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	<title>Comments for laptopaccessoriesguide.com</title>
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	<description>Laptops &#38; Accessories, Laptop Lights, Laptop Stands, Laptop Batteries, Laptop Bags, Laptop Sleeves, Docking stations, Laptops &#38; Accesories store</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Mon, 29 Nov 2010 12:20:32 -0500</lastBuildDate>
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		<title>Comment on Dell Inspiron iM10V-2734JGN Mini 10v 10.1-Inch Netbook by Gels</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6918/comment-page-1#comment-31609</link>
		<dc:creator>Gels</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 18:45:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6918#comment-31609</guid>
		<description>The item was bought for personal use and it suits its purpose well. The person who received it was quite happy. Had to purchase a few extra items but in all good cause.
Rating: 5 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The item was bought for personal use and it suits its purpose well. The person who received it was quite happy. Had to purchase a few extra items but in all good cause.<br />
Rating: 5 / 5</p>
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	<item>
		<title>Comment on Dell Inspiron Mini IM10-2865 10.1-Inch Promise Pink Netbook by random person</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6912/comment-page-1#comment-31590</link>
		<dc:creator>random person</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 18:44:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6912#comment-31590</guid>
		<description>This is a very nice little laptop, and I have very few gripes. But first, the good stuff. The keyboard is a very nice size, which was important to me when buying it, seeing as I&#039;m using it primarily as a writing laptop. I got it with 160 GB hard drive and 1 GB of RAM, which has done just fine for me. I haven&#039;t noticed the video problem others have pointed out, but I haven&#039;t watched much on it besides a few episodes of anime. :) It doesn&#039;t have a disc drive, but you can buy external ones, and I haven&#039;t had the need for it really. One of my favorite features is the various shortcuts for volume, brightness, and wireless on the keys; it really makes things convenient.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Really, my only gripe is the TERRIBLE touchpad. I have to use a little travel mouse for it most of the time, just because the touchpad is so bad. It has the left and right buttons integrated into the touchpad itself, so you can&#039;t really move the mouse with your thumb resting on the right button. This also makes it so it will randomly zoom in or out when I&#039;m viewing documents and move the mouse, just because my thumb is resting where it naturally goes. The worst part is that when you try to click, instead of clicking, the touchpad thinks you want to move the mouse so it shoots the pointer off into either corner (depending on which button you clicked). This is definitely something that should be fixed in later models, but it isn&#039;t to terribly debilitating. More of a disappointment really, that it slipped through into this updated model. However, it can be worked around (aka, you get used to it), or you can buy a cheap travel mouse like I did, so don&#039;t hate it too much just for this.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Anyway, this is a very nice little laptop, lightweight, but it still feels sturdy, enough so that I don&#039;t worry about just putting it in my backpack. This is very important to me, because I believe for something to be truly &quot;portable&quot;, it should be sturdy enough that you aren&#039;t afraid it will break if you take it around (like the Macbook Air). The battery life on mine is fairly good, I&#039;ve never had a problem with it running out yet, and I drag it around and surf the internet with it even. I&#039;d say it does about 3-4 hours, which works fine for my needs, although I&#039;d expect more on something that&#039;s supposed to highly portable like this.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Overall, I give it four out of five for that terrible touchpad, and the okay battery life. I&#039;d recommend this to someone who wants a nice portable secondary laptop, or even as a primary if your needs aren&#039;t too high.
Rating: 4 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is a very nice little laptop, and I have very few gripes. But first, the good stuff. The keyboard is a very nice size, which was important to me when buying it, seeing as I&#8217;m using it primarily as a writing laptop. I got it with 160 GB hard drive and 1 GB of RAM, which has done just fine for me. I haven&#8217;t noticed the video problem others have pointed out, but I haven&#8217;t watched much on it besides a few episodes of anime. <img src='http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' />  It doesn&#8217;t have a disc drive, but you can buy external ones, and I haven&#8217;t had the need for it really. One of my favorite features is the various shortcuts for volume, brightness, and wireless on the keys; it really makes things convenient.</p>
<p>Really, my only gripe is the TERRIBLE touchpad. I have to use a little travel mouse for it most of the time, just because the touchpad is so bad. It has the left and right buttons integrated into the touchpad itself, so you can&#8217;t really move the mouse with your thumb resting on the right button. This also makes it so it will randomly zoom in or out when I&#8217;m viewing documents and move the mouse, just because my thumb is resting where it naturally goes. The worst part is that when you try to click, instead of clicking, the touchpad thinks you want to move the mouse so it shoots the pointer off into either corner (depending on which button you clicked). This is definitely something that should be fixed in later models, but it isn&#8217;t to terribly debilitating. More of a disappointment really, that it slipped through into this updated model. However, it can be worked around (aka, you get used to it), or you can buy a cheap travel mouse like I did, so don&#8217;t hate it too much just for this.</p>
<p>Anyway, this is a very nice little laptop, lightweight, but it still feels sturdy, enough so that I don&#8217;t worry about just putting it in my backpack. This is very important to me, because I believe for something to be truly &#8220;portable&#8221;, it should be sturdy enough that you aren&#8217;t afraid it will break if you take it around (like the Macbook Air). The battery life on mine is fairly good, I&#8217;ve never had a problem with it running out yet, and I drag it around and surf the internet with it even. I&#8217;d say it does about 3-4 hours, which works fine for my needs, although I&#8217;d expect more on something that&#8217;s supposed to highly portable like this.</p>
<p>Overall, I give it four out of five for that terrible touchpad, and the okay battery life. I&#8217;d recommend this to someone who wants a nice portable secondary laptop, or even as a primary if your needs aren&#8217;t too high.<br />
Rating: 4 / 5</p>
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		<title>Comment on Sony VAIO VGN-NW330F/S 15.5-Inch Laptop by Hector Rodriguez</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6908/comment-page-1#comment-31555</link>
		<dc:creator>Hector Rodriguez</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 18:27:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6908#comment-31555</guid>
		<description>I normally used DELL computer; have a Latitude D620 that is a great laptop and very dependable so I wasn&#039;t very convinced to change for a SONY. My father recommended, so I decide to take the risk.
&lt;br /&gt;I&#039;m some kind of a demanding user, normally work with many windows open, and use a lot of application like Visio, SQL, etc., so need a very power computer.
&lt;br /&gt;The SONY VAIO VGN-NW330F/B gives what promise, I&#039;m very happy with this laptop, and looks very nice. I&#039;m happy with his 4GB of RAM and his 500GB of Hard Drive, work great feel comfortable. 
&lt;br /&gt;I really recommend it.
&lt;br /&gt;
Rating: 5 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I normally used DELL computer; have a Latitude D620 that is a great laptop and very dependable so I wasn&#8217;t very convinced to change for a SONY. My father recommended, so I decide to take the risk.<br />
<br />I&#8217;m some kind of a demanding user, normally work with many windows open, and use a lot of application like Visio, SQL, etc., so need a very power computer.<br />
<br />The SONY VAIO VGN-NW330F/B gives what promise, I&#8217;m very happy with this laptop, and looks very nice. I&#8217;m happy with his 4GB of RAM and his 500GB of Hard Drive, work great feel comfortable.<br />
<br />I really recommend it.<br />
<br />
Rating: 5 / 5</p>
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		<title>Comment on Acer Aspire One AOA150-1126 8.9-Inch Netbook &#8211; White by Wavey Davey</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6913/comment-page-1#comment-31595</link>
		<dc:creator>Wavey Davey</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 18:02:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6913#comment-31595</guid>
		<description>Where to start this review is the question, because I have a LOT to say about it, so I guess I&#039;ll begin by saying, repeating rather, my synopsis: the Acer One 1.6Ghz/1GB/160GB/6-Cell 5700mAh battery feature set gives Acer by far the best, finest, and most versatile, best-performing Netbook being made right now, and that includes a LOT of other netbooks from HP, Lenovo, Toshiba, et al, all of them included! That&#039;s a big, long sentence, with a lot of BANG to it, so let&#039;s start with the interface and go from there.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Acer decided to use Windows XP Home Premium 32-bit for the OS for the Acer One, in all configurations apparently, and they couldn&#039;t have been more right-on, spot-on in fact, in this choice. It&#039;s pretty much fix-me-free by now, with SP3 installed, extremely well sorted-out, trouble and maintenance free, and most of all, it&#039;s fast-booting and takes little overhead from the 1GB of physical RAM that comes in this configuration, with the 160GB SATA II Western Digital (in my case) hard drive.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I heartily recommend one PC program for maintenance of the Windows Registry, and it&#039;s called simply &quot;Registry Mechanic&quot; which you can get over at CNET&#039;s site, as they give it &quot;5 Turcows&quot; rating, the highest they give utility software suites, and if you use Registry Mechanic on a regular basis, certainly after adding/removing any programs, you&#039;ll be 99% to the good in XP Home Premium SP3! 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I am writing this review from an expert&#039;s point of view, trying to not get too technical for all you readers, honestly I am and will do my best there. I&#039;m a certified Mac/Apple Tech, and though I am not an MSC Microsoft Certified Tech at this point, I can pretty much rip apart, fix/repair, and troubleshoot any OS problem on a PC also, including a tech&#039;s worst nightmare, 64-bit Vista problems!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;To give just a couple examples of how nice Windows XP Home Premium SP3 works out on this little netbook would help, so let&#039;s give some. The Acer One boots up in less than 30 seconds from a cold start, and from sleep/hibernation less than 15 seconds, which is sort of miraculous considering all the potential traps, and other obstacles most Windows computers stick in the way of a fast boot process. It also does a nice job of handling multiple programs on a mere 1GB of physical RAM, which would be literally impossible, ludicrously so if it happened to be running any iteration of Vista! 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Acer also ships the One with a minimum of indigenous proprietary software, very little eye candy or &quot;brand candy&quot; either, a nice touch, pretty much limiting that stuff to an Acer &quot;screen saver&quot; program, and the MacAffee Anti-Virus program, which can be quickly and judiciously dispensed with using XP&#039;s default &quot;Add/Install Programs&quot; application. This is a major coup for the Acer consumer, and shows good judgment on their product team&#039;s part, as we don&#039;t have to remove a trial copy of Norton Systemworks, for example, which humbles most computers of any sort with its crazy, stupid, and offensive (!) so-called &quot;integration&quot; into virtually all edgemarks of Windows Vista or XP systems. It&#039;s my favorite &quot;I Hate You&quot; program to knock and warn users against having in their PC&#039;s of any type, and will tell those of you using it now for no fault of your own probably, that your notebook/PC desktop&#039;s performance will increase by a factor of at least 50% if you REMOVE IT from the computer right now, and install something that makes sense in terms of virus, spyware, adware, and a firewall of some sort...something like Trend Micro&#039;s Internet Security program, or maybe AVG for those on a budget. Just anything other than the Norton product/program is a good thing to have in the tank, just a fyi and I&#039;m done with the warning bit.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;So, the OS is an xlnt choice here, I mean for a little netbook you don&#039;t even need XP Pro, just this simple XP Home Premium does fine in this setup, thus Acer earns bonus points for that, a most important item to congratulate them on doing, noteworthy enough to make it the No.1 item I mention in this review.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Acer does give the user a &quot;trial copy&quot; of MS Office 2007 for those who need a WP program, a convenient thing and not a bad choice, but personally I prefer Office 2000 Professional, which I&#039;ve been using in PC&#039;s I own for some 7-8 years now, so I dispensed with the 2007 version, and installed my own Office Pro 2000 suite and took care of those needs. Other than the MacAfee Anti-Virus problem/program, there&#039;s little else to mention that you have to get rid of right off the bat to streamline, smooth, and speed up the netbook&#039;s OS and responsiveness, so kudos to Acer for not burdening the new owner with a ton of BS and crapola as I like to call a manufacturer&#039;s eye candy and &quot;freebies&quot; which are always more trouble than a benefit in PC&#039;s, it turns out.