

We're not sure we'd ever be able to touch-type on it, but then again a fifth-grader might. At least most of the space is saved for making sure the actual letter keys are a usable size, which makes typing at least possible, if not entirely easy.
Hp mininote 2133 hdd Pc#
At 2 pounds, it's almost a pound lighter than the 2.9-pound HP Mini-Note.Ĭramming all the things one expects from a laptop into a package this small presents some difficult design issues, and the Asus Eee PC has some of the tiniest keys we've ever had to deal with (UMPCs not included, which tend more toward smartphone thumb-style keyboards). The Eee PC is still the smallest of the mininotebooks, about the size of a trade paperback book, and it can even fit in a large jacket pocket without too much trouble. But the Mini-Note, while starting at only $599, is also a step up in price from the Eee PC, which was designed to put price first and looks second. It shows up bloated UMPCs, which can cost up to five times as much.Īt first it's easy to mistake the Eee PC's plastic chassis for a toy, and the recent HP 2133 Mini-Note is a similar system with an upscale brushed aluminum look. Hence, we stand by our original judgment that the Eee PC is certainly worth a look as a second laptop for travelers, or perhaps a first laptop for children-one you won't be afraid to leave in accident-prone hands.

Hp mininote 2133 hdd windows#
Instead, this new Eee PC adds Windows XP to an otherwise identical system and manages to keep the same $399 price (probably because the actual hardware inside is the same as we saw six months ago in the original). While Windows lends the Eee PC broader appeal, a larger 9-inch screen (expected later this year) would give it a boost in functionality because the larger screen would mean less horizontal scrolling, and a larger keyboard would mean fewer typos. The company promised a Windows version was in the works, but in the meantime, other PC makers saw the potential for inexpensive small laptops, and we've seen Hewlett-Packard's 2133 Mini-Note and an revamped version of Intel's Classmate PC run Windows with similar hardware, creating a new category people are calling mininotebooks or Netbooks. While it became a cult hit (Asus says it will have sold 5 million units worldwide by the end of 2008), the lack of a Windows-based operating system kept some shoppers away.
