Asus Eee PC 701

The Asus Eee PC is a value priced ultra-portable notebook series based off of Asus' own hardware and software specifications. The Eee PC is a fully operational computer, however the budget price and small form factor limit the performance capabilities. Various configurations are available, with the standard being a 900MHz Celeron M processor, 512MB or RAM and 4GB of solid state memory. More recently Asus has released models based on the new Intel Atom processor, that, with its improved chipset has improved overall performance and cut power consumption. The series has also seen a move to larger 9 and 10" models with larger keyboards, batteries, and screen resolutions to appear more attractive to average consumers that found the miniature keyboards and resolutions lacking compared to full laptop alternatives. Other value priced portable computers are being marketed by companies like Intel (Classmate) and by the One Laptop Per Child non-profit (see the XO-1) but those are targeted towards developing countries, while Asus is offering the Eee PC to everyone.

Where to Buy

Asus Eee PC 1
MSRP $399.00
Release date November, 2007
Brand Asus
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Pros & Cons48
Reviews43
Details
Buy It
Competitors18
Comments16
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Pros & Cons

ProSCORE
40 reviews
68
negative
mixed
positive
31 positive
4 mixed
5 negative

[i] How is the ProSCORE calculated?

show me!

Pros:
Do you agree?
Very portable
+30agreedisagree

Fast boot time
+26agreedisagree

Great value for the money
+22agreedisagree

Solidly built
+18agreedisagree

Supported by a strong modding/hacking community
+18agreedisagree

decent battery life
+16agreedisagree

Useful software included
+15agreedisagree

Linux OS
+14agreedisagree

A lot of potential for upgrades (hardware and software)
+11agreedisagree

Many different O/S options and distros now available: Ubuntu, and XP most notably
+10agreedisagree

Can be overclocked
+8agreedisagree

save money
+6agreedisagree

Attractive design
+5agreedisagree

3 USB ports
+5agreedisagree

the bios allows you to boot usb devices
+5agreedisagree

Very strong wireless reception.
+5agreedisagree

Excellent small speaker sound
+4agreedisagree

Easy to upgrade RAM to 2GB
+4agreedisagree

Wireless 802.11 b/g/n
+4agreedisagree

Preloaded with Skype
+4agreedisagree

Bluetooth connectivity
+3agreedisagree

The USB ports accept everything.
+3agreedisagree

Open Office Software preloadd on unit is compatible with MS Office
+3agreedisagree

Comes with a linux antivirus program which includes automatic updates and a scheduler.
+3agreedisagree

Good sized keyboard for a netbook
+2agreedisagree

Memory card reader
+2agreedisagree

Pressing F9 when starting the machine will set the machine to factory default.
+2agreedisagree

Hackintoshable to Leopard 10.5
+1agreedisagree

Screen resolution can be modded to TOTAL FUNCTONAL LEVEL
+1agreedisagree

Cons:
Do you agree?
Screen resolution is too low for many websites
+16agreedisagree

Suspend mode consumes battery
+9agreedisagree

AC/DC adapter plug is odd-shaped and blocks two electrical outlets
+9agreedisagree

Fan can get a little noisy when it overheats
+8agreedisagree

small keyboard
+7agreedisagree

Mouse button is weird
+6agreedisagree

Very small screen - 7" with black border all around
+3agreedisagree

Minor "screen-door effect" on the LCD
+3agreedisagree

No exterior battery-life indicator
+3agreedisagree

Keys are very small
+2agreedisagree

Celeron CPU gets quite hot
+2agreedisagree

Case attracts fingerprints
+2agreedisagree

No 3G/HSPDA
+1agreedisagree

you need a usb dongle to access gprs/edge over bluetooth
+1agreedisagree

4GB isn't a lot of space for a primary partition
+1agreedisagree

No modem.
0agreedisagree

Touchpad shows visible signs of wear after heavy use
0agreedisagree

Battery sticks out a bit at the back
-2agreedisagree

Linux OS
-13agreedisagree


43 people added to this review by submitting or voting on pros and cons. Add your say!