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;With a Mac everything you get is functional and virtually necessary for the machine&#039;s processing and program inventory, while with PC&#039;s they&#039;re always trying to sell you something, clutter up the OS with virtual garbage of one sort or another, so Acer really earns my praise here by not trying to give the user anything except a nice, fast, virtually ready for market netbook instead of a major project, one that needs a lot of coaxing and prior-feeding to make it perform normally, or shall I say exceptionally well versus being a slug in the rug.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The best place to start praise for this netbook in my view is with the hardware choices that Acer made for this little machine, because there are certainly plenty of choices on the PC side to start out with, and they did an exceptional job with the One, choosing everything with care, simplicity, and xlnt performance in mind. First there&#039;s the Intel Atom N270 CPU, the heart of the beast so to speak, and at 1.6Ghz with 533Mhz PC SDRAM along for the ride, the netbook is plenty fast, has a quick, but inexpensive memory ramp-up feature set, another good choice by the maker. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The CPU uses an incredible 10% (yes, read it and remember it) of the potential energy outlay for a comparable AMD, or Intel C2Duo CPU chip/die set, which does two things you should remember: 1) it has very little overhead in terms of battery use, and 2) it generates few heat management problems, which everyone should know and understand is the heart of most notebook/netbook problems. HEAT KILLS CPU&#039;s AND NOTEBOOKs, it&#039;s just that simple to write or say, and the Intel Atom N270 is a miracle of design and functionality that does what many CPU&#039;s would kill or die for, which they&#039;ll never have, and that&#039;s provide a modicum of speed with virtually no footprint of heat, or battery drain! Isn&#039;t that a treat!! I think so, so another xlnt choice by Acer there.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The hardware features a fast 5400RPM SATA II 2.5&quot; 160GB hard drive, which should be plenty large enough for even the most rampant physical space user, and it&#039;s best to note that here 2nd. The SDRAM @ 533Mhz works well with the equally fast system bus, so tasks are handled well even though there&#039;s only 1GB of physical RAM. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The only shortcoming here is that RAM, as it&#039;s NOT user serviceable/accessible, with an Intel netbook chassis design that will allow a maximum of 1.5GB of physical RAM addressable, so even if you want to void your warranty and take it apart and install a 1GB DIMM in that single SDRAM slot (512MB being hard-soldered onto the chassis, and not removable) , to yield 1.5GB of SDRAM, the benefits are questionable. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I would like to, at some point, try out a 2GB DIMM in that slot, and see if the netbook functions and addresses 2.5GB of SDRAM as that would make a lot more sense in terms of increasing the available physical RAM allocation, so when I get in the mood later this month with a weekend-extended off, I&#039;ll take an hour or two to do that exercise, and if successful I&#039;ll update this review accordingly!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Let&#039;s talk for a minute about the netbooks&#039; Wi-Fi (for better words) concepts, and see how it works in practice vs. theory right now. The most important aspect of these netbooks that are out now is the connectivity issue(s), because certainly everyone expects one to work wirelessly out of the box! And so it is with the Acer One&#039;s setup. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The network adapter is an Atheros AR5007EG &quot;A, B &amp; G&quot; (notice, no &quot;N&quot; availability) unit, and it&#039;s got a simple physical switch on the front of the netbook for turning it off and on, and I might mention that it&#039;s switched &quot;ON&quot; at the factory, so the moment you fire up the Acer One it&#039;s going to be searching for a wireless network, and will find one/them quickly... that is it will hierarchically list them in order of strength and logical importance in the Network Control Panel without you prompting it to do so. That&#039;s a nice feature, and Acer scores points here also.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;If you&#039;re using a typical user&#039;s WPA-TKIP network encryption vs an &quot;open&quot; or unprotected network at home/office, you&#039;ll be prompted for the password once the notebook is fired up past the User Configuration Screens of XP Home Premium, and once that password is entered check the box for &quot;remember me&quot;, and you&#039;re set as far as connecting to your local wireless network from then on. On a scale of 1-10 for connectivity, I&#039;m giving the Atheros network adapter a solid 9 for performance, if you wondered about it. It picked up not only my network here at my home office, which includes 8 other Macs and PC&#039;s of various sorts, but it also scored my 3 neighbors&#039; networks also, without any problems. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;So Acer&#039;s placement and structure of the physical part of the adapter is good also, ie the &quot;antenna&quot; is routed through the little chassis strategically, apparently (I have yet to discover it by taking it apart, but will soon!), and it&#039;s a strong network performer, which is essential in a notebook/netbook.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I haven&#039;t taken the Acer One on an outside trip yet, though we will definitely be using it for travel instead of my tried (read tired also) and true Apple iBook G3, vintage 2002 @ 600Mhz G3 territory with a 12&quot; screen vs. the Acer One&#039;s 8.9&quot; widescreen LCD display, so I can&#039;t comment on its ability to pick up outside Wi-Fi &#039;HotSpots&#039; but I&#039;ll betcha it&#039;s just fine in that regard. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Now we come to the details, and they are the best and most fun parts of the Acer One, so here goes...
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The 3 USB 2.0 ports are a killer connectivity system (ie very very good!), with twins on the right side of the chassis, and a single on the left side, along with an Ethernet port, plus a VGA portal for extended desktop duty, since the Intel Mobile 945 Express graphics chip will support an external monitor, a very nice feature if you want to do a presentation with PowerPoint via a large VGA LCD display, or perhaps hook it up to a larger screen for a slide show at work, or for friends and family during the holidays! Very versatile feature set here!!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Also of import are the twin card reader slots, the left side being the one for an SD/SDHC card (yup, it WILL read SDHC cards, no limit as to size AFAIK), the right side slot for everything else, MMC, Memory Stick Plus, etc etc...just no CompactCards that&#039;s about all it doesn&#039;t provide for, so you Nikon/Canon folks will have to use an adapter and make do with that! As for the network switch setup, the switch is on the front, but the LED is on the top surface where the keyboard is, so nicely done, Acer.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The power port for the AC adapter is on the left side, and it&#039;s not an ergonomically quiescent system like Apple&#039;s &quot;Mag-Safe&quot; system, and you CAN rip it out of the Acer One by tripping on the cord and potentially damaging the netbook, so the usual cautions about the AC adapter apply here...it&#039;s NOT an Apple product, typical PC stuff here with the power port/battery charging mechanism. I wish PC manufacturers would learn their lessons about this intimate subject, but they don&#039;t, or won&#039;t, as I can&#039;t think of a PC notebook with a truly ergonomic AC adapter port offhand. Just be careful with this part of the Acer One, and all will be good to go!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;That pretty much covers the feature set and ports, so to wrap this up I&#039;ll mention a couple other items and be done with this review in a flash, I promise!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Synaptic Pointing Device (trackpad in AppleSpeak) is easy to master, if you&#039;re not using an externally driven laser/USB mini-mouse like we do for pointing duty (we chose a Logitech V220 for this notebook at Amazon.com for about $25 shipped, a truly superior laser mini-mouse IMO, and one I&#039;ve grown fond of for use with my &quot;normal&quot; Acer laptop, a bit dated, but still useful 5920-6727 15.4&quot; widescreen GemStone Chassis unit). The trackpad has the normal right and left side clickables to it, it&#039;s infinitely adjustable for touch and speed via the Windows XP &quot;Mice and...&quot; control panel, and it works well without using an external USB/laser mouse, as there are times (like when laying in bed doing some late-night web surfing with the Acer One) when an external mouse is superfluous and impossible to use.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The keyboard takes a bit of getting used to to be fast on it, but fast you can be with a little adaptation, and if your hands aren&#039;t too big to make such things impossible. It&#039;s physically about 60% the size of the &quot;normal&quot; keyboard on a regular laptop, lacks the number system keys totally (they just aren&#039;t there), but of course has Page Up, Down, Side to Side, full function keys from F1 through F12 for controlling the boot process, initiating a file recovery or System Recovery exercise, whatever...it&#039;s all there for that sort of thing, so score more points for Acer One there!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Touch? On the keyboard, 1-10, 10 being the best possible, I&#039;m going to give it a 7.5, because once you&#039;re acclimated to using it via its small size, the feel could be a little better IMO, there&#039;s a definite &quot;click&quot; and &quot;clack&quot; to the keyboard strokes, but of course nothing like a vane-type keyboard from the old days...just a subtle reminder that you&#039;re not using a $2000+ notebook&#039;s keyboard, and it IS a lot smaller physically than a normal keyboard, takes some getting used to for speedy typing, and judicious and deft use of your fingers lest you be constantly making mistakes.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The LCD screen, at a resolution of 1024x600  pixels (natively so) is plenty big with the widescreen aspect ratio working for the Acer One to yield a much &quot;bigger&quot; feel and view, with outside viewing from odd angles possible, but certainly less so than with a full sized screen. With 32-bit color quality picked (highest possible), it&#039;s clear, crisp, clean and has xlnt definition, even with the smaller fonts required (or shall I say necessary) with an 8.9&quot; diagonal sized LCD display. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I wouldn&#039;t want to do a term paper on the Acer One, but for nominal typing and WP work, and certainly net surfing and keyboard fun, the LCD display works well. I&#039;m giving the Acer One a solid 9 out of 10 score for the display, which is by the way, nicely set off, and back from the edges of the frame, but not too distantly so, which is a good way or designing in some protection for the display, while still leaving plenty of room for the ports of a WebCam and a mono microphone, the Acer &quot;Crystal Brite&quot; (&quot;Crystal Eye&quot; Webcam!) technology setup, standard fare in their products if you&#039;re at all familiar with how Acer makes a laptop.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The webcam and microphone do work great, of course, as you would expect them to, but I wouldn&#039;t want to use any pictures taken with the little webcam for Photoshop work, for example. It&#039;s plenty good for local use and net use, and I&#039;ve used it for conferencing with Skype, and Yahoo Messenger clients with successful results in both cases.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Finally, there&#039;s the incredible performance of the 6-cell battery with this netbook&#039;s Intel Atom CPU, and it yields up to 5-6+ hours or MORE time on the machine, if you maximize Energy Saver settings, allow CPU cycling, etc etc, and really squeeze out the last drop from the tank. I was totally and completely surprised when I installed my favorite PC laptop battery monitor system on the Acer One, Embtech&#039;s EmBatPower utility, and found out that the Lithium Ion 6-cell battery has 5700+ mAh of power reserve built in! WOW! That&#039;s a big battery for even a normal laptop! And in the Acer One it just kills any competition in the &quot;last a long time&quot; department!! 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The Acer One scores 11 on battery performance, OFFSCALE TOTALLY!! You just can&#039;t buy a more CPU efficient, long lasting battery/laptop/netbook battery system than the 6-cell system in the Acer One. It&#039;s the meat and potatoes of all battery systems I&#039;ve even come across, and I&#039;ve seen a few that claimed to have 5-6-hour capacity, but never delivered. THIS ONE DOES!!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Construction yields a solid 9.5 on the Acer One, as the netbook&#039;s LCD screen hinge system is very heavy-duty, and should last a long long time even with severe/heavy use, has a nice &quot;feel&quot; to it in terms of being strong and viable, it&#039;s not a weak point of the netbook where with others it can be and is a weakness. The materials for a sub-$500 netbook are supreme, the feature set is almost if not perfect (only lacks FireWire, if you care to be ultra-critical about this sort of thing!), it just seems to &quot;all be there&quot; with the Acer One netbook.
