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and although I use a version of yt that automatically skips ads and sponsorships, I did get a small clip of the ass end of it and no, I do not require toothbrush as I do not brush teeth. I'm waiting for them to fall out by themselves one day, which hasn't happened yet at 34 years old, but maybe they all will soon so that I can get fake ones I really don't have to take care of. who has the time or money to take care of teeth anymore?!
My wife loved her eeePC. She has small hands and it fit her perfectly. The response was better once I installed Linux on it, because by then they had Windows on them.
@@backwardshalos6036 I am inclined to agree. The try-hard cringe persona makes a lot of the content feel too samey and like the creator has no real ability to put out anything of any real substance
I still have and use my 1001P Eee PC - 2GB RAM, 500GB HDD, Windows XP, and Serious Sam hovers around 60fps. Certainly not a daily driver, but it’s a great tiny super-light gamer with a 10hr extended battery. Great on flights!
My Eee PC 1015CX was my home server for a while until I retired it this year. I had to patch the BIOS to allow 64bit operation. The 1GB of RAM was painful. I had to stop other services before starting Jellyfin back when it was my only server. Here in the tropics, the humidity destroys LCD screens in about ten years. Mine has thick lines and large black spots all over. I just scripted Debian server to turn off the screen after booting.
The 10" GPD Win Max 2 is what netbooks aspired to be. I loved my Aspire One but lamented the inherent limitations of contemporary hardware. Nowadays, my Win Max 2 has a 16 core Ryzen 7840U, 32GB DDR5, 1TB PCIE4 SSD, and a 67Wh battery. It's everything I always wanted in an ultra-portable. Long live the netbook.
except a huge part of netbook concept is the relatively low cost and low entry barrier. The GPD products are cool, but way too expensive for the average person.
@turtlelore2 that was never part of the concept from my perspective, and I say this as someone who bought netbooks in their heyday. It was the portability that was appealing. For what it's worth, the Win Max 2 is only around $1k, which is pretty ballpark for the average laptop these days (e.g. macbook Air).
Not to invalidate your perspective, but the general market for netbooks were customers on a budget. Also, and I say this as a fellow GPD customer, one thousand dollars is a lot of money for most people, not an expense to be scoffed at.
As a Never Not Funny fan this joke made me blurt laugh and issue the highest of compliments from Mr Jimmy Pardo, "Ha! Idiot!" Well done ken, well done indeed
I got an ASUS EEE PC netbook as a graduation present in 2010. 2 GB of RAM, Windows 7 starter for the operating system. Family wanted me to dispose of it a year or two ago, but I refused because it was a present from my late-grandmother.
I don't care. I have no idea what you're talking about, though I watched dozens of DankPods videos. Y'all need to stop getting boners every time you all watch the same content. They're ONLY million subscriber channels. It's not that uncommon. I've heard PkCell but not your weird words Aaah! Batteries, etc... 1 grit. Yeah, y'all all watch the same channel. How **strange** in the non h*t*r* community...not.
I had my Eee probably from late 2009 and next 5 years it was excellent second computer for university after desktop. With 6 cell battery it works for 8+ hours, absolutely perfect for word, net, presentation, lightweight. And it still works. Sometimes I use it for portable USB endoscope and microscope. It was great product for 350€ at time.
That Eee Keyboard PC is like one of the coolest unique designs I've ever seen. An entire PC build into a keyboard with its own screen, its like a laptop but far far cooler. I wish they weren't so rare, I'd love to own one.
My friend owned regular nettop one, early white model. You could set taller resolution and it will just scroll it when you move the mouse. I never seen that anywhere else. It was surprisingly quick and could play old games like heroes 3 just fine. We even used VGA out to give presentations. Yes, 14" CRT is not big but it's definitely bigger than 7" 16:9 of this little idiot.
@@vadnegru that screen scrolling feature was kind of common on laptops with low resolution screens... If you set the resolution higher than what the panel could display it would just scroll the viewable area when you moused there.