Details

Hardware Design

At just over an inch thick, the notebook flips open to reveal a full QWERTY keyboard and a 7, 9 or 10" screen. The keyboard buttons are justifiably smaller than regular keys, though Asus decided to make the letter larger than the functional keys like "tab" which end up being much smaller than their traditional size. A 1.75" touch pad is included for mouse control with one button available, similar to the Apple's Mighty Mouse, the left side of the button controls left click, with the right side controlling right click. Not unlike Apple's various touch interfaces, the EEE includes advanced (arguably superior) multi-touch support. Around the bevel housing the screen are found two speakers on the sides, and on top is a webcam for video conferencing. Internet is available through the 100 M-bit ethernet port or the included A/B/G WiFi adapter (no modem). All models support SDHC cards.

Included Software

A customized version of Xandros Linux is used to power the Eee PC and give access to its various programs. Many standard programs come bundled in the package, and being a variant of Linux lets you download and install more applications if you wish. On the productivity side, OpenOffice 2.0 ( not 2.3? ) is included which lets you interact with all the usual Microsoft Office documents. A media player, Firefox web browser, and Skype round out the productivity applications available. Asus also includes a suite of casual games accessible under the "play tab".

Configurations

Eee PC 2G Surf (700) - $249

  • 900 processor which has 512KB cache RAM
  • Intel G915 chipset
  • Integrated graphics chip with VGA output
  • 7" LCD LED backlit screen, 800x480 resolution
  • 256MB of DDR2 RAM
  • 2GB solid-state storage
  • 1 PCI Express Mini Card connector
  • 10/100 Ethernet, B/G WiFi adapter
  • 3 USB ports, multi-card reader
  • Built-in stereo speaker; built-in microphone
  • Colors: White, black, green, blue, pink
  • estimated 2.8 hours battery, 4400mAh
  • estimated availability end-of-November

 Eee PC 4G Surf (701) - $349

The 4G Surf model includes everything from the 2G Surf model with these changes:

  • 4GB SSD storage
  • 512MB RAM

 Eee PC 4G (701) - $399

The 4G model includes everything from the 4G Surf model with these changes:

  • 0.3MP camera
  • 5200mAh battery, rated for 3.5 hours

 Eee PC 8G (701SD)

The 8G model includes everything from the 4G model with these changes:

  • 8GB SSD
  • 1GB RAM

Eee PC 9-inch screen (900, 901, 900A, 900HA, 904HA)

Various 9 inch models have been introduced with a movement to larger, more usable, higher resolution screens. Beginning with the EEE PC 900 with the same Celeron processor and internal SSD, the series has more recently expanded to cheaper 900H and 900HA models that include the higher performance atom processors and cheaper storage options (a slower SSD in the 900A and a cheaper 160gb hard disk drive in the 900HA).

Eee PC 10-inch screen (1000, 1000HA)

Various 10 inch models have been introduced to allow users larger screens, keyboards and higher capacity batteries - pushing the runtime of these higher costing EEEs to 6-7 hours. All of these contain the newer Atom processors. The 1000 contains 40GB of SSD, and is more expensive than the newly announced 1000HA that contains the same 160GB HDD found in the 900HA. The 1000 series contains a physically larger 10" screen which becomes easier to use despite using the same resolution as the smaller 9" screens.

The devices are Microsoft Windows XP compatible, with drivers available from support.asus.com. Asus link for this special project is: eeepc.asus.com/en/product.htm

Submit a link

This report was started November 2, 2007 at 1:12 pm by Omar
with the last edit occurring October 7, 2009 at 4:27 pm by kittkatt0
This page has been viewed 11491 times, with 776 edits by 49 contributors.
See the full report history »

Buy It

Asus Eee PC 701

• Eee PC 4G Netbook

MPN: EEEPC4GW011

Asus Eee PC 701

• Asus Eee 4G 7" PC Mobile Internet Device (512 MB RAM, 4 GB Hard Drive, Webcam, Linux Preloaded) Pearl White

• Eee PC 4G Notebook

UPC: 884840161400

EAN: 884840161400

MPN: 90OA01A10112111U101Q

Competitors

Asus Eee PC 701 is ranked 3rd among it's competitors.  See the top picks in Netbooks »

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Comments

1.  avatar Erik said:

I'm feeling this movement of ultra-cheap, simple PCs running Linux (see the gPC). I don't know about you, but I'm feeling a little rebellious after the whole unlocked iPhone brick debacle. There's an open movement, and you're going to be left behind, Apple. (Yes, I'm aware of the irony of OS X being built on UNIX).
Nov 05, 2007 10:02pm
2.  avatar Omar said:

I really want to get my hands on one of these, and try out a Nokia N810. Until I actually have experience with them first hand I won't be able to make a solid decision. I'm sure they're both great at what they do, I just don't know what I want to do. Decisions, decisions... the N810 has GPS and touch screen, the Eee has the better keyboard and clamshell design. And I can actually BUY the Eee right now, whereas I can't find the N810 in Canada.
Nov 22, 2007 2:37pm
3.  avatar chrisrodney said:

You can pick up an n810 from TigerDirect.ca for about $569.00 CAD. Or buy it south of border and save about $100 - 150.

I think you know what to do.
Nov 22, 2007 8:59pm
4.  avatar Omar said:

Yup. Ordering the EeePC tomorrow from Canada Computers. What put me over the edge was the fact that the Eee is a mini-laptop, meaning it runs actual Linux and Windows applications without any adjustments. Whereas the small screen and form factor of the N810 mean that applications need to be specifically tailored to the Nokia for usability purposes.

Plus I'd be paying for features like GPS and Bluetooth that I just don't need. I mean, I don't even have a car! And I don't own anything I'd be able to pair the Bluetooth WITH. All I really need is something nice and light that lets me access the Internet when I'm around the house, in cafes, or on a train somewhere. Plus the clamshell design of the EeePC means that I don't have to baby it so much, I'd be paranoid about messing up the Nokia's screen all the time.

Now the decision is, do I go with the EeePC, or a much more powerful and bigger standard laptop, the Vostro 1000 which I can purchase from Dell.ca for only $100 more! I'm still going with the EeePC, but trust me when I say that I agonized over THAT question quite a bit as well.
Nov 23, 2007 12:06am
5.  avatar Erik said:

I've been playing around with Omar's EEE in the office today. I love it. The pre-bundled open-source software (Xandros Linux, OpenOffice, Firefox) make it ready-to-go right out of the box.

Basically, the choice to get this laptop (and it is a laptop, not a mobile device) becomes a matter of preference. How important is size to you? How do you plan on using it? The EEE is perfect for someone wanting a lightweight Internet box on the cheap, who likely has a desktop (or more powerful laptop) for more advanced uses.

HUGE THUMBS UP ASUS!

Nov 30, 2007 12:09pm
6.  avatar Erik said:

The EEEUser community is pretty fantastic, and they've got some wicked tweaks and guides on their wiki. I switched the default environment to the advanced KDE desktop, and it's pretty darn sweet. This laptop is the nerd's dream. Linux, tweaks, hacks, mods, open-source, and wikis oh my!
Jan 04, 2008 3:15pm
7.  avatar lomtik said:

I saw it in the box in Pacific Mall in December when I was in Toronto for the holidays. So many thoughts went through my mind. At that time I was looking for (1) mp3 player (2) gps (3) wifi internet (4) picture viewer (5) calendar, todo, organizer - all not necessary in the same device. Well, at the end of the day, I bought Garmin Nuvo GPS and iTouch 16gig (actually these were presents). If iTouch had GPS build into it right now, I would pay extra $50, maybe even $100 to have it all in the same device like n810.

Back to EEE. I think it's a great portable computer that runs an OS with so many programs already existing for it! So many professionals who know how to deal with it and even Windows users would love the machine! I can easily see myself using one of these if I was commuting and wanted to do some work. I don't feel like taking out my 15" Sony Vaio in public transit whenever I use it.

And I must agree with you, it's awesome for geeks and h@x00rZ. It reminded me a better version of a small pda that a kid from Die Hard 4 always had in his pocket. At $400, I had a really hard time when deciding between EEE and iTouch 16G. The reason I got the latter one is because my old Mp3 player really needed replacement, because I already have a laptop and because I wanted something of a smaller size.

Next time it could be something similar to EEE or n810!
Jan 13, 2008 11:02pm
8.  avatar Altos said:

This is NOT ment to be a replacement for a normal Laptop or Desktop PC.

This product is aimed at people that wish to have the capabilities of a laptop in a compact and minimal design.