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&lt;br /&gt;Overall, I&#039;m giving the Acer One 5 stars, or 10 out of 10 if you want the extended version of a rating, for overall performance, feature set, battery performance/life, construction, and that xlnt Crystal Brite Acer 8.9&quot; LCD widescreen display with its 1024x600 pixel size. I like everything about the Acer One, especially the sub-$400 pricing that&#039;s available at certain places on the &#039;Net these days, for this particular configuration, the top of the line now. 
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&lt;br /&gt;Have I covered everything? Geez, I hope so! The only thing I haven&#039;t mentioned is the light weight, being 894 grams if you&#039;re counting it that way, no battery, or 1223 grams WITH the 6-cell battery in place...still well South of 3 pounds! Trust me, that&#039;s its accurate weight, as I just used my xlnt Radio Shack USB Scale on the Acer One, and double and triple checked how much it weighs. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I can&#039;t tell you how impressive this netbook is, and it&#039;s obvious why it&#039;s the No.1 selling computer of ANY TYPE OR KIND at Amazon.com right now, why it&#039;s stealing business from every quarter of the market. Acer can hardly keep up production to supply the demand for the darn thing, it&#039;s so popular right now! So if you want it all, &quot;the works&quot; in a netbook, there is no substitute: get the Acer One in this configuration, with the 6-cell battery, the 160GB SATA II hard drive, 1GB SDRAM, and all those standard features that are killing the competition. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;From a tech&#039;s viewpoint this is a great system to be able to service, it&#039;s a simple one to take apart and get to the important pieces (don&#039;t tell Acer I said that just yet!), and the &#039;modular&#039; chassis gets a &quot;10&quot; too! From the consumer&#039;s viewpoint there is no finer bargain in the marketplace than the Acer One &quot;LU.S050B.133&quot;, Model ZG5, configuration (the one off the product&#039;s box). 
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&lt;br /&gt;I&#039;ve written a LOT of reviews over the years for various computer systems and products, but I cannot emphasize enough how good a product this is, especially compared to all the rest of the netbooks out there for sale. 
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&lt;br /&gt;The Acer One ZG5 is the No.1 selling computer of ANY SIZE, TYPE, or CONFIGURATION in the world right now, and there&#039;s a good reason why. Acer did their homework, found all the right pieces to the puzzle the consumer wanted in a netbook, and here&#039;s the result! Get one now, or get one ASAP, because you&#039;re missing out on all the fun, all the goodness anyone could have possibly built into a netbook in the year 2008-9.  
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&lt;br /&gt;I predict that Acer will keep making these bulletproof little market-killers until the sun stops shining in the West and its competition is crushed even further than it already is. Good Luck to HP, Toshiba, Dell, the whole lot of you other PC manufacturers, because this is the King of the Hill, and you&#039;d best get used to looking up at the new No.1 computer maker in the world, Acer and the Acer One!
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&lt;br /&gt;ADDENDUM 01-20-2009:
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&lt;br /&gt;I was up late working on a hardware project of very complex capacities one night last month (Dec), and a thought hit me: I had 2GB (1 GB DIMMs) of Apple-Spec OEM SamSung PC 6400/800Mhz SDRAM (SODIMMs) sitting in my &quot;extra RAM&quot; box, right next to my workstation&#039;s chair where I sit at the controls of 2 PC&#039;s, a Dual Core G5 PowerMac 2.3Ghz running a FirmTek SeriTek 2eEN4 RAID 0 configuration (bootable RAID), and my trusty 24&quot; Intel 3.06Ghz iMac, which is my main photo editor. Interesting thought! 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;So I decided to tear the little Acer One apart right then and there, at 4AM or so, and put on my grounding cable system, plugged myself into the wall socket (literally, that&#039;s how it works!) to complete the anti-static treatment, found my trusty jeweler&#039;s mini-screw-driver and TORX sets, and set them next to me, and in about 10 minutes I had carefully, quickly taken the One apart down to the logic board, bare as a naked lady, ribbon cables for the trackpad, LCD display, and keyboard carefully taped down where they could do no harm. I pulled the 512MB SODIMM out of its carrier on the underside of the double-tiered logic board setup, carefully measured it with a micro-micrometer, measured the Apple 1GB SODIMM, and it was a match! I had already looked up the specs of the Acer SODIMM I had removed, and its registry and buffers were compatible with the Apple SODIMM, so in it went! Snap! The carrier accepted the Apple RAM easily, and I had the netbook back together in about 20 minutes, taking my time and not over-torquing the mini-screws on the chassis, especially those connecting into ABS plastic! 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;If you&#039;re careful, ground yourself 120% before you start working, and do NOT get up and move around while you&#039;re working to generate any static electricity, and DO NOT DROP components onto each other, or hard surfaces, you too can do the above exercise in a few short minutes. It&#039;s really not too hard, nothing complex about it, just BE CAREFUL with those 25 or so mini-screws you&#039;ve got to remove, draw pictures if necessary about which ones go where when you disassemble the One, so you&#039;ll remember where they all fit when you re-assemble it. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Cute netbook though! And easy easy easy to take apart, and get to the important things, mainly the RAM and the hard drive, should you ever want to replace the OEM HD with something larger, say a Samsung F1 Spinpoint H6 500GB SATA II 2.5&quot; HD, which I&#039;ll do next to the Acer One...
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Anyway, the good news: it all worked out just great. The Acer One *LIKES* the Apple DIMM a lot, and is performing extremely well with the higher-clocked SODIMM installed. 1.5GB of RAM is a huge improvement over 1GB of RAM in the Acer One, as you&#039;re increasing the physical RAM by 50%, so expect BIG performance increases, faster boot times, more application-friendly OS windows for multiple-program-open situations, etc etc. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I have found that the One cannot address a 2GB DIMM under any circumstances, so don&#039;t try it if you were thinking about it...
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;The logic board&#039;s BIOS just is not able to deal with the high bandwidth a 2GB DIMM would generate, so until and/if Acer decides to use a different BIOS arrangement on the logic board, 1.5GB is the limit on RAM in the Aspire One netbook series. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Once more however, I will warn those of you who have never taken apart a laptop to be very cautious, and careful, and deliberate, and operate in S L O W M O T I O N when you are doing this installation...just use common sense, keep track of those mini-screws, one by one if necessary with a diagram drawn as to where they all go, because some ARE different than others, and you must re-assemble the One with the correct screws in the correct sequence, or there will be problems, and we don&#039;t want that do we?
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I simply wanted to update this Review with the news that 1.5GB of physical RAM in the Acer One is a good thing to have, and if you know what you are doing, you are NOT limited to using a 533Mhz SODIMM of PC 5300 SDRAM. If the buffers, timing, and registry sequences are good to go with a PC 6400 800Mhz SODIMM, it will work in the Acer One, certainly at least as good as with a PC 5300 533Mhz SODIMM. That&#039;s just a FYI should you happen to have any Apple-spec 1GB DIMMs laying around from an update/upgrade to an Intel iMac, Mac Mini, or MacBook of a certain vintage, as those type of 1GB DIMMs will work perfectly fine in the Acer One, and I shall testify accordingly if asked about it!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I don&#039;t know if there are any actual benefits to running higher-clocked SODIMMs in the Acer One&#039;s logic board/chassis arrangement, but what the hey, I have proved it possible to use higher-spec&#039;d SODIMMs in the Acer One with success, my One using that SODIMM for some 5 weeks and counting now.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;You know what, tech work is pretty interesting some times, and this is one of them...I got to use some spare parts that were sitting around here doing nothing at all, and I got to save a little $$$ in the deal too...
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Enjoy your Acer One, and remember one thing about this Acer product that IS important: it is apparently very &quot;flexible&quot; and easy to work with in terms of upgrading/updating the components inside the box. Be very, very careful should any of you attempt this exercise, use a correct guide/instruction set from a reliable source, specifically on the netbook you own...as there ARE differences between the different models of the Acer One netbook, difference INSIDE of the chassis that could throw you a curve ball if you&#039;re not acting wisely.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Wavey Davey, 01-20-2009 
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Rating: 5 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Where to start this review is the question, because I have a LOT to say about it, so I guess I&#8217;ll begin by saying, repeating rather, my synopsis: the Acer One 1.6Ghz/1GB/160GB/6-Cell 5700mAh battery feature set gives Acer by far the best, finest, and most versatile, best-performing Netbook being made right now, and that includes a LOT of other netbooks from HP, Lenovo, Toshiba, et al, all of them included! That&#8217;s a big, long sentence, with a lot of BANG to it, so let&#8217;s start with the interface and go from there.</p>
<p>Acer decided to use Windows XP Home Premium 32-bit for the OS for the Acer One, in all configurations apparently, and they couldn&#8217;t have been more right-on, spot-on in fact, in this choice. It&#8217;s pretty much fix-me-free by now, with SP3 installed, extremely well sorted-out, trouble and maintenance free, and most of all, it&#8217;s fast-booting and takes little overhead from the 1GB of physical RAM that comes in this configuration, with the 160GB SATA II Western Digital (in my case) hard drive.</p>
<p>I heartily recommend one PC program for maintenance of the Windows Registry, and it&#8217;s called simply &#8220;Registry Mechanic&#8221; which you can get over at CNET&#8217;s site, as they give it &#8220;5 Turcows&#8221; rating, the highest they give utility software suites, and if you use Registry Mechanic on a regular basis, certainly after adding/removing any programs, you&#8217;ll be 99% to the good in XP Home Premium SP3! </p>
<p>I am writing this review from an expert&#8217;s point of view, trying to not get too technical for all you readers, honestly I am and will do my best there. I&#8217;m a certified Mac/Apple Tech, and though I am not an MSC Microsoft Certified Tech at this point, I can pretty much rip apart, fix/repair, and troubleshoot any OS problem on a PC also, including a tech&#8217;s worst nightmare, 64-bit Vista problems!</p>
<p>To give just a couple examples of how nice Windows XP Home Premium SP3 works out on this little netbook would help, so let&#8217;s give some. The Acer One boots up in less than 30 seconds from a cold start, and from sleep/hibernation less than 15 seconds, which is sort of miraculous considering all the potential traps, and other obstacles most Windows computers stick in the way of a fast boot process. It also does a nice job of handling multiple programs on a mere 1GB of physical RAM, which would be literally impossible, ludicrously so if it happened to be running any iteration of Vista! </p>