I owned one of the Eee pc laptops in 2008 and it helped me move to a different country and apply for jobs in various public WiFi areas. After that I loaded different Linux on it, and tried to make it last either bigger 3rd party batteries, even as a form of media centre attached to a tv. Thank you for bringing back the memories, and nice episode
it was great and after relplacing windbloat with ubuntu, it shined even more. I used that thing on the road to configure security camera systems (that were also running on linux)
I can see a netbook from where I'm sitting, I still use it for SIO2PC for my Atari 800xls and to program one of my Chinese amateur transceivers that doesn't like newer versions of Windows.
I have one dedicated to running the North Korean operating system. It's my little Juche comrade. I unfortunately lost my netbooks to the tsunami back in 2011. So the ones I have now were effectively Ebay rescues.
I still use my Dell Mini 9. I put Vista on it and I pretty much only use it for my cars tuning software since it fits in the console or glove box easily on trips. Battery still works too!
12:45 "There's usually a door on the front that covers the I/O" Not only does that thing look like a Nintendo Wii, it has the same problem as my Nintendo Wii (the I/O door flaps keep popping off and going missing).
I walked into an Apple store, this is when the had the unit that fit into an envelope. I looked at it and said, "that is cool, but", as I pulled the Eeepc out said," mine fits in a smaller envelope". They all where interested
I found an eeePC Netbook in a garbage bin a few years ago, I upgraded the RAM and replaced the eMMC storage with an SSD, installed Windows XP, and now it runs like a dream. It's awesome as a super portable retro gaming system.
@@rustymixer2886 I was living in an apartment, where there was shared garbage disposal, and there was a separate bin for e-waste, I currently own 3 funtional computers that I pulled from that bin, the afore mentioned eeePC, an MSÌ Cubi, and the Lenovo tower that this comment is being posted from.
@Michael-Archonaeus very cool, glad you saves the tech...people will even throw away "slow" 100% stuff but if they just install a Linux like mint the eeepc will be swift
@@rustymixer2886 Yeah, I'm currently running KDE Neon on the Lenovo. The MSI is currently without an OS, because I needed the SSD for my work laptop lol
It is so funny, I just disassembled a battery from an EEE PEE CEE for my DIY stuff, went to take a break, opened TH-cam, and there is a video about history of EEE PEE CEE. Love the coincidence
I had an eeePC Surf around 2007. It was fantastic for carrying around to meetings at the time without lugging my full laptop setup. I basically used it for the productivity my iPad would give me a few years later.
19:15 could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure even my Galaxy S2 had Bluetooth mouse support which would allow a mouse cursor to be displayed... It's still possible on my phone today, furthering the fact that Androids are essential pocket computers.
Thank you for clarifying that the Eee pc weighed 2lbs and that was as much as two 1lb weights. Numbers and things are really confusing and this kind of information will allow me to succeed in the future. Keep up the good work!
it was a gimmic and that was about it a laptop with a smaller screen then other laptops back then now days you want something that small get a steam deck it has more power then an eee pc🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I had one of these! I used to carry it in my bag to class and use it on the train, writing notes for class. I also used to hook it up to my Nokia N95 phone and browse the web. Mine came with a version of Windows installed.
I remember the first time I heard the "netbook" name in the early half of the 2000s. It was a news video on Japanese gas stations. They showed off all the things you could buy, including an $80 low powered "disposable" laptop that was just powerful enough to check your email on the go. It was pre smart phone era.
Man, my family got an EeePc around 2009. It was slow, but functioned great for its intended use - casual consumers who wanted a portable machine to go on the internet with and maybe run some Office Suite programs (and some games too!). We still turn ours on from time to time, if only to check out what old files are still in it. Wonderful little machines, thanks for doing a video on them :]
So cool to revisit this part of computing history. I am glad to say I was a small part of it having worked at Xandros in the time when then EeePC was first conceptualized and eventually released. It was so cool at the time to work on what we all thought back then, was such cutting edge tech. I remember having a pre-production version EeePC 701 with me on a flight and having all the flight attendants and some of the passengers start asking me what the hell it was and how they could get one. Also I have seen a couple other roundups of this era and many people forget to mention the One Laptop Per Child project as the inspiration for creating this untapped market. Thanks for capturing this piece of history and summarizing it so well.