The Eee PC is ideal for people that want ultra-portability without sacrificing power. It is intended for internet browsing, school work, and simple entertainment.

That is why it has the small screen size and the equally small pricetag.
Jan 16, 2008 12:49am
9.  avatar GT-D said:

that is simply amazing. I'm also really digging the ultra-small linux laptops. This is exactly what I'd want for school (tho I'm just about to graduate.) - Maybe I'll get one for my wife for her birthday.

In fact, I think I will. She has some years of school left, and her laptop is an old dell p3 or something.
Jan 25, 2008 11:23am
10.  avatar GT-D said:

Just bought one for my wife - she (and I, vicariously through her) is really enjoying it. Giving it its first field test today while she's in class.

Initial impressions: very impressed, well worth the money.
Mar 11, 2008 11:52am
11.  avatar Omar said:

Welp, I'd been a little dissatisfied with this little guy since it couldn't really handle YouTube videos without stuttering. That is a basic task that I was hoping for this thing, so it's important to me. Lo and behold, the tweaking community comes to my rescue and turns out the Eee is underclocked. Now to get it back up to speed!

Overclock guide

It's actually very easy to overclock, and now that I'm running at 900MHz speed, everything is much zippier, and YouTube videos run perfectly. It's actually very sweet.
May 04, 2008 11:55am
12.  avatar Omar said:

Well, I just had a pretty big scare. I overclocked my little guy to 900MHz a few times, and as previously reported the speed boost was very nice. However, one time I overclocked (you have to set the processor speed every time you start the computer) and the screen went all wonky, purple haze and all of that. Hard lock. Reboot. Nothing. Press power button again... nothing. uh... take out battery, put battery back in. Nothing. Ok, well I guess it's fried. Good thing it's still under warranty.

Fast forward a week which brings us to today where I'm cleaning my room and I see the little white block gaining a nice layer of dust. Give it a go for ... old time's sake I guess, and what do you know, the thing boots up! All nice and dandy, and I'm writing this post on the darn thing right now. I love this thing!
May 17, 2008 4:33pm
13.  avatar squalorking said:

Omar, have you been using the stock Xandros or another flavor of Linux? I've since sold my Eee, but I had found the stock OS to be... Bloaty.

Like a 3-weeks dead goldfish, or a $400 HP desktop (with free games!).

I had actually gotten Windows XP to run lighter than the original with nLite, but I swore by eeeXubuntu.
Jul 25, 2008 6:02pm
14.  avatar Omar said:

Yup, I'm still running the stock Xandros, and I agree with the bloatiness. I haven't really been up on the game in regards to OS' but last time I checked the eeeXubuntu was getting close to reaching 1.0 (it was RC3 I believe).

I'm just waiting for a super easy installation download and script with no issues in regards to wifi, sound, or anything like that.

I'm getting an iPhone next week so not sure how useful the Eee will be. Though if I can get some hot teathering action going I'd be able to get the best of both worlds.
Jul 25, 2008 6:35pm
15.  avatar Omar said:

Well.. I got the iPhone and expected or not, I didn't use my Eee for months. I just used my iPhone for checking the web and e-mail, it's much more convenient. Fast forward until today where I've now installed Ubuntu Eee onto the sucker annnnd it's actually pretty cool now. I don't know how much I'll use it, but it's actually pretty more useful now than I gave it credit for these past few months.

Installing Ubuntu wasn't super easy, but that was more because I wanted to use my current external HDD, and not a regular USB stick, or SD card. As such, I had to do a little wrangling and do some boot sector installation crap. Not too hard, but it took awhile to get everything configured properly. Now I have a partition on my hard drive that is the "Ubuntu Eee installer" so it'll make it easy to install on other people's if they so wish.

Here's my mini-guide on installing with an external HDD with a Windows based PC:

  1. create a new partition using EASEUS Partition Manager (it's free). Set it to FAT16, size 3GB and PRIMARY
  2. then download the latest syslinux zip package. All you need is the syslinux.exe file in the win32 directory
    1. run: syslinux -rfam :  this creates the master boot record and sets the partition to be ACTIVE
    2. rename the isolinux directory to "syslinux" inside this directory rename all the "isolinux" files to "syslinux"
  3. extract the Ubuntu Eee ISO files onto the partition as explained in the installation guide
  4. follow as normal

The gotchas for me was setting up the PRIMARY + ACTIVE + SYSLINUX. This guide helped with SYSLINUX. Another SYSLINUX help. Ubuntu Eee installation guide. EASEUS Partition Tool.