<p>Acer also ships the One with a minimum of indigenous proprietary software, very little eye candy or &#8220;brand candy&#8221; either, a nice touch, pretty much limiting that stuff to an Acer &#8220;screen saver&#8221; program, and the MacAffee Anti-Virus program, which can be quickly and judiciously dispensed with using XP&#8217;s default &#8220;Add/Install Programs&#8221; application. This is a major coup for the Acer consumer, and shows good judgment on their product team&#8217;s part, as we don&#8217;t have to remove a trial copy of Norton Systemworks, for example, which humbles most computers of any sort with its crazy, stupid, and offensive (!) so-called &#8220;integration&#8221; into virtually all edgemarks of Windows Vista or XP systems. It&#8217;s my favorite &#8220;I Hate You&#8221; program to knock and warn users against having in their PC&#8217;s of any type, and will tell those of you using it now for no fault of your own probably, that your notebook/PC desktop&#8217;s performance will increase by a factor of at least 50% if you REMOVE IT from the computer right now, and install something that makes sense in terms of virus, spyware, adware, and a firewall of some sort&#8230;something like Trend Micro&#8217;s Internet Security program, or maybe AVG for those on a budget. Just anything other than the Norton product/program is a good thing to have in the tank, just a fyi and I&#8217;m done with the warning bit.</p>
<p>So, the OS is an xlnt choice here, I mean for a little netbook you don&#8217;t even need XP Pro, just this simple XP Home Premium does fine in this setup, thus Acer earns bonus points for that, a most important item to congratulate them on doing, noteworthy enough to make it the No.1 item I mention in this review.</p>
<p>Acer does give the user a &#8220;trial copy&#8221; of MS Office 2007 for those who need a WP program, a convenient thing and not a bad choice, but personally I prefer Office 2000 Professional, which I&#8217;ve been using in PC&#8217;s I own for some 7-8 years now, so I dispensed with the 2007 version, and installed my own Office Pro 2000 suite and took care of those needs. Other than the MacAfee Anti-Virus problem/program, there&#8217;s little else to mention that you have to get rid of right off the bat to streamline, smooth, and speed up the netbook&#8217;s OS and responsiveness, so kudos to Acer for not burdening the new owner with a ton of BS and crapola as I like to call a manufacturer&#8217;s eye candy and &#8220;freebies&#8221; which are always more trouble than a benefit in PC&#8217;s, it turns out.</p>
<p>With a Mac everything you get is functional and virtually necessary for the machine&#8217;s processing and program inventory, while with PC&#8217;s they&#8217;re always trying to sell you something, clutter up the OS with virtual garbage of one sort or another, so Acer really earns my praise here by not trying to give the user anything except a nice, fast, virtually ready for market netbook instead of a major project, one that needs a lot of coaxing and prior-feeding to make it perform normally, or shall I say exceptionally well versus being a slug in the rug.</p>
<p>The best place to start praise for this netbook in my view is with the hardware choices that Acer made for this little machine, because there are certainly plenty of choices on the PC side to start out with, and they did an exceptional job with the One, choosing everything with care, simplicity, and xlnt performance in mind. First there&#8217;s the Intel Atom N270 CPU, the heart of the beast so to speak, and at 1.6Ghz with 533Mhz PC SDRAM along for the ride, the netbook is plenty fast, has a quick, but inexpensive memory ramp-up feature set, another good choice by the maker. </p>
<p>The CPU uses an incredible 10% (yes, read it and remember it) of the potential energy outlay for a comparable AMD, or Intel C2Duo CPU chip/die set, which does two things you should remember: 1) it has very little overhead in terms of battery use, and 2) it generates few heat management problems, which everyone should know and understand is the heart of most notebook/netbook problems. HEAT KILLS CPU&#8217;s AND NOTEBOOKs, it&#8217;s just that simple to write or say, and the Intel Atom N270 is a miracle of design and functionality that does what many CPU&#8217;s would kill or die for, which they&#8217;ll never have, and that&#8217;s provide a modicum of speed with virtually no footprint of heat, or battery drain! Isn&#8217;t that a treat!! I think so, so another xlnt choice by Acer there.</p>
<p>The hardware features a fast 5400RPM SATA II 2.5&#8243; 160GB hard drive, which should be plenty large enough for even the most rampant physical space user, and it&#8217;s best to note that here 2nd. The SDRAM @ 533Mhz works well with the equally fast system bus, so tasks are handled well even though there&#8217;s only 1GB of physical RAM. </p>
<p>The only shortcoming here is that RAM, as it&#8217;s NOT user serviceable/accessible, with an Intel netbook chassis design that will allow a maximum of 1.5GB of physical RAM addressable, so even if you want to void your warranty and take it apart and install a 1GB DIMM in that single SDRAM slot (512MB being hard-soldered onto the chassis, and not removable) , to yield 1.5GB of SDRAM, the benefits are questionable. </p>
<p>I would like to, at some point, try out a 2GB DIMM in that slot, and see if the netbook functions and addresses 2.5GB of SDRAM as that would make a lot more sense in terms of increasing the available physical RAM allocation, so when I get in the mood later this month with a weekend-extended off, I&#8217;ll take an hour or two to do that exercise, and if successful I&#8217;ll update this review accordingly!</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s talk for a minute about the netbooks&#8217; Wi-Fi (for better words) concepts, and see how it works in practice vs. theory right now. The most important aspect of these netbooks that are out now is the connectivity issue(s), because certainly everyone expects one to work wirelessly out of the box! And so it is with the Acer One&#8217;s setup. </p>
<p>The network adapter is an Atheros AR5007EG &#8220;A, B &#038; G&#8221; (notice, no &#8220;N&#8221; availability) unit, and it&#8217;s got a simple physical switch on the front of the netbook for turning it off and on, and I might mention that it&#8217;s switched &#8220;ON&#8221; at the factory, so the moment you fire up the Acer One it&#8217;s going to be searching for a wireless network, and will find one/them quickly&#8230; that is it will hierarchically list them in order of strength and logical importance in the Network Control Panel without you prompting it to do so. That&#8217;s a nice feature, and Acer scores points here also.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re using a typical user&#8217;s WPA-TKIP network encryption vs an &#8220;open&#8221; or unprotected network at home/office, you&#8217;ll be prompted for the password once the notebook is fired up past the User Configuration Screens of XP Home Premium, and once that password is entered check the box for &#8220;remember me&#8221;, and you&#8217;re set as far as connecting to your local wireless network from then on. On a scale of 1-10 for connectivity, I&#8217;m giving the Atheros network adapter a solid 9 for performance, if you wondered about it. It picked up not only my network here at my home office, which includes 8 other Macs and PC&#8217;s of various sorts, but it also scored my 3 neighbors&#8217; networks also, without any problems. </p>
<p>So Acer&#8217;s placement and structure of the physical part of the adapter is good also, ie the &#8220;antenna&#8221; is routed through the little chassis strategically, apparently (I have yet to discover it by taking it apart, but will soon!), and it&#8217;s a strong network performer, which is essential in a notebook/netbook.</p>
<p>I haven&#8217;t taken the Acer One on an outside trip yet, though we will definitely be using it for travel instead of my tried (read tired also) and true Apple iBook G3, vintage 2002 @ 600Mhz G3 territory with a 12&#8243; screen vs. the Acer One&#8217;s 8.9&#8243; widescreen LCD display, so I can&#8217;t comment on its ability to pick up outside Wi-Fi &#8216;HotSpots&#8217; but I&#8217;ll betcha it&#8217;s just fine in that regard. </p>
<p>Now we come to the details, and they are the best and most fun parts of the Acer One, so here goes&#8230;</p>
<p>The 3 USB 2.0 ports are a killer connectivity system (ie very very good!), with twins on the right side of the chassis, and a single on the left side, along with an Ethernet port, plus a VGA portal for extended desktop duty, since the Intel Mobile 945 Express graphics chip will support an external monitor, a very nice feature if you want to do a presentation with PowerPoint via a large VGA LCD display, or perhaps hook it up to a larger screen for a slide show at work, or for friends and family during the holidays! Very versatile feature set here!!</p>
<p>Also of import are the twin card reader slots, the left side being the one for an SD/SDHC card (yup, it WILL read SDHC cards, no limit as to size AFAIK), the right side slot for everything else, MMC, Memory Stick Plus, etc etc&#8230;just no CompactCards that&#8217;s about all it doesn&#8217;t provide for, so you Nikon/Canon folks will have to use an adapter and make do with that! As for the network switch setup, the switch is on the front, but the LED is on the top surface where the keyboard is, so nicely done, Acer.</p>
<p>The power port for the AC adapter is on the left side, and it&#8217;s not an ergonomically quiescent system like Apple&#8217;s &#8220;Mag-Safe&#8221; system, and you CAN rip it out of the Acer One by tripping on the cord and potentially damaging the netbook, so the usual cautions about the AC adapter apply here&#8230;it&#8217;s NOT an Apple product, typical PC stuff here with the power port/battery charging mechanism. I wish PC manufacturers would learn their lessons about this intimate subject, but they don&#8217;t, or won&#8217;t, as I can&#8217;t think of a PC notebook with a truly ergonomic AC adapter port offhand. Just be careful with this part of the Acer One, and all will be good to go!</p>
<p>That pretty much covers the feature set and ports, so to wrap this up I&#8217;ll mention a couple other items and be done with this review in a flash, I promise!</p>
<p>The Synaptic Pointing Device (trackpad in AppleSpeak) is easy to master, if you&#8217;re not using an externally driven laser/USB mini-mouse like we do for pointing duty (we chose a Logitech V220 for this notebook at Amazon.com for about $25 shipped, a truly superior laser mini-mouse IMO, and one I&#8217;ve grown fond of for use with my &#8220;normal&#8221; Acer laptop, a bit dated, but still useful 5920-6727 15.4&#8243; widescreen GemStone Chassis unit). The trackpad has the normal right and left side clickables to it, it&#8217;s infinitely adjustable for touch and speed via the Windows XP &#8220;Mice and&#8230;&#8221; control panel, and it works well without using an external USB/laser mouse, as there are times (like when laying in bed doing some late-night web surfing with the Acer One) when an external mouse is superfluous and impossible to use.</p>
<p>The keyboard takes a bit of getting used to to be fast on it, but fast you can be with a little adaptation, and if your hands aren&#8217;t too big to make such things impossible. It&#8217;s physically about 60% the size of the &#8220;normal&#8221; keyboard on a regular laptop, lacks the number system keys totally (they just aren&#8217;t there), but of course has Page Up, Down, Side to Side, full function keys from F1 through F12 for controlling the boot process, initiating a file recovery or System Recovery exercise, whatever&#8230;it&#8217;s all there for that sort of thing, so score more points for Acer One there!</p>
<p>Touch? On the keyboard, 1-10, 10 being the best possible, I&#8217;m going to give it a 7.5, because once you&#8217;re acclimated to using it via its small size, the feel could be a little better IMO, there&#8217;s a definite &#8220;click&#8221; and &#8220;clack&#8221; to the keyboard strokes, but of course nothing like a vane-type keyboard from the old days&#8230;just a subtle reminder that you&#8217;re not using a $2000+ notebook&#8217;s keyboard, and it IS a lot smaller physically than a normal keyboard, takes some getting used to for speedy typing, and judicious and deft use of your fingers lest you be constantly making mistakes.</p>
<p>The LCD screen, at a resolution of 1024&#215;600  pixels (natively so) is plenty big with the widescreen aspect ratio working for the Acer One to yield a much &#8220;bigger&#8221; feel and view, with outside viewing from odd angles possible, but certainly less so than with a full sized screen. With 32-bit color quality picked (highest possible), it&#8217;s clear, crisp, clean and has xlnt definition, even with the smaller fonts required (or shall I say necessary) with an 8.9&#8243; diagonal sized LCD display. </p>