Quick correction - display is 800x480, not 800x400. The Celeron M 353 CPU in the original models is actually underclocked from 900MHz to 630MHz to save power. It's the same in all 7" models, 2G Surf, 4G, 701SD, whatever. The 900 has it running at the full 900MHz.
I had an EeePC. It was fantastic! You could get it with an extended battery that gave it an 8 hour run time on the lowest power mode. It was perfect for travelling. Huge battery, cheap so not a disaster if it was damaged or stolen, and light weight so it wasn't tiring to lug around. I stuck an emulator on there and had a blast.
My first ever laptop was one of those Eee PCs. Web browsing was painfully slow, even back in the day. But playing XP pinball on a 7 inch screen was so cool.
I had an Asus eeepc 901, with Puppylinux installed, which cost me €199 at the time. The autonomy and portability that this machine provided me was incredible.
"Computer Clan," I literally have a majority of the products you've mentioned: - Asus 701 Eee PC Netbook - Asus Transformer 101 (second tablet) - Asus Transformer 301 - Asus Transformer 701 (Windows competitor) - Asus Transformer 703 I might be getting these sub-names incorrect, but I've had them all. I've seen so many products on your show that I personally have owned or still own, and they still function. As it stands, my Asus Transformer 701 Android sits on top of my refrigerator acting as a UPnP network picture frame with "Fotoo" on a dribble charge. Unfortunately, it does not charge without the keyboard-weird. Personally, I wish I could modify it and get it higher than Android 4.4.2, but it still functions, albeit with glitches.
I found ROM mods for my TF701 all the way up to Android 7.1 N. Works flawlessly even with keyboard battery support. I kept using all the way to 2021 until I bought a Chromebook.
@@suomhiit was perfect for women. And that's why they were phased out. Because if men don't use it in tech it's done. I would love to have something in this format. It's was perfect for me.
I had an EeePC before I bought an iPad. I actually really liked it even though it was so slow compared to my desktops. But, it was small and I could take it anywhere and I ended up using it a lot. A lot! The reason I bought it was because I was going to do some traveling and I wanted a compact PC and couldn't afford a Mac laptop or iPad at the time. It had Windows 7 starter as the OS but I also remember seeing a model that had XP (glad I didn't go with that one). It really was a decent little computer that did exactly what I wanted it to do, which wasn't much: email, browsing, a little YouTuibing, video chat, word processing. One night I dropped it and it bricked. It now lives in a box in the basement almost forgotten. I keep it only to possibly harvest it for parts.
This was first personal laptop and I loved it so much. I recently found myself feeling nostalgic and found an almost new exact model a year ago and bought it again. Still use it sometimes for things that need XP programs.
Hi Ken. Thanks for another great video, loved it as much as all your other ones. Besides that, I also wanted to say that I appreciated very much the fact that you added metric conversions, though I can usually convert from imperial to metric easily (except temperature, that's just impossible) I always appreciate it when they just add metric
The Transformer Prime was an amazing device. An ARM-based Laptop/Tablet convertible that was well ahead of its time. Great performance, great battery life, a keyboard so good that I wrote a book on it, and all of it in a super slim metal enclosure.
I remember wanting one back in the day. Never ended up getting it, and in retrospect I can't say I regret not owning one. It would still be a cool collectable, though.
Awesome video. I’ve had a few Asus Eee products and still use an 11 inch under 2 pound fanless N4000 Asus Vivobook today. It’s a surprisingly well engineered lightweight laptop that was so cheap I expected it to break or die long ago but it still works great. It came with Windows 10 S but suffered under Microsoft’s bloated spyware OS. Running Linux, however, it boots quickly, is plenty fast for most tasks, and has 9+ hours of real world battery life. It also fits great on any airline tray table. I expected it to be disposable but here it is 5 years old and it’s been indestructible and even still has amazing battery life.
