature handheld (the size of a VHS casette approx). It does weigh too much and if you have small fingers you can touch type on the device. I just enquired from Best Electronics in America and they have some RAM packs 256K for the Atari Portfolio so I should be able to get 640K into the machine.

    Well I purchased the Atari Portfolio in 1989 for £199 and for my bucks I got a portable with 128K a parallel port and some Apps: Editor, Lotus 123 Compatible Spreadsheet, Calculator, Diary and Address book. I had given away my original Atari Portfollio away a long time ago and recently purchased one of EBAY for £7.25. I will hopefully be doing some retro programming for DOS 2.11 and trying to get the little thing to act as a webserver and hook it up to the internet somehow. (I can but try).

    The EEPC
    The difference in 20 years is now for £199.00 you get a machine that can do a lot more work. Who knows what people will be getting in another 20 years for the same price.

    I am going to have a lot of fun trying to get the Atari Portfolio to act as a web server. Doing the same on the EEPC would probable be easy peasy.

    But computers were fun in the eighties and the software was not bloated taking up MEGS of ROM but today you get great graphics and sound and interconnectivity plus GIGS of storage on those litte SD cards and USB sticks. So I still woud be happier with the modern computers and things have moved on in terms of speed and capabilities. I hope to be buying an Asus EEPC with 3 months.

  3. My experience with Ubuntu-eee | csixty4 Says:

    [...] thought I was a good boy for installing all of Asus’s updates to my EeePC 701, which I’ve used for six months without a problem.  But, one of the more recent updates left [...]

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Difference Engine #2

Cogs making up the mechanical counters in the reproduction of Babbage's "Difference Engine #2" at the Computer History Museum