<p>I wouldn&#8217;t want to do a term paper on the Acer One, but for nominal typing and WP work, and certainly net surfing and keyboard fun, the LCD display works well. I&#8217;m giving the Acer One a solid 9 out of 10 score for the display, which is by the way, nicely set off, and back from the edges of the frame, but not too distantly so, which is a good way or designing in some protection for the display, while still leaving plenty of room for the ports of a WebCam and a mono microphone, the Acer &#8220;Crystal Brite&#8221; (&#8221;Crystal Eye&#8221; Webcam!) technology setup, standard fare in their products if you&#8217;re at all familiar with how Acer makes a laptop.</p>
<p>The webcam and microphone do work great, of course, as you would expect them to, but I wouldn&#8217;t want to use any pictures taken with the little webcam for Photoshop work, for example. It&#8217;s plenty good for local use and net use, and I&#8217;ve used it for conferencing with Skype, and Yahoo Messenger clients with successful results in both cases.</p>
<p>Finally, there&#8217;s the incredible performance of the 6-cell battery with this netbook&#8217;s Intel Atom CPU, and it yields up to 5-6+ hours or MORE time on the machine, if you maximize Energy Saver settings, allow CPU cycling, etc etc, and really squeeze out the last drop from the tank. I was totally and completely surprised when I installed my favorite PC laptop battery monitor system on the Acer One, Embtech&#8217;s EmBatPower utility, and found out that the Lithium Ion 6-cell battery has 5700+ mAh of power reserve built in! WOW! That&#8217;s a big battery for even a normal laptop! And in the Acer One it just kills any competition in the &#8220;last a long time&#8221; department!! </p>
<p>The Acer One scores 11 on battery performance, OFFSCALE TOTALLY!! You just can&#8217;t buy a more CPU efficient, long lasting battery/laptop/netbook battery system than the 6-cell system in the Acer One. It&#8217;s the meat and potatoes of all battery systems I&#8217;ve even come across, and I&#8217;ve seen a few that claimed to have 5-6-hour capacity, but never delivered. THIS ONE DOES!!</p>
<p>Construction yields a solid 9.5 on the Acer One, as the netbook&#8217;s LCD screen hinge system is very heavy-duty, and should last a long long time even with severe/heavy use, has a nice &#8220;feel&#8221; to it in terms of being strong and viable, it&#8217;s not a weak point of the netbook where with others it can be and is a weakness. The materials for a sub-$500 netbook are supreme, the feature set is almost if not perfect (only lacks FireWire, if you care to be ultra-critical about this sort of thing!), it just seems to &#8220;all be there&#8221; with the Acer One netbook.</p>
<p>Overall, I&#8217;m giving the Acer One 5 stars, or 10 out of 10 if you want the extended version of a rating, for overall performance, feature set, battery performance/life, construction, and that xlnt Crystal Brite Acer 8.9&#8243; LCD widescreen display with its 1024&#215;600 pixel size. I like everything about the Acer One, especially the sub-$400 pricing that&#8217;s available at certain places on the &#8216;Net these days, for this particular configuration, the top of the line now. </p>
<p>Have I covered everything? Geez, I hope so! The only thing I haven&#8217;t mentioned is the light weight, being 894 grams if you&#8217;re counting it that way, no battery, or 1223 grams WITH the 6-cell battery in place&#8230;still well South of 3 pounds! Trust me, that&#8217;s its accurate weight, as I just used my xlnt Radio Shack USB Scale on the Acer One, and double and triple checked how much it weighs. </p>
<p>I can&#8217;t tell you how impressive this netbook is, and it&#8217;s obvious why it&#8217;s the No.1 selling computer of ANY TYPE OR KIND at Amazon.com right now, why it&#8217;s stealing business from every quarter of the market. Acer can hardly keep up production to supply the demand for the darn thing, it&#8217;s so popular right now! So if you want it all, &#8220;the works&#8221; in a netbook, there is no substitute: get the Acer One in this configuration, with the 6-cell battery, the 160GB SATA II hard drive, 1GB SDRAM, and all those standard features that are killing the competition. </p>
<p>From a tech&#8217;s viewpoint this is a great system to be able to service, it&#8217;s a simple one to take apart and get to the important pieces (don&#8217;t tell Acer I said that just yet!), and the &#8216;modular&#8217; chassis gets a &#8220;10&#8243; too! From the consumer&#8217;s viewpoint there is no finer bargain in the marketplace than the Acer One &#8220;LU.S050B.133&#8243;, Model ZG5, configuration (the one off the product&#8217;s box). </p>
<p>I&#8217;ve written a LOT of reviews over the years for various computer systems and products, but I cannot emphasize enough how good a product this is, especially compared to all the rest of the netbooks out there for sale. </p>
<p>The Acer One ZG5 is the No.1 selling computer of ANY SIZE, TYPE, or CONFIGURATION in the world right now, and there&#8217;s a good reason why. Acer did their homework, found all the right pieces to the puzzle the consumer wanted in a netbook, and here&#8217;s the result! Get one now, or get one ASAP, because you&#8217;re missing out on all the fun, all the goodness anyone could have possibly built into a netbook in the year 2008-9.  </p>
<p>I predict that Acer will keep making these bulletproof little market-killers until the sun stops shining in the West and its competition is crushed even further than it already is. Good Luck to HP, Toshiba, Dell, the whole lot of you other PC manufacturers, because this is the King of the Hill, and you&#8217;d best get used to looking up at the new No.1 computer maker in the world, Acer and the Acer One!</p>
<p>ADDENDUM 01-20-2009:</p>
<p>I was up late working on a hardware project of very complex capacities one night last month (Dec), and a thought hit me: I had 2GB (1 GB DIMMs) of Apple-Spec OEM SamSung PC 6400/800Mhz SDRAM (SODIMMs) sitting in my &#8220;extra RAM&#8221; box, right next to my workstation&#8217;s chair where I sit at the controls of 2 PC&#8217;s, a Dual Core G5 PowerMac 2.3Ghz running a FirmTek SeriTek 2eEN4 RAID 0 configuration (bootable RAID), and my trusty 24&#8243; Intel 3.06Ghz iMac, which is my main photo editor. Interesting thought! </p>
<p>So I decided to tear the little Acer One apart right then and there, at 4AM or so, and put on my grounding cable system, plugged myself into the wall socket (literally, that&#8217;s how it works!) to complete the anti-static treatment, found my trusty jeweler&#8217;s mini-screw-driver and TORX sets, and set them next to me, and in about 10 minutes I had carefully, quickly taken the One apart down to the logic board, bare as a naked lady, ribbon cables for the trackpad, LCD display, and keyboard carefully taped down where they could do no harm. I pulled the 512MB SODIMM out of its carrier on the underside of the double-tiered logic board setup, carefully measured it with a micro-micrometer, measured the Apple 1GB SODIMM, and it was a match! I had already looked up the specs of the Acer SODIMM I had removed, and its registry and buffers were compatible with the Apple SODIMM, so in it went! Snap! The carrier accepted the Apple RAM easily, and I had the netbook back together in about 20 minutes, taking my time and not over-torquing the mini-screws on the chassis, especially those connecting into ABS plastic! </p>
<p>If you&#8217;re careful, ground yourself 120% before you start working, and do NOT get up and move around while you&#8217;re working to generate any static electricity, and DO NOT DROP components onto each other, or hard surfaces, you too can do the above exercise in a few short minutes. It&#8217;s really not too hard, nothing complex about it, just BE CAREFUL with those 25 or so mini-screws you&#8217;ve got to remove, draw pictures if necessary about which ones go where when you disassemble the One, so you&#8217;ll remember where they all fit when you re-assemble it. </p>
<p>Cute netbook though! And easy easy easy to take apart, and get to the important things, mainly the RAM and the hard drive, should you ever want to replace the OEM HD with something larger, say a Samsung F1 Spinpoint H6 500GB SATA II 2.5&#8243; HD, which I&#8217;ll do next to the Acer One&#8230;</p>
<p>Anyway, the good news: it all worked out just great. The Acer One *LIKES* the Apple DIMM a lot, and is performing extremely well with the higher-clocked SODIMM installed. 1.5GB of RAM is a huge improvement over 1GB of RAM in the Acer One, as you&#8217;re increasing the physical RAM by 50%, so expect BIG performance increases, faster boot times, more application-friendly OS windows for multiple-program-open situations, etc etc. </p>
<p>I have found that the One cannot address a 2GB DIMM under any circumstances, so don&#8217;t try it if you were thinking about it&#8230;</p>
<p>The logic board&#8217;s BIOS just is not able to deal with the high bandwidth a 2GB DIMM would generate, so until and/if Acer decides to use a different BIOS arrangement on the logic board, 1.5GB is the limit on RAM in the Aspire One netbook series. </p>
<p>Once more however, I will warn those of you who have never taken apart a laptop to be very cautious, and careful, and deliberate, and operate in S L O W M O T I O N when you are doing this installation&#8230;just use common sense, keep track of those mini-screws, one by one if necessary with a diagram drawn as to where they all go, because some ARE different than others, and you must re-assemble the One with the correct screws in the correct sequence, or there will be problems, and we don&#8217;t want that do we?</p>
<p>I simply wanted to update this Review with the news that 1.5GB of physical RAM in the Acer One is a good thing to have, and if you know what you are doing, you are NOT limited to using a 533Mhz SODIMM of PC 5300 SDRAM. If the buffers, timing, and registry sequences are good to go with a PC 6400 800Mhz SODIMM, it will work in the Acer One, certainly at least as good as with a PC 5300 533Mhz SODIMM. That&#8217;s just a FYI should you happen to have any Apple-spec 1GB DIMMs laying around from an update/upgrade to an Intel iMac, Mac Mini, or MacBook of a certain vintage, as those type of 1GB DIMMs will work perfectly fine in the Acer One, and I shall testify accordingly if asked about it!</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t know if there are any actual benefits to running higher-clocked SODIMMs in the Acer One&#8217;s logic board/chassis arrangement, but what the hey, I have proved it possible to use higher-spec&#8217;d SODIMMs in the Acer One with success, my One using that SODIMM for some 5 weeks and counting now.</p>
<p>You know what, tech work is pretty interesting some times, and this is one of them&#8230;I got to use some spare parts that were sitting around here doing nothing at all, and I got to save a little $$$ in the deal too&#8230;</p>
<p>Enjoy your Acer One, and remember one thing about this Acer product that IS important: it is apparently very &#8220;flexible&#8221; and easy to work with in terms of upgrading/updating the components inside the box. Be very, very careful should any of you attempt this exercise, use a correct guide/instruction set from a reliable source, specifically on the netbook you own&#8230;as there ARE differences between the different models of the Acer One netbook, difference INSIDE of the chassis that could throw you a curve ball if you&#8217;re not acting wisely.</p>
<p>Wavey Davey, 01-20-2009 </p>
<p>Rating: 5 / 5</p>
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		<title>Comment on Dell Inspiron iM10V-2734JGN Mini 10v 10.1-Inch Netbook by Mary Lannen</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6918/comment-page-1#comment-31608</link>
		<dc:creator>Mary Lannen</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 17:51:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6918#comment-31608</guid>
		<description>I have been using my new dell mini for over a month now and I absolutely love it! It does everything I need it to do and I can take it with me wherever I go! I can store photos, surf, shop, talk to friends, whatever! It is great! 
&lt;br /&gt;My only issue is that it only comes with Windows 7 starter. I have to buy the full version. But that is minor compared to what it does. And Amazon has the best price!
