Laptops Morph To Netbooks at CES ‘09 :: Symblogogy

by Edmund Jenks | January 10, 2009 at 07:30 am
682 views | 41 Recommendations | 9 comments


Intel’s Classmate PC Tablet PC, uh, I mean Netbook, is a better Netbook than most because it shows some design considerations that make sense for the small form factor. Image Credit Intel Laptops Morph To Netbooks at CES ‘09

The world’s largest tradeshow attendance maybe down from about 140,000 to 130,000, but at CES, the byline is that smaller is better.

Take the laptop computer for example, the one technology trend that is getting the most attention is a downsized, on-board programs reduced, lightweight notebook optimized to take advantage of the strength of what is available over the internet. Dubbed the “Netbook”, this tool may just become what a notebook, laptop computer was supposed to be when they were introduced as the main computerized aid to a person on the go.

Skype, Go To My PC, and other software function capabilities remove the need to have a full computer system on the road when communications (written and video), internet access, and information retrieval are the functions that become more important than the ability to process digital assets on a large scale.

Netbooks are the star of the show. At CES 2009, a little smaller may just become better in a big way.

Sony VAIO P is Slim WVGA Netbook - Measuring less than an inch, sporting 8-inch 1600x768 screen and 3G support, the netbook will sell for $900. Image Credit: Pocketnow

This excerpted from eWEEK -

Desktops & Notebooks Slideshow:
Notebooks and Netbooks Take Center Stage at the 2009 CES


At the 2009 International CES in Las Vegas, mobility remained one of the hottest topics, and vendors littered the showroom floor with the latest in notebooks, netbooks, mini-notebooks and ultraportable laptops.

eWEEK took a look at some of the latest offerings from Toshiba, Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Asus, Acer and Sony.

While CES usually focuses on consumer electronics, there were several enterprise and SMB offerings on the showroom floor, including the HP Mini 2140 and the Toshiba Portege R600.

Reference Here>>
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2
Jordan Yerman

I'm actually really digging these coach-class-friendly machines... even my 14" old-school iBook cannot be opened without smacking the seat in front of me, and a 17" notebook would be a non-starter. Also, if the OS keeps crashing and you want to throw it across the room, the lighter weight would translate to greater distance.

Come to think of it, these machines (onboard storage capacity aside) are as powerful (if not more so) than what I'm typing on right now...

0
Edmund Jenks

Laptop as discus, now that is a morph we all might get behind.

It makes a great product name -- I can hear it now, the Dell Discus sails further than any of the other five, top selling "Netbooks" on the market today.

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Uwe Paschen

I do like the new VAIO yet the prise tag is still a little high for a machine that will be outdated with in 6 month.

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SOLARLIFE

Edmund great tech report, any idea about the price tag of the Intel classmate ? $300 ?

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Edmund Jenks

Yes - $299.00 is what I saw.

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Amy Judd

I love anything that is a mini form of something else - super cute laptops!

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Paul Conneally

I like all the smaller and smallest and the morph discuss is interesting but i'm also liking some of the stuff thats going bigger again - some phones - that retro feel with bigger buttons - maybe i'm getting old and they are better for my eyes and fingers - in fact if my rooms were big enough id love a computer that looked like these but had all the power of todays... thats me at work...

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David@Used Laptops

This is sure an era of mini things . Day by day the size of the computer is getting smaller and more easier to carry but i think it will also cause an eye strain.

0
David@Used Laptops

Electronic devices are going smaller in size day by day and have more technology options this surew is one of the wonders of this technological age.

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