Oct 05, 2008 10:57pm
16.  avatar Erik said:

^^^ For the record, I know Omar is now using an n-lited version of XP on his EEE. Ubuntu is s---l----o-----w on a 701 4G.

I've loaded XP on my EEE as well, and I freakin' love the thing. I was pretty happy with Xandros or KDE, but once I got the familiar XP Pro running, things got a lot easier. Just the ability to run Firefox 3 or Chrome was enough for me.

Here's what I loaded on it to make it hum:
Firefox 3
Google Chrome
Winamp
VLC Media Player
Pidgin
OpenOffice
GIMP
Notepad++

I put all of these apps on my desktop as shortcuts with single-click browsing enabled in XP, added keyboard shortcuts for everything, and then auto-hid the start menu. I find this setup far more productive and faster than the stock Xandros.

To top it off, I can now easily configure the EEE as a wireless bridge for my wired-only Xbox Media Center.
Oct 15, 2008 11:50am
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Reviews

Sort by: Most helpful  •  Newest  •  Most positive

Erik

avatar
October 15, 2008
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
53
negative
mixed
positive
9 pros
8 cons
love itlove it
have ithave it
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Great value for the money
  • Supported by a strong modding/hacking community
  • decent battery life
  • Useful software included
  • Many different O/S options and distros now available: Ubuntu, and XP most notably
  • Can be overclocked
  • Excellent small speaker sound

Cons

  • Screen resolution is too low for many websites
  • Suspend mode consumes battery
  • AC/DC adapter plug is odd-shaped and blocks two electrical outlets
  • Fan can get a little noisy when it overheats
  • Very small screen - 7" with black border all around
  • Minor "screen-door effect" on the LCD
  • No exterior battery-life indicator
  • Keys are very small

Comments

"I'm feeling this movement of ultra-cheap, simple PCs running Linux (see the gPC). I don't know about you, but I'm feeling a little rebellious after the whole unlocked iPhone brick debacle. There's an open movement, and you're going to be left behind, Apple. (Yes, I'm aware of the irony of OS X being built on UNIX)."
"

I've been playing around with Omar's EEE in the office today. I love it. The pre-bundled open-source software (Xandros Linux, OpenOffice, Firefox) make it ready-to-go right out of the box.

Basically, the choice to get this laptop (and it is a laptop, not a mobile device) becomes a matter of preference. How important is size to you? How do you plan on using it? The EEE is perfect for someone wanting a lightweight Internet box on the cheap, who likely has a desktop (or more powerful laptop) for more advanced uses.

HUGE THUMBS UP ASUS!

"
"The EEEUser community is pretty fantastic, and they've got some wicked tweaks and guides on their wiki. I switched the default environment to the advanced KDE desktop, and it's pretty darn sweet. This laptop is the nerd's dream. Linux, tweaks, hacks, mods, open-source, and wikis oh my!"
"^^^ For the record, I know Omar is now using an n-lited version of XP on his EEE. Ubuntu is s---l----o-----w on a 701 4G.

I've loaded XP on my EEE as well, and I freakin' love the thing. I was pretty happy with Xandros or KDE, but once I got the familiar XP Pro running, things got a lot easier. Just the ability to run Firefox 3 or Chrome was enough for me.

Here's what I loaded on it to make it hum:
Firefox 3
Google Chrome
Winamp
VLC Media Player
Pidgin
OpenOffice
GIMP
Notepad++

I put all of these apps on my desktop as shortcuts with single-click browsing enabled in XP, added keyboard shortcuts for everything, and then auto-hid the start menu. I find this setup far more productive and faster than the stock Xandros.

To top it off, I can now easily configure the EEE as a wireless bridge for my wired-only Xbox Media Center."

