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Verizon and Gateway offer 3G-enabled netbook, LT2016u

The LT2016u is outfitted with a 10.1" WSVGA LED display, an Intel Atom N270 CPU, 1GB of RAM, a 160GB HDD, a .3 megapixel webcam, Wi-Fi, Ethernet, USB and VGA ports, a three-in-one media card reader, two speakers, a microphone, a six-cell battery, Windows XP Home, and weighs 2.95lbs. This netbook follows the launch of Gateway's LT3100 and LT2000, which debuted over the summer.
User Comments (2)
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windmill007
on October 2, 2009 7:11 AM |
250MB haha... Don't u dare download anything or watch any videos. Even 5GB is a joke. Shows you that cell networks aren't really capable of high traffic volume or they are just greedy. I'm not sure which is the case. |
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Guest
on October 2, 2009 11:09 AM |
Yes 3G sucks for bandwidth...but it is essentially a 'ready to go' wireless network that works anywhere you have 3G access. Thats a pretty big area of service you're paying for. If you're going to surf the net anyway and can't stand the itty bitty cellphones that can do this why not go 3G enabled netbook for ease of use? I'm not a big fan of Gateway but I'm interested to see who else will jump on this bandwagon. If this 'early adopter' technology takes off and more people end up using it the 3G plans will only get better for pricing and bandwidth. |
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