Rating: 5 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have been using my new dell mini for over a month now and I absolutely love it! It does everything I need it to do and I can take it with me wherever I go! I can store photos, surf, shop, talk to friends, whatever! It is great!<br />
<br />My only issue is that it only comes with Windows 7 starter. I have to buy the full version. But that is minor compared to what it does. And Amazon has the best price!<br />
Rating: 5 / 5</p>
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	<item>
		<title>Comment on Samsung X460-41S 14.1-Inch Laptop by Zzzzz</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6935/comment-page-1#comment-31614</link>
		<dc:creator>Zzzzz</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 17:11:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6935#comment-31614</guid>
		<description>I have to admit, I was a little weary of buying a Samsung, but once it arrived, my fears were gone.  It&#039;s light, has a great screen with great color.  It&#039;s fast on boot up and it is well built.  I love the fact that it has 3 gbs of ram as Vista is a resource hog.  The computer runs flawlessly and the wifi connects in a jiff.  The only problem I have is that Vista has problems coming out of sleep mode on occasion, but that&#039;s a Vista issue and not a Samsung issue.  It has a great battery life and is extremely thin.  3 USB ports, HDMI, what more could you ask for?  I would definitely buy this again.
Rating: 5 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have to admit, I was a little weary of buying a Samsung, but once it arrived, my fears were gone.  It&#8217;s light, has a great screen with great color.  It&#8217;s fast on boot up and it is well built.  I love the fact that it has 3 gbs of ram as Vista is a resource hog.  The computer runs flawlessly and the wifi connects in a jiff.  The only problem I have is that Vista has problems coming out of sleep mode on occasion, but that&#8217;s a Vista issue and not a Samsung issue.  It has a great battery life and is extremely thin.  3 USB ports, HDMI, what more could you ask for?  I would definitely buy this again.<br />
Rating: 5 / 5</p>
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		<title>Comment on Asus Eee PC 1001P-MU17-WT 10.1-Inch Intel Atom Netbook Computer by Joey</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6914/comment-page-1#comment-31600</link>
		<dc:creator>Joey</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 17:06:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6914#comment-31600</guid>
		<description>It seemed like I had been reading reviews on this netbook for weeks. Here on Amazon and elsewhere. I more than did my homework on this one. I even went to Best Buy a few weeks ago and did some typing on the Asus netbook they had for sale there. I wanted to get a sense for how an Asus netbook would work for me in the real world. 2 Fridays nights ago I decided to go with it and I placed my order with Amazon. Following is my thorough review on this product.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;First Impressions:
&lt;br /&gt;- This is a theme you&#039;ll see played out over and over in various reviews on this netbook. Amazon ships fast. I ordered on a Friday night after hours (picked free shipping because I wasn&#039;t in a hurry to get it) and by Monday it shipped. I had it in my hands by Wednesday morning before 10 AM. That is what I call exceptional service and it far exceeded my expectations.
&lt;br /&gt;- Upon receiving the netbook and opening up everything I was really pleased with the fit and finish of the netbook. I have to say that the checkered pattern is great. Definitely it will mask fingerprints and scratches a whole lot better than its glossy counterpart. It looks classy and works well in the real world.
&lt;br /&gt;- There was one fly in the ointment. When I turned on the netbook for the first time Windows would not boot up. I wasn&#039;t extremely happy about that. But that all got worked out over the phone with Asus technical support in about 15 minutes. It would appear that the person who did the Windows installation didn&#039;t complete it. Anyway, using the Restore function things were able to be reset and it was a minor problem soon forgotten. For lack of a better illustration, I feel that it was like buying a pair of brand new shoes and noticing they had a scuff on them. However, the shoes came with a scuff remover tool and so the scuff was easily removed. The point is, although it was nice to see the tool worked you&#039;d just hope you wouldn&#039;t have to use it on the first day! Anyway, anybody who considers this a deal-breaker as far as buying an Asus netbook is crazy. This was the only minor irritant for me personally and I will go on to elaborate now on the many things I love about this netbook!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Battery Life:
&lt;br /&gt;- This is an issue that there seems to be a great debate on around here in various reviews. There are people saying that they&#039;re getting 11 hours right on Asus specifications but on the other hand there are people really upset with the battery life because they&#039;re only getting 5 hours on a charge. This is my opinion after getting my own netbook. You MUST deep charge the battery for the first time for at least 11-12 hours. If you&#039;re using the netbook during that time than charge it even longer. Remember, while you&#039;re using the netbook the battery won&#039;t charge as fast. This concept isn&#039;t something I made up. Look it up for yourself. The Asus manual says charge it at least 8 hours for the first time - I decided to charge longer than that. Not only that, you MUST do a full charge and discharge a few times before the battery reaches its maximum potential. Again, it&#039;s in the manual. After the first charge I used the netbook over 3 days for several hours of usage. It definitely seemed capable of getting 11 hours out of it if the Super Hybrid Engine setting was permanently set to Power Saver and the screen brightness was toned down (the screen is capable of being way too bright anyway!) and one wasn&#039;t watching YouTube videos continuously for the whole time. I just got done charging it for the second time today (again charged it for 9+ hours) and it says it has 13 hours left.
&lt;br /&gt;- I want to talk about the Super Hybrid Engine function in a second. First, to recap, if you&#039;re only getting 5 hours out of a charge than it would be my suggestion you consider these 3 things:
&lt;br /&gt;a) Did you deep charge it 8-12 hours the first time (without using it for that time) and a few times for the following charges?
&lt;br /&gt;b) Do you have 4-5 programs open and are you trying to watch YouTube videos for hours on end?
&lt;br /&gt;c) BUT MOST IMPORTANTLY, is your Super Hybrid Engine set to Power Saver? You can toggle through several power efficiency settings and Power Saver is one of them. If not, there is no way you will get 11 hours out of the battery. Now, for just surfing the Internet I didn&#039;t notice any difference in speed using Power Saver. Even playing a YouTube video it was okay. In fact, I think I&#039;ll keep it on Power Saver permanently. But, the battery definitely notices a difference when the Super Hybrid Engine is in this mode. It can extend the battery&#039;s life between 35-50% on a charge. That&#039;s HUGE. You won&#039;t get that in Super Performance mode!
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Operating System:
&lt;br /&gt;- People on here are in some cases ragging on the operating system (Windows 7) that comes with this netbook. Folks, as I have already commented on some of your reviews before making this purchase, Windows 7 is coming out on most netbooks these days. It&#039;s reality. XP is old and dated and quickly coming to the end of its life. If you only want your netbook for a year and you&#039;re set on XP than save a few bucks and go with XP. For the rest of you, learn to deal with Windows 7 as it is the future, for the next few years anyway. I don&#039;t find the Starter version to be that much different than anything else. Sure, I don&#039;t have a few options that I&#039;d have with Windows 7 Premium but big deal.  This is a secondary computer to me. I already have 3 others in the house. The operating systems on my computers range from XP to Vista to Windows 7. This operating system isn&#039;t that big of a deal to me. Windows is Windows.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Speed and Functionality:
&lt;br /&gt;- This netbook is more than fast enough for me. However, I&#039;m just using it as a portable Internet surfing machine. I don&#039;t plan to put Photoshop on it. I don&#039;t plan to put iTunes on it. I put Open Office on it and that&#039;s all I&#039;ll need. This netbook runs just as fast for me as any other computer I have around here. If you plan to use it as I do than 1 GB RAM will be fine. If you plan to do heavy duty stuff with it than upgrade to 2 GB RAM. Keep in mind though that at the end of the day it is still and will always be just a netbook. If your expectations are out of whack and you&#039;re expecting this netbook to be some amazing powerhouse that can do everything for you except wash your dishes you will likely be disappointed. Do your homework. Assess your requirements and needs. Maybe you&#039;ll find that you should be getting a regular laptop instead. This is something you will need to work out with yourself. If/how you work it out will determine how happy you will be with this product.
&lt;br /&gt;-  The keyboard is great. It is 92-93% of a regular-sized keyboard and my fingers can fly on it. Still getting used to having the Delete and Backspace keys in a slightly different place but I will adjust. People talked about it being spongy? I don&#039;t understand that. It seems solid to me.
&lt;br /&gt;- Before I forget, and as others have always stated, the bloatware that comes with this netbook is minimal. I only had to remove a couple of programs that were getting in the way. That&#039;s a positive.
&lt;br /&gt;- I like the smooth touchpad. The Asus I tried out at Best Buy had a dotted touchpad. It wouldn&#039;t have been the end of the world to get that but I much prefer the smooth touchpad. It&#039;s very responsive and I have no problems with it. I do have a wireless mouse for one of my other laptops but I don&#039;t plan to use a wireless mouse with this netbook. Not necessary.
&lt;br /&gt;- People have complained about the WiFi range being bad on this netbook. I don&#039;t have a problem with that. I have a G wireless router and this netbook has a G network card in it. I can easily use my netbook anywhere in the house and on the property. In fact, I took it across the street to my neighbor&#039;s house the other day and I still had 1-2 bars on WiFi over there.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Power Adapter:
&lt;br /&gt;- People have said the light on the power adapter block is too bright. That makes me laugh. Folks, if that light is the worst irritant of your day you have it made!
&lt;br /&gt;- Speaking of the power adapter, it does make me nervous that the pin that you insert into the netbook is so tiny. I did worry for a small amount of time about that breaking and perhaps I&#039;ll buy a back-up power adapter just to be prepared. Ultimately, I think if you&#039;re careful with it than it likely won&#039;t be a problem. Keep in mind, with this netbook&#039;s long battery life most of the time that power adapter is going to be sitting at home collecting dust.
&lt;br /&gt;- I know there was an issue with some Asus power adapter blocks getting too hot. I think that was specifically related to the 1005 series. I can certainly verify that after 11-1/2 hours of charging the first time and 9+ hours of charging the second time the adapter block was very COOL to the touch. So, Asus either fixed that problem or it never was an issue for the 1001 series and it was just an issue for the 1005 series. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Special Features:
&lt;br /&gt;- The Super Hybrid Engine feature is great. It seems to me that is exclusive to Asus. It&#039;s a feature in and of itself that makes the Asus netbook one to consider.
&lt;br /&gt;- The Express Gate feature is pretty slick too. It really does boot up the netbook into a different area and get you on the Internet a whole lot faster. When you want to get out of that, it&#039;s easy to segue into the main Windows area where you have full access to all of your programs again. Too bad that Internet Explorer is the only browser of choice in Express Gate. I&#039;m a Chrome die-hard because I know just how fast I can browse the Internet with Google Chrome. Oh well, it&#039;s not that big of a deal.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Conclusion:
&lt;br /&gt;- If you&#039;re a traveler or student on the go definitely you want to consider this machine. It&#039;s light as a feather, pretty durable and is a pleasure to use. I look forward to taking this to Canada with me when I go on a road trip in a few weeks. It does everything well that I expect of it. And it has the best battery life of any portable computer I&#039;ve ever seen.
&lt;br /&gt;- I just want to stress yet again that you should assess your needs and requirements before you buy this netbook. So many reviews on here (and I can tell just by reading them) are negative because I firmly believe those people who bought this netbook should&#039;ve bought something else instead. If you&#039;re at all computer savvy like me and you&#039;re a bit of a neat freak (you don&#039;t clutter up your computer with crap) this netbook will easily perform to your expectations and that I can guarantee you.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Good luck. Hope you&#039;re as happy with this product as I am.
