HP Netbooks wont feature Linux
HP will not be offering a Linux version of its new Mini 1000 netbook in the UK the company has revealed.While there will be three versions of the Mini 1000 available in the US, including one that runs the brilliant looking Linux powered, ‘Mobile Internet Experience’, here in the UK there is currently only one model available – the high-end ‘Vivienne Tam’ model. This runs Windows XP and at £390 plus VAT, it’s not in keeping with budget ethos that launched the netbook.
Alternatively, business users can purchase the Linux powered HP Mini 2133 netbook, but as we pointed out in our review, its Via C7 processor leaves the netbook rather underpowered.
HP told IT PROin a statement that it is committed to bringing new netbooks to the UK market and will be launching the Compaq 700. “The company has assessed the current EMEA market and believes that the Compaq 700 and HP Mini 1000 Vivienne Tam Edition better address the market and consumer needs. As a result the HP Mini 1000 with Mobile Internet Experience will not be introduced in EMEA.â€
Touchscreen Asus Eee PC tablet netbook T91

Touchscreen Netbook Asus EEE PC T91 tablet
One of the best new gadgets announced at tech show CES, is the Touchscreen Netbook Asus Eee PC tablet netbook T91.
The Eee PC T91 convertible tablet is a tiny netbook with a swivelling screen that can be used in standard laptop orientation, as well as in touchscreen tablet mode. The display can be twisted 180 degrees and folded flat against the keyboard, making it slightly reminiscent of a giant iPhone (or the apple netbook we were hoping for!)
The swivelling display houses an 8.9-inch panel that can recognise multi-touch gesture user inputs. On initial inspection, it looks like an ordinary netbook, but when you get bored of using the machine in standard laptop mode, you can twist the screen into tablet mode where you can perform two-finger gestures such as pinching, stretching, scrolling and twisting, in order to manipulate media without using a keyboard or mouse.
Inside the ridiculously attractive white chassis is an Intel Z520 CPU, 1GB of RAM, Windows XP Home, a 160GB hard drive, integrated WiMax, 802.11n, a GPS sat-nav chip and a TV tuner.
We want one!
Apple Netbook almost definate – if not a netbook a 9″ Apple touchscreen netbook type thing
The respected Taiwan Economic News claims that contract manufacturer Quanta is "expected to add Sony and Apple as clients for the contract manufacture of Netbook computers in 2009."
Quanta already builds netbooks for a number of companies including Acer, Lenovo, HP and BenQ but its vice chairman and president C.C. Leung is preparing for the worse expecting zero growth year on year as even the red hot Netbook segment isn't spared by the global recession.
The company is expected to sell 37 million units in 2008 and enrolling Sony and Apple could be crucial if Quanta wants to smash these shipment figures by next year.
Sony and Apple are the only two remaining popular notebook manufacturers that have yet to launch Netbooks.
Quanta is a major partner for Apple having manufactured everything from iPods, iPhones, Apple iMac and Macbooks for the technology company.
What's more interesting, given that Macworld expo is coming up soon, is that a Apple is talking to OEM in Asia to produce either a device with a 7-inch or a 9-inch screen which will interact seamlessly with iTunes App store and almost certainly be Apple's answer to the Netbook tidal wave. In otherwords, an ipod Touch but bigger and better.
We reckon it could look like this:
Intel Atom netbook processor
1gb ram
32gb SSD storage
Touchscreen
7" or 9"
Handwriting recognition.
£499 (well, its Apple and its bound to be more expensive than a cheap netbook).
We are sooooo excited!
SALES: Netbook Sales – Christmas Sales for Netbooks on now
The Christmas Sales are here and you can buy a new netbook with your christmas cash. Buy a netbook on sale. Sale netbooks are here, and we list some of the best cheapest netbooks that are in a christmas sale.
Here's a run down of online shops that have netbooks on sale:
Dixons
![]() |
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
IN STOCK
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Comet
![]() |
ACER AOA110-AW
Features Intel Atom processor, 512MB RAM, 8.9 inch display screen and built-in webcam. Cheap basic netbook! WAS £179.99 NOW £169.99 - SAVE £10.00! |
Maplin
|
|||
|
now £139.99 Save £80.00 was £219.99
|
|||
Empire Direct
![]() |
TOSHIBA NB10 SALE
Features Intel Atom processor, 1GB RAM, 120GB storage, Windows XP an 10" inch display screen plus built-in webcam. One of the best netbooks. WAS £299.99 NOW £284.99 - SAVE £15! |
Laptops Direct
| Toshiba NB100 Netbook Sale
Great netbook from Toshiba featured Intel Atom netbook processor, 1gb ram, 8.9" screen and windows xp. Great deal! WAS £269.12 NOW £259.97 - SAVE £9.15! |
|
| Lenovo S10 Netbook Sale
Business netbook with Intel Atom cpu, 10.2" screen, 160 gb hard drive, 1gb ram, its a beast among men. WAS £312.18 NOW £279.97 - SAVE £32.21! |
|
Free Netbooks – How to get a free netbook!
