Wed Jan 14, 2009 1:13PM EST
See Comments (15)
There was no shortage of netbooks -- those inexpensive and underpowered laptops that have been all the rage for the last year -- at this year's CES convention, with many wondering if they haven't completely hit the point where they've become interchangeable commodities.
High-end netbooks like Sony's Lifestyle PC aside, most netbooks now look and act about the same, offering the same features, components, and screen size.
So what's the market's next move? Cut prices, of course. Netbook pricing has been slowly creeping up over the last year as buyers looked for bigger hard drives, better performance, roomier keyboards, and larger screens. That feature creep means it's not uncommon to see prices well above $400 for entry-level devices.
The folks at Freescale Semiconductor want to turn that trend around, offering a low-power chip designed to sip electricity while letting netbook makers offer devices for less than $200.
Notebooks.com got its hands on some of Freescale's prototype devices at a private meeting during CES and came away impressed, calling them "extremely well built." A gallery of photos and videos on its website tends to bear that out. Video playback looks amazing on the device shown off, but more extensive real-world testing will obviously be required to see how general performance measures up to other units. Freescale also claims eight-hour battery life on its new models, a bold statement that I'd love to see put to the test.
The one drawback is that the OS is a pretty stripped-down, a Linux core with a web browser and a video playback client, and little else. No productivity suite, and possibly no potential for add-on applications at all.
Freescale has reference designs out now, with the goal of having partner machines on the market in time for the holiday season this year. We'll be watching!
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Best buy already offers an Eee 8.9" for $199. Stripped down, but still.
Smart Phones are getting smarter and more advanced. They'll drive netbooks off the market in next few years.
The current form of the netbook is a waste of time. They should be making 8 inches touch screen like a bigger iphone. It needs to have some usb port for keyboard or mouse, vga out put to connect to external display and a LAN port. Device should be able to hold on one hand and control via the touch screen with the other hand. It should have an onscreen keyboard just like the iphone. You can get online and check email without any attachment. If documents or presentation need to be create, people could plug in an USB keyboard.
"The one drawback is that the OS is a pretty stripped-down, a Linux core with a web browser and a video playback client, and little else. No productivity suite, and possibly no potential for add-on applications at all." Mr. Null, why does Linux seem so unworthy to be on these netbooks? It doesn't have to be a payed proprietary OS. In fact, if this netbook runs ubuntu linux, then you have the best eye candy out there. Compiz-Fusion its called. And it uses way less resources then any Vista aero stuff. Hater. I'm going to be the one laughing when Windows or MAC OS (whatever number they make up for it), go UNDER, and Linux will be the sole survivor. Good Day Mr. Null
The complaint about no productivity suite ignores that you can get free or cheap browser-based productivity suites from a growing list of providers, most notably Google. This is basically the old thin-client reimagined, where the browser is essentially the OS for a gaggle of remotely hosted applications.
She probably left you because you could not speak or spell.
Netbooks are a big waste of money. Couple years soon the laptop will be obsolete.
I have an eepc 901 linux version and it is more than capable of doing the things I want, fast boot time, good battery life; its excellent for taking notes and really very convenient.
Hey Me-This: Many/most of the current netbooks have some of the features you mention. My $380. Acer Aspire One has 3 USB ports, an external VGA connector, integrated wireless and 100 mb lan ports, as well as two memory slots for SD cards (I use an 8 gig one as a backup device.) I don't want a bigger smarter phone: I want something between that and my heavy duty desktop. I guess it just depends on what you want to do. Regards, Bungaman
1 Posted by rogueist on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:49PM EDT Report Abuse
they need a nice sub-$100 netbook to make it all take off.