Competitors

Erik prefers Asus Eee PC 701 over HP 2133 Mini-Note, Aleutia E1, Fujitsu Lifebook U810
Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

GT-D

avatar
October 15, 2008
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
73
negative
mixed
positive
11 pros
4 cons
have ithave it
love itlove it
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Great value for the money
  • Solidly built
  • Supported by a strong modding/hacking community
  • decent battery life
  • Useful software included
  • Linux OS
  • Many different O/S options and distros now available: Ubuntu, and XP most notably
  • save money
  • Excellent small speaker sound

Cons

  • Screen resolution is too low for many websites
  • AC/DC adapter plug is odd-shaped and blocks two electrical outlets
  • Mouse button is weird
  • Very small screen - 7" with black border all around

Comments

"that is simply amazing. I'm also really digging the ultra-small linux laptops. This is exactly what I'd want for school (tho I'm just about to graduate.) - Maybe I'll get one for my wife for her birthday.

In fact, I think I will. She has some years of school left, and her laptop is an old dell p3 or something."
"Just bought one for my wife - she (and I, vicariously through her) is really enjoying it. Giving it its first field test today while she's in class.

Initial impressions: very impressed, well worth the money."

Competitors

GT-D prefers Asus Eee PC 701 over HP 2133 Mini-Note
Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

squalorking

avatar
July 25, 2008
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
60
negative
mixed
positive
9 pros
6 cons
love itlove it
have ithave it
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Great value for the money
  • Solidly built
  • Supported by a strong modding/hacking community
  • decent battery life
  • Useful software included
  • A lot of potential for upgrades (hardware and software)
  • Can be overclocked

Cons

  • Screen resolution is too low for many websites
  • Suspend mode consumes battery
  • AC/DC adapter plug is odd-shaped and blocks two electrical outlets
  • Fan can get a little noisy when it overheats
  • Minor "screen-door effect" on the LCD
  • No exterior battery-life indicator

Comments

"Omar, have you been using the stock Xandros or another flavor of Linux? I've since sold my Eee, but I had found the stock OS to be... Bloaty.

Like a 3-weeks dead goldfish, or a $400 HP desktop (with free games!).

I had actually gotten Windows XP to run lighter than the original with nLite, but I swore by eeeXubuntu."

Competitors

squalorking prefers Nokia N810 over Asus Eee PC 701
Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

Omar

avatar
December 7, 2007
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
75
negative
mixed
positive
6 pros
2 cons
have ithave it
love itlove it
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Great value for the money
  • decent battery life
  • Useful software included
  • A lot of potential for upgrades (hardware and software)

Cons

  • small keyboard
  • Minor "screen-door effect" on the LCD

Comments

"I really want to get my hands on one of these, and try out a Nokia N810. Until I actually have experience with them first hand I won't be able to make a solid decision. I'm sure they're both great at what they do, I just don't know what I want to do. Decisions, decisions... the N810 has GPS and touch screen, the Eee has the better keyboard and clamshell design. And I can actually BUY the Eee right now, whereas I can't find the N810 in Canada."
"Yup. Ordering the EeePC tomorrow from Canada Computers. What put me over the edge was the fact that the Eee is a mini-laptop, meaning it runs actual Linux and Windows applications without any adjustments. Whereas the small screen and form factor of the N810 mean that applications need to be specifically tailored to the Nokia for usability purposes.

Plus I'd be paying for features like GPS and Bluetooth that I just don't need. I mean, I don't even have a car! And I don't own anything I'd be able to pair the Bluetooth WITH. All I really need is something nice and light that lets me access the Internet when I'm around the house, in cafes, or on a train somewhere. Plus the clamshell design of the EeePC means that I don't have to baby it so much, I'd be paranoid about messing up the Nokia's screen all the time.

Now the decision is, do I go with the EeePC, or a much more powerful and bigger standard laptop, the Vostro 1000 which I can purchase from Dell.ca for only $100 more! I'm still going with the EeePC, but trust me when I say that I agonized over THAT question quite a bit as well."
"Welp, I'd been a little dissatisfied with this little guy since it couldn't really handle YouTube videos without stuttering. That is a basic task that I was hoping for this thing, so it's important to me. Lo and behold, the tweaking community comes to my rescue and turns out the Eee is underclocked. Now to get it back up to speed!