I still have my EEEPC701. I most often used it with Puppy Linux 528 installed on an external drive. It is a very usable machine except that the available web browsers are basically none. Back when 32bits was considered worth having, it did all I really needed it to do. I could easily do emails and watch cat videos and stuff like that. Using the VGA port, I could get a picture big enough that more than one person could see what was on the display. The sound on headphones was good enough to watch a movie or even listen to music. The built in speakers were about "voice grade". The WiFi was sensitive compared to most laptops. It was small enough to travel in a small briefcase with lots of other stuff in with it. It also provided USB ports that I could use to charge my phone. It was a bit odd but if you plugged in the adapter and the cell phone, the phone would get charged without EEEPC being on. It was extremely handy when traveling semi-light because of its small size.
I had the Eee Pad. It was a gift from my dad. Strangely, he split up the tablet part and the docking station part into two gifts. I got the Eee Pad tablet from my dad for my birthday, and he gave me the docking station for Christmas.
Had a 1005hab back in the day. I could watch movies on it and play 16 bit games on emulators. I used it to read computer magazines in PDF format. As long as your use case stayed within the hardware limitations, the little laptop was great.
I really miss netbook form factor. I have a desktop with a massive screen at home, I don’t need a massive laptop on the go. Having a tiny laptop was a game changer back in the day, though performance on them was absolutely terrible.
Yeah the closest thing you get in modern laptops right now is a 13 inch ultrabook with very small bezel that feels like a 12 inch laptop, but even it's still too large to be called "netbook form factor"
There are still such options , but smallest I saw are 13.3 inches , and rarely with weak specs , these are usually gaming or production laptops with very limited upgradeability and low i/o ports. The other option is some basic android tablet with keyboard , if you need light work , like Office apps , internet browsing and very light media consumption. :)
@@sihamhamda47 Thats why I have bought a ton of Samsung Chromebook 3's, they have full size usb ports (not like current that just have type-c ports), they are EOL and go for ~$40 used, are 11.6in and if you remove the write protect screw on the motherboard linux works great on them
The Chromebooks are the successors to Netbooks. Something like the 100e provides an acceptable level of performance at a 11" form factor. Heck, my old n22 managed to be way more functional with a Celeron (still is, minus the EOL part...) than the Atom Windows netbooks.
21:47 I was able to get into the pilot for the Cr-48. I was amazed at how well it worked at the time, and I was very disappointed that I spilled beer on it only to never have it turn on again.
I still have mine. Its got freebsd on it. Used it in college for my CS classes and it was awesome. Took me all night to compile applications from stratch on it when the ports tree was compromised and you had to build binaries yourself.
I had the Eee PC 1005 HAB, I upgraded the RAM to 2 GB and it ran XP great and I sold it to my cousin who used it for his insurance sales job. It was also great on cramped airplanes.
I did enjoy my eee pc 901 netbook for years... I ran ubuntu 8.04 on it... it was great to watch video's during flights to and from clients. I still have it and it still works... eventually I picked up a macbook air in 2013 and never looked back...
Ah, the Eee PC. I remember gifting one myself for my birthday when they were kind of new (I think second "generation", 1001H or so with Windows): Compared to a full sized Laptop this thing was great. Used it during my last two semesters at university and it was really just a great and convenient experience.
@@raven4k998 Well, I wanted to get the same super fancy looking PC Case from Fractal Design that my brother bought. Turned out it doesn't have a drive bay, and that's becoming the norm ... And I'm the only one in my circle of friends/family with a Blu-Ray drive in his PC 🤨
I had the windows XP EEEpc and it was great for my office work at my business. cheap. portable. connected to internet. 2 gig of ram. 1.3ghz celeron. I hooked it up to a 15 in monitor and used a plug in wifi USB. It was perfect for the use case. 👍
I was kinda waiting for a DankPods reference to be thrown in there somewhere through the video but yet realistic about how that wouldn't happen. I'm happy, and satisified.