How to get a Free Netbook
Did you know that you can easily get a free netbook just by signing up to a mobile broadband contract? It works in a similar way to mobile phone contracts - you sign up to a fixed term contract for 3g mobile internet, and you get a netbook for free.
Here, we list the best deals on the market that come with a free netbook. The free netbook deals are a fantastic idea if you are looking at, or require, broadband speed internet whether you are. A netbook with internet access makes perfect sense - netbooks are small light and portable and, with 3g internet, you can surf the net and check your emails wherever you are in the country.
All the main mobile phone providers offer mobile broadband (Vodafone, Orange, T-mobile, 3 and o2). Many of the mobile phone retailers offer the free netbook deals aswell.
VODAFONE - Free Dell Mini 9 Netbook |
|
![]() |
Vodafone's Mobile Broadband covers 80% of the UK - and they're the fastest, most reliable provider around. |
![]() |
|
Orange - Free Asus EEE PC 901 Netbook |
|
|
Orange's Mobile Broadband gives you high speed internet access wherever you are. |
|
![]() |
|
Three - Free Asus EEE PC 701 netbook |
|
![]() |
Three give |
![]() |
|
Three - Free Elonex Webbook XP Netbook
|
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
Which Netbook to Buy for Christmas?
Christmas is fast approaching and netbooks, mini-laptops, will no doubt feature heavily on Christmas lists around the country. A netbook is a small laptop, meant to be used as a second computer, and is great for surfing the net from the sofa.
We are the first to admit that netbooks are very similar in specification. Here, Atom Netbooks reveals our favourite netbooks for your Christmas shopping - and the cheapest sites to buy netbooks. So, if you are after the cheapest netbook, the best netbook, a pink netbook or you dont know Which Netbook to buy, then hopefully this article will be of use to you.
Best Netbooks
| 1. ASUS EEE PC 1000 | |
![]() |
Intel Atom 1.6ghz, 1gb RAM, 120gb HD, 10†Screen, Windows XP One of the best netbooks currently available. Fully featured, best spec and well built. Our recommended netbook. |
| Buy Online: dabs.com |
|
| 2. Toshiba NB100 |
|
![]() |
Intel Atom 1.6ghz, 1gb RAM, 120gb HD, 8.9†Screen, Windows XP A great high quality netbook from Toshiba. Get the Toshiba NB100 netbook free from e2save, when you sign up to mobile broadband. |
|
Buy Online: dabs.com |
|
| 3. Lenovo S10 |
|
![]() |
Intel Atom 1.6ghz, 1gb RAM, 160gb HD, 10†Screen, Windows XP Great build quality. Feels like an expensive laptop. Good battery life and the 160gb hard drive is big for a netbook |
|
Buy Online: dabs.com |
|
| 4. Acer Aspire One |
|
![]() |
Intel Atom 1.6ghz, Various Specifications including SSD, Hard Drives, Windows XP and Linux, 8.9" screen A true netbook - 8.9" screens throughout the netbook range make this a tiny mini-laptop. With a wide array of options you can find the right version for you! Ranging from £170 to £300. |
|
Buy Online: dabs.com, Misco.co.uk, PC World, Play.com, Amazon.co.uk |
|
| 5. ASUS EEE PC 901 |
|
![]() |
Intel Atom 1.6ghz, 1gb RAM, 20gb SSD, 8.9" Screen, Windows XP or Linux A small, fast netbook with a great battery life. We recommend the 12gb SSD that comes with Linux for speed. |
|
Buy Online: dabs.com |
|
| 6. Advent 4211 Netbook |
|
![]() |
Intel Atom 1.6ghz, 1gb RAM, 120gb HD, 10†Screen, Windows XP One of the first decent netbooks available to buy, the Advent Atom based 4211 netbook is only available from currys, dixons or pc world. |
|
Buy Online: PC World, |
|
| 7. Samsung NC10 |
|
![]() |
Intel Atom 1.6ghz, 1gb RAM, 160gb HD, 10†Screen, Windows XP There's something just lovely about the Samsung NC10 - it feels (and is!) more expensive than its other netbook friends. Great battery life and probably more suited to the business sector. |
|
Buy Online: dabs.com |
|
| 8. MSI Wind |
|
![]() |
Intel Atom 1.6ghz, 1gb RAM, 120gb HD, 10†Screen, Windows XP Although available in other colours, we think this pink netbook is perfect for young girls. Just imagine some high school musical stickers on this netbook! |
|
Buy Online:Â Misco.co.uk |
|
| 9. HP Mini 2133 |
|
![]() |
Via C7, 1gb RAM, 120gb HD, 8.9†Screen, Windows Vista A quality machine, slightly let down by the C7 processor and Vista Business, but nonetheless a top netbook with a promising future. |
|
Buy Online: dabs.com |
|
| 10. Dell Mini 9 |
|
![]() |
Intel Atom 1.6ghz, 1gb RAM, 8/16gb SSD, 8.9†Screen, Ubuntu or Windows XP Tiny netbook from Dell, the basic model (8gb and Ubuntu seems overpriced) but it is fast and perfect for internet surfing on the sofa! Get the Dell Mini 9 for FREE with Vodafone |
|
Buy Online: dell.co.uk, vodafone.co.uk |
|
ASUS EEE PC all in one touchscreen pc
Play.com have a holding page for what may be a brilliant new ASUS EEE PC.The Asus EEE All in One Touchscreen, as Play.com have presented it, appears to be a touchscreen desktop pc.
