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Hardware
Asus launches 12.1-inch Eee PC, AMD Congo and Nvidia Ion versions coming soon
Those looking to buy an affordable netbook this holiday season, with a larger than average display, might be interested to know Asus just launched the 12.1-inch Eee PC 1201HA in the U.S. The system includes a 1.33GHz Intel Atom Z520 processor with integrated Intel GMA 950 graphics and 1GB of RAM (expandable to 2GB).

The screen resolution is quite decent for a netbook, at 1366x768, which along the estimated 6+ hours of battery life and low price tag seem to be the netbook's key selling points. Otherwise, there is a 160GB hard disk drive, built-in Ethernet port, 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi, a 1.3-megapixel camera, three USB ports, a multi-card reader and either XP or Windows 7. The Asus 1201HA is currently selling at Best Buy for $330 with free shipping.
If you are willing to wait some more and shell out a few extra bucks, a variation known as the 1201N will be the first Eee PC with Nvidia Ion graphics when it arrives in December, including 2GB of RAM, a 250GB hard drive and HDMI out for about $500. The Taiwanese manufacturer is also said to be planning a version with AMD's 1.6GHz Congo MV40 processor and ATI Radeon HD3200 graphics.

The screen resolution is quite decent for a netbook, at 1366x768, which along the estimated 6+ hours of battery life and low price tag seem to be the netbook's key selling points. Otherwise, there is a 160GB hard disk drive, built-in Ethernet port, 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi, a 1.3-megapixel camera, three USB ports, a multi-card reader and either XP or Windows 7. The Asus 1201HA is currently selling at Best Buy for $330 with free shipping.
If you are willing to wait some more and shell out a few extra bucks, a variation known as the 1201N will be the first Eee PC with Nvidia Ion graphics when it arrives in December, including 2GB of RAM, a 250GB hard drive and HDMI out for about $500. The Taiwanese manufacturer is also said to be planning a version with AMD's 1.6GHz Congo MV40 processor and ATI Radeon HD3200 graphics.
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User Comments (36)
Post a comment| Moltar on November 30, 2009 12:04 PM | It seems as though netbooks are turning back into laptops again. I remember a few years ago there were several offerings of sub 13 inch laptops available from several retailers. Now it seems as they are making a resurgence under the netbook name. |
| harby on November 30, 2009 12:06 PM | Hmm very interesting. But I thought that intel-based netbook
chipsets (non-CULVs) were limited to 1GB or RAM so how come
this can be upgraded to 2? As for the 1201N, sounds good for sure but I wouldn't call it a netbook, clearly stepping into the ultraportable laptop segment. |
| Moltar on November 30, 2009 12:10 PM | I completely agree, the netbooks seem to be stepping out of their segment and bringing back the ultra portable notebook segment. Shouldn't Netbooks be getting smaller and more streamlined, not bigger? |
| timljh on November 30, 2009 12:21 PM | even the price is stepping out of their segment too =P $500, it seems that they are getting one step nearer to laptop... |
| fada on November 30, 2009 12:24 PM | will this fad with netbooks ever go away, if they just make one giant iphone like device then i would find it acceptable but using netbooks is akin to wearing shoes that are way to small in my opinion. |
| Vrmithrax on November 30, 2009 12:33 PM | The chip manufacturers (and Microsoft) would like to keep a
distinction between netbooks and notebooks, but in reality
most consumers are bucking those restrictions. There is a
larger margin to be made on the notebooks, so naturally
those companies want you to have a clear-cut choice: either
super limited cheap netbook, or powerful capable more
expensive notebook. But as the lines blur more and more,
it's become apparent that the majority of the marketplace
wants something in between. The limit that harby mentioned was true, netbooks were limited to 1 GB, but consumers demanded more, and the restriction buckled. Just one example of how the distinctions blur more every day. As tight integrated and highly efficient platforms like Ion hitting the scene, the performance differences will tend to blur as well. |
| regenweald on November 30, 2009 12:34 PM | Netbooks had a nice run, but we are basically heading
straight back to reasonably priced ultra mobiles. The base
thing about netbooks is that they helped to drive prices
down across the board. To me the distinction is useless. I
buy a portable device that suits my needs best. No need for
catch phrases and marketing |
| FoReWoRd on November 30, 2009 12:38 PM | looking good, this ATI might be slighly faster than the ION equvilant, why no 2gb ram |
| Puiu on November 30, 2009 12:48 PM | I would buy the 330$ one but i would add another GB of RAM
(2 in total) as it would help a lot. @harby: Intel allows them to have 2GB of RAM now (starting with n470 atoms) |
| swilllx2p on November 30, 2009 1:11 PM | Netbooks seem to be becoming just a marketing label to drive sales. As others stated, the lines between the netbooks/ultraportables/laptops are becoming pretty blurry. |