Overclock guide

It's actually very easy to overclock, and now that I'm running at 900MHz speed, everything is much zippier, and YouTube videos run perfectly. It's actually very sweet."
"Well, I just had a pretty big scare. I overclocked my little guy to 900MHz a few times, and as previously reported the speed boost was very nice. However, one time I overclocked (you have to set the processor speed every time you start the computer) and the screen went all wonky, purple haze and all of that. Hard lock. Reboot. Nothing. Press power button again... nothing. uh... take out battery, put battery back in. Nothing. Ok, well I guess it's fried. Good thing it's still under warranty.

Fast forward a week which brings us to today where I'm cleaning my room and I see the little white block gaining a nice layer of dust. Give it a go for ... old time's sake I guess, and what do you know, the thing boots up! All nice and dandy, and I'm writing this post on the darn thing right now. I love this thing!"
"Yup, I'm still running the stock Xandros, and I agree with the bloatiness. I haven't really been up on the game in regards to OS' but last time I checked the eeeXubuntu was getting close to reaching 1.0 (it was RC3 I believe).

I'm just waiting for a super easy installation download and script with no issues in regards to wifi, sound, or anything like that.

I'm getting an iPhone next week so not sure how useful the Eee will be. Though if I can get some hot teathering action going I'd be able to get the best of both worlds."
"

Well.. I got the iPhone and expected or not, I didn't use my Eee for months. I just used my iPhone for checking the web and e-mail, it's much more convenient. Fast forward until today where I've now installed Ubuntu Eee onto the sucker annnnd it's actually pretty cool now. I don't know how much I'll use it, but it's actually pretty more useful now than I gave it credit for these past few months.

Installing Ubuntu wasn't super easy, but that was more because I wanted to use my current external HDD, and not a regular USB stick, or SD card. As such, I had to do a little wrangling and do some boot sector installation crap. Not too hard, but it took awhile to get everything configured properly. Now I have a partition on my hard drive that is the "Ubuntu Eee installer" so it'll make it easy to install on other people's if they so wish.

Here's my mini-guide on installing with an external HDD with a Windows based PC:

  1. create a new partition using EASEUS Partition Manager (it's free). Set it to FAT16, size 3GB and PRIMARY
  2. then download the latest syslinux zip package. All you need is the syslinux.exe file in the win32 directory
    1. run: syslinux -rfam :  this creates the master boot record and sets the partition to be ACTIVE
    2. rename the isolinux directory to "syslinux" inside this directory rename all the "isolinux" files to "syslinux"
  3. extract the Ubuntu Eee ISO files onto the partition as explained in the installation guide
  4. follow as normal

The gotchas for me was setting up the PRIMARY + ACTIVE + SYSLINUX. This guide helped with SYSLINUX. Another SYSLINUX help. Ubuntu Eee installation guide. EASEUS Partition Tool.

"

Competitors

Omar prefers Everex gBook over Asus Eee PC 701
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Altos

avatar
January 16, 2008
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
86
negative
mixed
positive
6 pros
1 con
want itwant it
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Great value for the money
  • Supported by a strong modding/hacking community
  • decent battery life
  • A lot of potential for upgrades (hardware and software)

Cons

  • small keyboard

Comments

"This is NOT ment to be a replacement for a normal Laptop or Desktop PC.

This product is aimed at people that wish to have the capabilities of a laptop in a compact and minimal design.

The Eee PC is ideal for people that want ultra-portability without sacrificing power. It is intended for internet browsing, school work, and simple entertainment.

That is why it has the small screen size and the equally small pricetag."

Competitors

Altos prefers HP 2133 Mini-Note over Asus Eee PC 701
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christine

avatar
June 27, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
78
negative
mixed
positive
25 pros
7 cons
love itlove it
have ithave it

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Great value for the money
  • Solidly built
  • Supported by a strong modding/hacking community
  • decent battery life
  • Useful software included
  • Linux OS
  • A lot of potential for upgrades (hardware and software)
  • Many different O/S options and distros now available: Ubuntu, and XP most notably
  • Can be overclocked
  • save money
  • Attractive design
  • 3 USB ports
  • the bios allows you to boot usb devices
  • Very strong wireless reception.
  • Wireless 802.11 b/g/n
  • Preloaded with Skype
  • Bluetooth connectivity
  • The USB ports accept everything.
  • Open Office Software preloadd on unit is compatible with MS Office
  • Comes with a linux antivirus program which includes automatic updates and a scheduler.
  • Good sized keyboard for a netbook
  • Memory card reader
  • Pressing F9 when starting the machine will set the machine to factory default.