Featuring a wide 15.6" screen, Intel Atom 1.6Ghz processor, 1gb ram and 160gb hard drive, it looks the bee's knees. However, it is a bit heavy and batteryless to work as a netbook, which is a bit disappointing, but surely a sign of things to come.
We can't wait!
OLO netbook – uses iphone and has Mac OSX on!
Unknown OLO Computers have released pictures of what appears to be a netbook that utilises the Apple iPhone as a trackpad and comes installed with Apple's Operating System OSX.Now, it could just be a brilliant joke, but we checked and it wasn't April Fools' Day.
So, it looks like it could be genuine.
There are several theories about what it may or may not do, which include:
* A netbook shell especially for the iphone. It will use the iPhone's processing power to allow larger screen surfing, working, syncing etc.
* A fully featured atom-based netbook, with the usual spec, harnessing the iPhone's multi-touch facility to cut costs. Would also allow the iPhone to be charged and sync'd etc.
* A big fat lie that's not really a netbook.
Bearing in mind the anticipation of an official apple mac netbook (aka the Macbook Nano) to be announced Tuesday or Wednesday of this week, this might just be a hoax. It could however be brilliant!
Stay tuned for more information.
How to install software on a netbook with no CD drive
We've been asked on a few occasions now - I need to install [insert program name] on to my netbook, I can't download the drivers/software, and my lovely new netbook doesn't have a CD-ROM optical drive.
If only there was a way to remotely access a CD drive from another computer wirelessly, in a similar way to how Apple's Macbook Air's "Remote Disc" works.
There are a couple of ways, explained below, which assume that your netbook runs Windows XP and you have another PC also running windows. (If anyone knows the way to do this via linux, please email us).
There are three basic solutions for installing software on a netbook without an optical drive:
1. Share the Disc Over a Network
Required: A network, and a PC with an optical drive
This solution essentially shares the optical drive in one PC over a network to your Netbook. For most this is the easiest method because most users these days have a network readily available, and assuming there’s a network there’s likely a PC with an optical drive connected to it.
First you need to load the CD/DVD into the optical drive in the PC. Now go to My Computer and right click on the drive with the loaded media, click properties, navigate to the Sharing tab (note if you haven’t done this before it may give you a warning that you shouldn’t do this unless you know what you’re doing, click the message to continue). Check the Share this folder on the network box, give it a name of your choice and hit OK.
From this point forward any computer on your network will be able to access the shared drive. If this is a problem be sure to follow the steps above and uncheck Share this folder on the network, to take it off.
Now, make sure your Netbook is connected to the network (this works wirelessly or through ethernet wired connection). Access My Network Places, and click Add A Network Place, use the wizard to add the optical drive you selected to share.
Now that it is shared you should be able to access it from My Network Places at any time (when your Netbook is connected to the network), and it should automatically refresh if you switch the CD, if it doesn’t do a right-click, and hit refresh and the files should update. If you are trying to install software and are used to auto-run, double click the Setup.exe file or similar to begin installation.
Job done.
2. Use an External Optical Drive (can be a bootable disc)
Required: External optical drive
External optical drives are the easiest way to use CD/DVD media and install software to your Netbook. It is however the most expensive option. External CD/DVD readers can be bought online for less than £50 now days (eg Freecom available at Dabs.com for £31)
External drives are very simple; just plug it into an available USB port. Your Netbook will automatically detect the drive and simply add it to My Computer just like a built in drive. Some drives will even run power through the USB, while this makes them more mobile it eats up your Netbook's battery faster, if that is a problem other external drives do require a power outlet for use but should not drain your battery.
3. Create an Image (not bootable)
Required: Image making software (like Alcohol 120% or VirtualDrive), image emulation software (Alcohol 120% includes one, Dameon Tools is another, or Power Iso), access to a computer with an optical drive, and a method to transfer a large file from that computer to your Tablet PC.
You will need to use your particular software User-Guide for most of this process. What you do essentially is use software to create an exact copy of the CD in the form of a file (normally a .iso) that has to be read by an optical drive emulator which then can access the CD as if it were being read by a real optical drive. The biggest disadvantage to this method is that CDs can run around 700mbs, DVDs around 4gbs… transferring files of that size, even over fast networks, can be tedious. A benefit however is you can carry important CDs (as files) with you as you go, so for example if you need to install Microsoft Word content to use some feature while your in a meeting, you can do so without having the physical CD with you… This however of course requires heavy disk space since the CD file tends to be around 700mbs.
> Note: The legality around creating CD images is grey. You should be fine as long as you only make (and do not share with anyone) images for CDs you physically own, and only install it on the number of machines that matches the number of licenses you own (most software you purchase includes one license). It’s simple, if your honest and fair you should be fine under the law, if your not… then user beware.
We hope that helps.
Thanks to Tablet PC Talk for their original guide.






