Rating: 5 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It seemed like I had been reading reviews on this netbook for weeks. Here on Amazon and elsewhere. I more than did my homework on this one. I even went to Best Buy a few weeks ago and did some typing on the Asus netbook they had for sale there. I wanted to get a sense for how an Asus netbook would work for me in the real world. 2 Fridays nights ago I decided to go with it and I placed my order with Amazon. Following is my thorough review on this product.</p>
<p>First Impressions:<br />
<br />- This is a theme you&#8217;ll see played out over and over in various reviews on this netbook. Amazon ships fast. I ordered on a Friday night after hours (picked free shipping because I wasn&#8217;t in a hurry to get it) and by Monday it shipped. I had it in my hands by Wednesday morning before 10 AM. That is what I call exceptional service and it far exceeded my expectations.<br />
<br />- Upon receiving the netbook and opening up everything I was really pleased with the fit and finish of the netbook. I have to say that the checkered pattern is great. Definitely it will mask fingerprints and scratches a whole lot better than its glossy counterpart. It looks classy and works well in the real world.<br />
<br />- There was one fly in the ointment. When I turned on the netbook for the first time Windows would not boot up. I wasn&#8217;t extremely happy about that. But that all got worked out over the phone with Asus technical support in about 15 minutes. It would appear that the person who did the Windows installation didn&#8217;t complete it. Anyway, using the Restore function things were able to be reset and it was a minor problem soon forgotten. For lack of a better illustration, I feel that it was like buying a pair of brand new shoes and noticing they had a scuff on them. However, the shoes came with a scuff remover tool and so the scuff was easily removed. The point is, although it was nice to see the tool worked you&#8217;d just hope you wouldn&#8217;t have to use it on the first day! Anyway, anybody who considers this a deal-breaker as far as buying an Asus netbook is crazy. This was the only minor irritant for me personally and I will go on to elaborate now on the many things I love about this netbook!</p>
<p>Battery Life:<br />
<br />- This is an issue that there seems to be a great debate on around here in various reviews. There are people saying that they&#8217;re getting 11 hours right on Asus specifications but on the other hand there are people really upset with the battery life because they&#8217;re only getting 5 hours on a charge. This is my opinion after getting my own netbook. You MUST deep charge the battery for the first time for at least 11-12 hours. If you&#8217;re using the netbook during that time than charge it even longer. Remember, while you&#8217;re using the netbook the battery won&#8217;t charge as fast. This concept isn&#8217;t something I made up. Look it up for yourself. The Asus manual says charge it at least 8 hours for the first time &#8211; I decided to charge longer than that. Not only that, you MUST do a full charge and discharge a few times before the battery reaches its maximum potential. Again, it&#8217;s in the manual. After the first charge I used the netbook over 3 days for several hours of usage. It definitely seemed capable of getting 11 hours out of it if the Super Hybrid Engine setting was permanently set to Power Saver and the screen brightness was toned down (the screen is capable of being way too bright anyway!) and one wasn&#8217;t watching YouTube videos continuously for the whole time. I just got done charging it for the second time today (again charged it for 9+ hours) and it says it has 13 hours left.<br />
<br />- I want to talk about the Super Hybrid Engine function in a second. First, to recap, if you&#8217;re only getting 5 hours out of a charge than it would be my suggestion you consider these 3 things:<br />
<br />a) Did you deep charge it 8-12 hours the first time (without using it for that time) and a few times for the following charges?<br />
<br />b) Do you have 4-5 programs open and are you trying to watch YouTube videos for hours on end?<br />
<br />c) BUT MOST IMPORTANTLY, is your Super Hybrid Engine set to Power Saver? You can toggle through several power efficiency settings and Power Saver is one of them. If not, there is no way you will get 11 hours out of the battery. Now, for just surfing the Internet I didn&#8217;t notice any difference in speed using Power Saver. Even playing a YouTube video it was okay. In fact, I think I&#8217;ll keep it on Power Saver permanently. But, the battery definitely notices a difference when the Super Hybrid Engine is in this mode. It can extend the battery&#8217;s life between 35-50% on a charge. That&#8217;s HUGE. You won&#8217;t get that in Super Performance mode!</p>
<p>Operating System:<br />
<br />- People on here are in some cases ragging on the operating system (Windows 7) that comes with this netbook. Folks, as I have already commented on some of your reviews before making this purchase, Windows 7 is coming out on most netbooks these days. It&#8217;s reality. XP is old and dated and quickly coming to the end of its life. If you only want your netbook for a year and you&#8217;re set on XP than save a few bucks and go with XP. For the rest of you, learn to deal with Windows 7 as it is the future, for the next few years anyway. I don&#8217;t find the Starter version to be that much different than anything else. Sure, I don&#8217;t have a few options that I&#8217;d have with Windows 7 Premium but big deal.  This is a secondary computer to me. I already have 3 others in the house. The operating systems on my computers range from XP to Vista to Windows 7. This operating system isn&#8217;t that big of a deal to me. Windows is Windows.</p>
<p>Speed and Functionality:<br />
<br />- This netbook is more than fast enough for me. However, I&#8217;m just using it as a portable Internet surfing machine. I don&#8217;t plan to put Photoshop on it. I don&#8217;t plan to put iTunes on it. I put Open Office on it and that&#8217;s all I&#8217;ll need. This netbook runs just as fast for me as any other computer I have around here. If you plan to use it as I do than 1 GB RAM will be fine. If you plan to do heavy duty stuff with it than upgrade to 2 GB RAM. Keep in mind though that at the end of the day it is still and will always be just a netbook. If your expectations are out of whack and you&#8217;re expecting this netbook to be some amazing powerhouse that can do everything for you except wash your dishes you will likely be disappointed. Do your homework. Assess your requirements and needs. Maybe you&#8217;ll find that you should be getting a regular laptop instead. This is something you will need to work out with yourself. If/how you work it out will determine how happy you will be with this product.<br />
<br />-  The keyboard is great. It is 92-93% of a regular-sized keyboard and my fingers can fly on it. Still getting used to having the Delete and Backspace keys in a slightly different place but I will adjust. People talked about it being spongy? I don&#8217;t understand that. It seems solid to me.<br />
<br />- Before I forget, and as others have always stated, the bloatware that comes with this netbook is minimal. I only had to remove a couple of programs that were getting in the way. That&#8217;s a positive.<br />
<br />- I like the smooth touchpad. The Asus I tried out at Best Buy had a dotted touchpad. It wouldn&#8217;t have been the end of the world to get that but I much prefer the smooth touchpad. It&#8217;s very responsive and I have no problems with it. I do have a wireless mouse for one of my other laptops but I don&#8217;t plan to use a wireless mouse with this netbook. Not necessary.<br />
<br />- People have complained about the WiFi range being bad on this netbook. I don&#8217;t have a problem with that. I have a G wireless router and this netbook has a G network card in it. I can easily use my netbook anywhere in the house and on the property. In fact, I took it across the street to my neighbor&#8217;s house the other day and I still had 1-2 bars on WiFi over there.</p>
<p>Power Adapter:<br />
<br />- People have said the light on the power adapter block is too bright. That makes me laugh. Folks, if that light is the worst irritant of your day you have it made!<br />
<br />- Speaking of the power adapter, it does make me nervous that the pin that you insert into the netbook is so tiny. I did worry for a small amount of time about that breaking and perhaps I&#8217;ll buy a back-up power adapter just to be prepared. Ultimately, I think if you&#8217;re careful with it than it likely won&#8217;t be a problem. Keep in mind, with this netbook&#8217;s long battery life most of the time that power adapter is going to be sitting at home collecting dust.<br />
<br />- I know there was an issue with some Asus power adapter blocks getting too hot. I think that was specifically related to the 1005 series. I can certainly verify that after 11-1/2 hours of charging the first time and 9+ hours of charging the second time the adapter block was very COOL to the touch. So, Asus either fixed that problem or it never was an issue for the 1001 series and it was just an issue for the 1005 series. </p>
<p>Special Features:<br />
<br />- The Super Hybrid Engine feature is great. It seems to me that is exclusive to Asus. It&#8217;s a feature in and of itself that makes the Asus netbook one to consider.<br />
<br />- The Express Gate feature is pretty slick too. It really does boot up the netbook into a different area and get you on the Internet a whole lot faster. When you want to get out of that, it&#8217;s easy to segue into the main Windows area where you have full access to all of your programs again. Too bad that Internet Explorer is the only browser of choice in Express Gate. I&#8217;m a Chrome die-hard because I know just how fast I can browse the Internet with Google Chrome. Oh well, it&#8217;s not that big of a deal.</p>
<p>Conclusion:<br />
<br />- If you&#8217;re a traveler or student on the go definitely you want to consider this machine. It&#8217;s light as a feather, pretty durable and is a pleasure to use. I look forward to taking this to Canada with me when I go on a road trip in a few weeks. It does everything well that I expect of it. And it has the best battery life of any portable computer I&#8217;ve ever seen.<br />
<br />- I just want to stress yet again that you should assess your needs and requirements before you buy this netbook. So many reviews on here (and I can tell just by reading them) are negative because I firmly believe those people who bought this netbook should&#8217;ve bought something else instead. If you&#8217;re at all computer savvy like me and you&#8217;re a bit of a neat freak (you don&#8217;t clutter up your computer with crap) this netbook will easily perform to your expectations and that I can guarantee you.</p>
<p>Good luck. Hope you&#8217;re as happy with this product as I am.<br />
Rating: 5 / 5</p>
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	</item>
	<item>
		<title>Comment on Sony VAIO VGN-NW330F/S 15.5-Inch Laptop by Carla Chandler</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6908/comment-page-1#comment-31554</link>
		<dc:creator>Carla Chandler</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 17:03:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6908#comment-31554</guid>
		<description>I purchased this model after debating over another model that I had purchased for my son.  The very first day it displayed a &quot;No Operating System found&quot; message on a black screen.  My husband told me to immediately return it.  I gave it some time thinking it was a fluke.  NOPE---tonight it began making a loud noise---then a blue error screen quickly disappeared to a black screen &quot;No operating system found&quot; message.  I contacted SONY and was told this was hard-drive and they could not help me over the phone.  It was suggested that I return the model for a new one.  WELL---today is ONE DAY TOO LATE to return to AMAZON.  Could I be any luckier?  I would advise you to carefully examine the RETURN POLICY to AMAZON.  After reading this tonight--I am thinking that I made a costly mistake to purchase a computer from Amazon and this model might have been a mistake as well.
Rating: 1 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I purchased this model after debating over another model that I had purchased for my son.  The very first day it displayed a &#8220;No Operating System found&#8221; message on a black screen.  My husband told me to immediately return it.  I gave it some time thinking it was a fluke.  NOPE&#8212;tonight it began making a loud noise&#8212;then a blue error screen quickly disappeared to a black screen &#8220;No operating system found&#8221; message.  I contacted SONY and was told this was hard-drive and they could not help me over the phone.  It was suggested that I return the model for a new one.  WELL&#8212;today is ONE DAY TOO LATE to return to AMAZON.  Could I be any luckier?  I would advise you to carefully examine the RETURN POLICY to AMAZON.  After reading this tonight&#8211;I am thinking that I made a costly mistake to purchase a computer from Amazon and this model might have been a mistake as well.<br />
Rating: 1 / 5</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>Comment on Samsung X460-41S 14.1-Inch Laptop by kerstin.k21</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6935/comment-page-1#comment-31613</link>
		<dc:creator>kerstin.k21</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 16:50:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6935#comment-31613</guid>
		<description>Hi,
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;I was really fond of my laptop, but always thought that the lid was very fragile and now merely a week ago, opening the laptop its LCD cracked. I always handled the laptop with extreme precaution, because it is my work support and always carried it in a Samsonite Laptop Case, reknown for good quality.
&lt;br /&gt;I instantly contacted the SAMSUNG CUSTOMERS CENTER but they (still) keep tellling me that the warranty does not cover physical damage - and I keep insisting that I think the problem was caused due to fault of design of the lid.