Cons

  • Screen resolution is too low for many websites
  • No exterior battery-life indicator
  • Case attracts fingerprints
  • No 3G/HSPDA
  • you need a usb dongle to access gprs/edge over bluetooth
  • No modem.
  • Touchpad shows visible signs of wear after heavy use

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
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Ricky Yu

avatar
August 16, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
60
negative
mixed
positive
18 pros
12 cons
have ithave it

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Great value for the money
  • Solidly built
  • Supported by a strong modding/hacking community
  • decent battery life
  • Useful software included
  • Linux OS
  • A lot of potential for upgrades (hardware and software)
  • Many different O/S options and distros now available: Ubuntu, and XP most notably
  • Can be overclocked
  • Very strong wireless reception.
  • Easy to upgrade RAM to 2GB
  • Wireless 802.11 b/g/n
  • The USB ports accept everything.
  • Good sized keyboard for a netbook
  • Pressing F9 when starting the machine will set the machine to factory default.
  • Hackintoshable to Leopard 10.5

Cons

  • Screen resolution is too low for many websites
  • Suspend mode consumes battery
  • AC/DC adapter plug is odd-shaped and blocks two electrical outlets
  • Fan can get a little noisy when it overheats
  • small keyboard
  • Mouse button is weird
  • Very small screen - 7" with black border all around
  • Minor "screen-door effect" on the LCD
  • No exterior battery-life indicator
  • Keys are very small
  • Celeron CPU gets quite hot
  • Case attracts fingerprints

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

hdbdude

avatar
August 9, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
58
negative
mixed
positive
14 pros
10 cons

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Supported by a strong modding/hacking community
  • Linux OS
  • Many different O/S options and distros now available: Ubuntu, and XP most notably
  • Attractive design
  • 3 USB ports
  • the bios allows you to boot usb devices
  • Very strong wireless reception.
  • Easy to upgrade RAM to 2GB
  • Preloaded with Skype
  • Bluetooth connectivity
  • Open Office Software preloadd on unit is compatible with MS Office
  • Comes with a linux antivirus program which includes automatic updates and a scheduler.

Cons

  • Screen resolution is too low for many websites
  • Suspend mode consumes battery
  • AC/DC adapter plug is odd-shaped and blocks two electrical outlets
  • Fan can get a little noisy when it overheats
  • small keyboard
  • Mouse button is weird
  • Keys are very small
  • Celeron CPU gets quite hot
  • 4GB isn't a lot of space for a primary partition
  • Touchpad shows visible signs of wear after heavy use

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

ralli

avatar
May 24, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
70
negative
mixed
positive
14 pros
6 cons

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Great value for the money
  • Solidly built
  • decent battery life
  • Linux OS
  • A lot of potential for upgrades (hardware and software)
  • Attractive design
  • 3 USB ports
  • Easy to upgrade RAM to 2GB
  • Wireless 802.11 b/g/n
  • Bluetooth connectivity
  • Good sized keyboard for a netbook
  • Memory card reader

Cons

  • Screen resolution is too low for many websites
  • Suspend mode consumes battery
  • Fan can get a little noisy when it overheats
  • Case attracts fingerprints
  • No 3G/HSPDA
  • Battery sticks out a bit at the back

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

GuidoMan

avatar
July 27, 2008
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
60
negative
mixed
positive
12 pros
8 cons
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • Very portable
  • Fast boot time
  • Great value for the money
  • Solidly built
  • Supported by a strong modding/hacking community
  • decent battery life
  • Useful software included
  • Linux OS
  • A lot of potential for upgrades (hardware and software)
  • Can be overclocked
  • save money
  • Excellent small speaker sound

Cons

  • Screen resolution is too low for many websites
  • Suspend mode consumes battery
  • AC/DC adapter plug is odd-shaped and blocks two electrical outlets
  • small keyboard
  • Mouse button is weird
  • Very small screen - 7" with black border all around
  • No exterior battery-life indicator
  • Keys are very small

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No
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