| kibaruk on November 30, 2009 1:14 PM | Uuuuh I would love the 12,1 with Ion card for HD
viewing. Those comming are the 3rd gen netbooks, a step closer to notebooks but keeping the mobility always on. You could say they are UMPCs but they are netbooks, they are not still meant to be used as a full PC. |
| fref on November 30, 2009 1:17 PM | Netbooks are getting bigger and bigger, which kind of
defeats the purpose of a netbook if you ask me. Especially
when that netbook sells for 500$... If they continue like
this, they'll be releasing a 15.6" netbook next... |
| BlindObject on November 30, 2009 1:25 PM | Eh, I'm kinda tired of seeing a new netbooks every-week. Seriously, what's the point? A bought an Asus g50 last year, and it still blows away all the laptops at the cafe lounge. (I love seeing the Mac peoples face when they see my super flashy LDs =)) They should get away from net books and start making MICRO books. lol |
| Richy2k9 on November 30, 2009 1:28 PM | hello ... there are way too many of those tiny machines coming out, thank GOD, we can find some quite good reviews here & then. this one seems not bad, even if i would prefer a desktop PC with all options, would make a perfect gift to my wify would needs only a machine for the net, her recipes & a few simple games. great dig techspot .... cheers! |
| Serag on November 30, 2009 3:05 PM | wow, other than the slow Atom processor..specs looks very
"low-end notebook" like.. fair price as well.. |
| ET3D on November 30, 2009 3:09 PM | Seems like Congo is getting quite a few design wins. Lets see how it sells. |
| manintech on November 30, 2009 3:59 PM | $330 is a very good price |
| IvanAwfulitch on November 30, 2009 4:06 PM | Moltar said: This. The definition of a netbook has seemed
to be a screen size of about 11 inches or less, a scrunched
keyboard, and limited functionality to provide the basics to
people that need only the basics with a price accordingly
matched. Higher performance graphics? Bigger screens? That
definitely changes the netbook philosophy.I completely agree, the netbooks seem to be stepping out of their segment and bringing back the ultra portable notebook segment. Shouldn't Netbooks be getting smaller and more streamlined, not bigger? There definitely is ONE important thing to note here though; things are getting incredibly small. Can you imagine having a high performance gaming laptop that's about 1 foot square? That's pretty nuts. This netbook definitely isn't fitting the description or the bracket it should be in and is SLIGHTLY larger than its competitors, but it's definitely making a new benchmark for making high powered computing smaller. The Ion and the Atom are, for the moment, the pinnacle of miniaturized computing. |
| Guest on November 30, 2009 4:25 PM | I don't mind paying another $100+ for the Nvidia ion for better graphics and HD!! |
| BlackIrish on November 30, 2009 5:56 PM | At this point, the Wind12 U230 that TechSpot mentioned seems like a much better buy! |
| 9Nails on November 30, 2009 7:52 PM | After playing with an HP netbook without the Ion, I'm willing to step in line and buy the Ion upgrade. Hulu in full screen was slightly sub-par without some sort of GPU acceleration card added in. Intel still hasn't learned how to make a descent GPU chip. |
| Kibaruk on November 30, 2009 9:43 PM | I'll copy the same post I made on a fairly equal topic with
one tweak: "Netbooks COULD replace in time desktop PCs, really low power consumption and with small size that caracterize netbooks (They can be "hanged" behind the screen, since nowadays screen is at least 17" or even 19" big they fit back there and no one would ever know), connected to an external display and mouse/keyboard or even docks with optical drives (Or USB ones) they can (At least with this hardware) replace a normal desktop computer, with the plus that you can unplug it and use it wherever you want. I'm really into the idea." |
| techdisciple on November 30, 2009 10:36 PM | ftw the kcuf is wrong with this pc industrie making Netbooks Bigger, Bigger and Bigger, and for that price tag $500 makes me want to buy a cheap Laptop instead... :@ |
| lfg18 on November 30, 2009 11:32 PM | The line separating netbook and notebooks is dissappearing, but I would not pay for a $300 netbook, they are not reliable, and as it was mentioned in an article some time ago here in techspot, you get what you pay for, so investing in a better laptop will be worth the money as they tend to break down less than netbooks. |
| KodrutZ on December 1, 2009 3:42 AM | Why to say netbooks are not reliable? The idea is that,
considering all those iPhones and BlackBerries out there, I
see no reason in going for a netbook, when you can add a few
extra bucks for a decent notebook (I am thinking about
16-17" displays and 1600X900 resolution here, 3-4GB of
memory, 320-500GB hard drive, discrete graphics), and if you
really need to go online, you can use your
phone. Come on, guys, are you really serious about watching HD movies on a 12" screen? I can't believe this! |
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