&lt;br /&gt;I am still fighting to get it fixed by warranty, but they are giving me a hard time so far.....in case you have the same problem, please try to find me in skype as kerstin.k21 - I think it would be helpful to be able to show similar cases (better, even positively resolved cases). I really would appreciate your help.
&lt;br /&gt;Also, if there are more X460 users having problems like scratches due to the keyboard frame, a mismatch between the frame and the screen itself (a case I found reported in Germany) or a broken LCD, please contact me.
Rating: 1 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi,</p>
<p>I was really fond of my laptop, but always thought that the lid was very fragile and now merely a week ago, opening the laptop its LCD cracked. I always handled the laptop with extreme precaution, because it is my work support and always carried it in a Samsonite Laptop Case, reknown for good quality.<br />
<br />I instantly contacted the SAMSUNG CUSTOMERS CENTER but they (still) keep tellling me that the warranty does not cover physical damage &#8211; and I keep insisting that I think the problem was caused due to fault of design of the lid.<br />
<br />I am still fighting to get it fixed by warranty, but they are giving me a hard time so far&#8230;..in case you have the same problem, please try to find me in skype as kerstin.k21 &#8211; I think it would be helpful to be able to show similar cases (better, even positively resolved cases). I really would appreciate your help.<br />
<br />Also, if there are more X460 users having problems like scratches due to the keyboard frame, a mismatch between the frame and the screen itself (a case I found reported in Germany) or a broken LCD, please contact me.<br />
Rating: 1 / 5</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>Comment on Asus Eee PC 1001P-MU17-WT 10.1-Inch Intel Atom Netbook Computer by Sagistic</title>
		<link>http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/Laptops&#038;Accessories/%category_id%/6914/comment-page-1#comment-31599</link>
		<dc:creator>Sagistic</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 16:49:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.laptopaccessoriesguide.com/?p=6914#comment-31599</guid>
		<description>The ASUS 1001P (white) is truly gorgeous. It just looks and feels impeccably detailed and doesn&#039;t feel flimsy. I&#039;ll lay out a quick pro/con first before updating it later with more details/observations. Keep in mind, I&#039;ve only had this netbook to play with for a few hours, yet it expels me to write a review, since there&#039;s none for this particular model.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Pros
&lt;br /&gt;______________________________________
&lt;br /&gt;+ Battery life! I doubt any other model offers an 11 hour battery life at this price point ($299). If you only surf the net, write reports, or do simple tasks, on a slightly dimmer backlight, you can well get up to 10.5hrs. However, other intensive tasks with a brighter view can cut the battery life in half (~6 hours), which is still good.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;+ Keyboard - I like the feel of it, and it doesn&#039;t feel as cramped. I have slightly smaller than average hands, but it works well. I prefer non-chiclet style, as this netbook is.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;+Trackpad- I&#039;m glad this one didn&#039;t come with bumpy surface. I tried it at a local BB, and didn&#039;t really like the feel of it. I also don&#039;t mind the single bar layout for the left and right clicks. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;+LCD- This one comes with the matte LCD style. I thought it would be less sharper or poorer viewing angles, but it seems sharp enough for me. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;+Chassis- I love the latticework/non-glossy look. Doesn&#039;t attract any fingerprints and it doesn&#039;t look plasticy. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Cons
&lt;br /&gt;________________________________
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;- Battery Charger - I wasn&#039;t going to order ASUS unless I was sure that the problem was fixed, but I decided to just gamble. Unfortunately, I got the worst brand. There seems to be 3 different types of chargers. One from Enertronix (high failure rate due to a overheating problem that shuts off the charger and making it unusable), one from delta (the best one- doesn&#039;t seem to have any failure rates)- and one from PI Electronics (not sure about this one). It works for now, but many users have reported it comes DOA or fails within 1-3 months. * More about this down below*
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;- No N-wireless while the Acer alternative with the same price point has this option
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;- Windows 7 Starter. Sucks. Amazon needs to fix this; The technical details say that it comes with Win7, but the Specifications says Win XP Home.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Neutral
&lt;br /&gt;______________________________________________________
&lt;br /&gt;- No netbook sleeve, I purchased a separate one from Amazon.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;- Comes with crappy outside cardboard box.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;***More about the battery charger. As I&#039;ve mentioned, I got the crappy one. It&#039;s specific model is Enertronix #EXA0901XH. If ASUS readily replaced this, it wouldn&#039;t be much of a concern. But, users in various forums have reported that ASUS&#039;s crappy customer service and lack of, as well as weeks or months of backordered chargers prevented them from getting a new one. In addition, ASUS doesn&#039;t pay for shipping back the failed battery charger. However, if you get lucky and get any of the other two charger models, there seems to be no problem. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;However, it seems that most people found a temporary solution. I&#039;ll try to relay the knowledge I&#039;ve gained about these solutions. First, it seems that the faulty charger lies within an overheating problem and a mechanism for turning the charger off (but not back on). So you can alleviate this problem by temporarily allowing your charger to cool down after each use and if that doesn&#039;t work, putting it in the refrigerator for ~10-20 minutes. Other users have also mentioned that the charger will fail quicker, if multiple input locations are used. So if you keep plugging in and out the charger at different outlets, it often fails. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;Despite the problem with the charger, the netbook itself is great, and even with its shortcomings, I decided to take a plunge. Whether it turns out to be a problem or not, time will tell. 
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;_________________________________________________________________
&lt;br /&gt;Update as of 2-13-2010/about 2 weeks into purchase
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;- My charger still works fine, although it runs pretty hot. I&#039;ve attached an heatsink from an old video card (not sure if this helps any), and I haven&#039;t really been using the charger anywhere else except in my bedroom. 
&lt;br /&gt;- The matte screen, although great for outside, I am starting to see the lack in brightness compared to a glossy at a bright setting. The viewing angle is also pretty limited but most of the times you&#039;ll be look straight ahead. 
&lt;br /&gt;- I&#039;ve also noticed that the battery is very heavy so that the weight of the whole netbook is not equally distributed, but slightly heavier towards the battery, but its not a concern on flat surfaces.
&lt;br /&gt;- I have used coreAVC to try resolutions of 720p on .mkv and .avi and they worked fine. However, the cpu will run at 95-100%. Also, it has much difficulty running multiple flash embedded sites (for example, trying to run youtube and omgpop or hulu at the same time). 
&lt;br /&gt;- Battery life is still good, and I haven&#039;t seen any noticeable decreases. One thing I&#039;ve noticed is that it takes a while for the system to estimate your battery life depending on your usage style. 
&lt;br /&gt;- I will be using this netbook more extensively, so more updates will be posted. So far so good.
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Rating: 5 / 5</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The ASUS 1001P (white) is truly gorgeous. It just looks and feels impeccably detailed and doesn&#8217;t feel flimsy. I&#8217;ll lay out a quick pro/con first before updating it later with more details/observations. Keep in mind, I&#8217;ve only had this netbook to play with for a few hours, yet it expels me to write a review, since there&#8217;s none for this particular model.</p>
<p>Pros<br />
<br />______________________________________<br />
<br />+ Battery life! I doubt any other model offers an 11 hour battery life at this price point ($299). If you only surf the net, write reports, or do simple tasks, on a slightly dimmer backlight, you can well get up to 10.5hrs. However, other intensive tasks with a brighter view can cut the battery life in half (~6 hours), which is still good.</p>
<p>+ Keyboard &#8211; I like the feel of it, and it doesn&#8217;t feel as cramped. I have slightly smaller than average hands, but it works well. I prefer non-chiclet style, as this netbook is.</p>
<p>+Trackpad- I&#8217;m glad this one didn&#8217;t come with bumpy surface. I tried it at a local BB, and didn&#8217;t really like the feel of it. I also don&#8217;t mind the single bar layout for the left and right clicks. </p>
<p>+LCD- This one comes with the matte LCD style. I thought it would be less sharper or poorer viewing angles, but it seems sharp enough for me. </p>
<p>+Chassis- I love the latticework/non-glossy look. Doesn&#8217;t attract any fingerprints and it doesn&#8217;t look plasticy. </p>
<p>Cons<br />
<br />________________________________</p>
<p>- Battery Charger &#8211; I wasn&#8217;t going to order ASUS unless I was sure that the problem was fixed, but I decided to just gamble. Unfortunately, I got the worst brand. There seems to be 3 different types of chargers. One from Enertronix (high failure rate due to a overheating problem that shuts off the charger and making it unusable), one from delta (the best one- doesn&#8217;t seem to have any failure rates)- and one from PI Electronics (not sure about this one). It works for now, but many users have reported it comes DOA or fails within 1-3 months. * More about this down below*</p>
<p>- No N-wireless while the Acer alternative with the same price point has this option</p>
<p>- Windows 7 Starter. Sucks. Amazon needs to fix this; The technical details say that it comes with Win7, but the Specifications says Win XP Home.</p>
<p>Neutral<br />
<br />______________________________________________________<br />
<br />- No netbook sleeve, I purchased a separate one from Amazon.</p>
<p>- Comes with crappy outside cardboard box.</p>
<p>***More about the battery charger. As I&#8217;ve mentioned, I got the crappy one. It&#8217;s specific model is Enertronix #EXA0901XH. If ASUS readily replaced this, it wouldn&#8217;t be much of a concern. But, users in various forums have reported that ASUS&#8217;s crappy customer service and lack of, as well as weeks or months of backordered chargers prevented them from getting a new one. In addition, ASUS doesn&#8217;t pay for shipping back the failed battery charger. However, if you get lucky and get any of the other two charger models, there seems to be no problem. </p>
<p>However, it seems that most people found a temporary solution. I&#8217;ll try to relay the knowledge I&#8217;ve gained about these solutions. First, it seems that the faulty charger lies within an overheating problem and a mechanism for turning the charger off (but not back on). So you can alleviate this problem by temporarily allowing your charger to cool down after each use and if that doesn&#8217;t work, putting it in the refrigerator for ~10-20 minutes. Other users have also mentioned that the charger will fail quicker, if multiple input locations are used. So if you keep plugging in and out the charger at different outlets, it often fails. </p>
<p>Despite the problem with the charger, the netbook itself is great, and even with its shortcomings, I decided to take a plunge. Whether it turns out to be a problem or not, time will tell. </p>
<p>_________________________________________________________________<br />
<br />Update as of 2-13-2010/about 2 weeks into purchase</p>
<p>- My charger still works fine, although it runs pretty hot. I&#8217;ve attached an heatsink from an old video card (not sure if this helps any), and I haven&#8217;t really been using the charger anywhere else except in my bedroom.<br />
<br />- The matte screen, although great for outside, I am starting to see the lack in brightness compared to a glossy at a bright setting. The viewing angle is also pretty limited but most of the times you&#8217;ll be look straight ahead.<br />
<br />- I&#8217;ve also noticed that the battery is very heavy so that the weight of the whole netbook is not equally distributed, but slightly heavier towards the battery, but its not a concern on flat surfaces.<br />
<br />- I have used coreAVC to try resolutions of 720p on .mkv and .avi and they worked fine. However, the cpu will run at 95-100%. Also, it has much difficulty running multiple flash embedded sites (for example, trying to run youtube and omgpop or hulu at the same time).<br />
<br />- Battery life is still good, and I haven&#8217;t seen any noticeable decreases. One thing I&#8217;ve noticed is that it takes a while for the system to estimate your battery life depending on your usage style.<br />
<br />- I will be using this netbook more extensively, so more updates will be posted. So far so good.</p>
<p>
Rating: 5 / 5</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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