I retired from my career in 2008 and decided to drive around the USA. While waining to fly out I saw one of these at Manchester Airport UK. So I bought it and it was a life saver for Banking, Photo Storage and keepimg in touch with family Many Happy Memories with the Eee Pc.
Intel also had a hand in the death of netbooks. Their Atom processors were notorious for being slow yet still power hungry resulting in both a bad experience *and* bad battery life. While iPads with ARM CPUs had comparable or better performance while sipping electricity. Later attempts to save netbooks by switching to Windows for popular appeal only exacerbated this problem and hastened their demise. Windows could not run on ARM at the time, and was a terrible experience on low end x86 CPUs. On the Android side, there was a chance to sidestep this issue thanks to ARM processors, Google deserves the blame for the failure of Android tablets by not investing sufficient resources to polish the user experience. They cheaped out because Android phones were already popular enough and thought they could just push through by relying on their dominance in other areas, but instead permanently ceded the tablet form factor to Apple. Notably, the other division within Google that did take the different form factor seriously - Chrome OS - achieved massive success with Chromebooks.
Will you ever make an episode about chromebooks specifically? i would love to learn more about them, especially after the surge of them in schools around my area in 2015
I wish modern tablets had the option to have those keyboards with the USB ports on them they actually feel like proper bottoms to a laptop. The only thing is is that to do it properly you're going to have to make it heavy enough so that the thing isn't top heavy which is what happened with the one I had. Having an extra battery that you can charge in the bottom can help with the weight like as mentioned in this video.
I had one of these EEE PC back in early 2008 when I was starting High School. These things were cool at the time because they were not as expensive compared to a lot of laptops and the MacBook. Plus, it was small and light enough that I could fit in my backpack and use it on my desk during class.
How is this possible; I just received my EEE PC 900 two weeks ago. Installing Win XP on the 4GB internal flash was a Nightmare (not installing, but booting). A mini-PCI to Msata adapter, a new 128GB and bios upgrade solved it for me. The internal flash is not visible any longer after placing the MSata SSD. Thanks for the video!
Coincidentally, I took my 15 year old EeePC 1000HE out of storage two days ago, and managed to re-install Linux on it. Except for some issues with wifi, it still seems to run fine. The hard part was finding a modern distro that still actively supports it
Eee wanted to be easy and excellent, but they only created e-waste. Calling it a boom or revolution is being nicer than it deserved. Everyone seems to like the idea of a smaller laptop until they realize the specs are shit. And Netbooks ended up with hardware on par with higher end cell phones. Eeessentially useless for eeenything other than browsing the internet.
That's all I needed. Just because you don't see a user for it it doesn't mean other people won't. Plus in developing countries where normal regular notebooks were really expensive as PC helped a lot here in Brazil for students. Not everyone wants to run incredible games on their notebooks. It was much better working in a netbook than working with a tablet.
Hey, I remember these! It was a great yet miserable experience using these. In the end having a 14 inch laptop that's still thinner and lighter than one of these proved to be the best comrpomise, and for anything smaller phones and tablets took over.
I remember Asus had a Padfone which was a Android smartphone that connected into w big screen and transformed into a tablet, which than had an Keyboard dock to make it into a laptop. As a kid I really wanted it but they discontinued it after 1 generation.
I really like the Eee Keyboard PC with the lcd screen. I've been looking for quite a while and never managed to locate one that worked. Found 2 that were very broken at the e-recycling center. They were beyond repair by the time I got to them sadly. Congrats on getting your hands on one. They aren't powerful by any stretch, but they're weird and I like that weirdness about them. Cheers.
One interesting product missed is Eee netbook with ION nVidia graphics. A beefier 12" netbook with dual-core Atom CPU (with very bad thermals) paired with dedicated nVidia graphics. I loved that device, despite all its shortcomings. It could play low demanding games (if those are not CPU bound) and was very good at playing video, due to hardware decoding in its nVidia graphics, unlike other netbooks at that time.
I had a 701. Still have it somewhere. My greatest accomplishment with it was around the time it came out, having it in a leg-mounted pack driving a VR headset to display a webcam image of what's in front of me overlaid with a badly modded game and using Wiimotes and a GPS feed from my smartphone for controls. The fans screamed, the batteries lasted minutes, everything was on the lowest possible settings, but the little thing was juuust capable of giving a portable augmented reality experience. Fantastic little thing.
I think I still have one of the later versions out in the garage. It was my wife's machine for several years, and did everything she needed it to. Its Achilles heel, for us anyway, turned out to be the miniscule 'hard drive.' I mean, we sold machines with 4 gig HDDs when I worked at Best Buy in the mid 90s. By 2010, you could pretty much run it out of storage in under 6 months without even trying. But now I'm feeling kinda nostalgic. Might have to dig it out and see if it still works...
i had one of these and it was an alright system. (after i added more ram and cleaned up win7) the best part about these was its long battery life, which is why i bought it in the first place. now i got myself a acer swift 1, which is also a small form factor laptop with good battery life and is even quite snappy.
CR-48 mention brings a tear to my eye. I don’t think I’ve ever been as excited as when I found out I was selected for the pilot. Only purchasing my first kindle or first iPad would probably compare in being as excited for a product.
That keyboard with the little screen is pretty dang cool! Damn shame it never took off, cause that looks pretty dang cool! And lol, Dankpods is now being referenced by other TH-camrs now. I still remember the days when I first found him back in 2020. So proud of him. (Wipes tear)…And it’s okay Ken, you tried, nobody can capture the magnificence of how that crazy man pronounces EeePeeCee like he can.
My first computer ever was an eeePC notebook. Came home from school one day and there was it as a surprise for me. I have fond memories of it, lasted years. Which is still why Asus is my first pick when I want to buy a new laptop
Not a fad at all. I still love tiny pc's. Had an Acer. An ASUS transformer book got me through college. Looking at a GPD Win Mini right now, actually. I think it started with that ATM scene in Terminator 2. I'll bet I'm not the only one.
I've still got two original 701 units and they still work and I use them. Super compact PC which I use for basic diagnostic software. Very reliable. I run them on MicroXP.
I still remember Christmas morning, 2008. Next to the Christmas tree sitting on a desk there was a brand new Asus EEE Box set up with a bow and my name on it. 9 year old me couldn't believe that I had my very own computer.
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hi
reality is an illusion
I love your perfectly round head...yes I'm a weirdo I just had to say that.
and although I use a version of yt that automatically skips ads and sponsorships, I did get a small clip of the ass end of it and no, I do not require toothbrush as I do not brush teeth. I'm waiting for them to fall out by themselves one day, which hasn't happened yet at 34 years old, but maybe they all will soon so that I can get fake ones I really don't have to take care of. who has the time or money to take care of teeth anymore?!
you sponsor is bollocks
“That’s as much as 2 one-pound weights.”
It’s the extra knowledge like this that keeps me coming back.
Two pounds is $ 2.54 for American viewers.
Imperial/avoirdupois pounds or troy pounds?
I was astonished.
I was confusd for a moment, good thing he cleared that up for us.
IOt's comedy gold like this that makes the internet so much fun. 🙃😉
My wife loved her eeePC. She has small hands and it fit her perfectly. The response was better once I installed Linux on it, because by then they had Windows on them.
There's definitely a small-penis joke in there somewhere lol
ALRIGHT WE'RE ARMIN THE NUGGET ON THE EEEEEE PEE CEEEE
dankpods is brain rot
@@backwardshalos6036no u
@@backwardshalos6036🧢
@@backwardshalos6036 I am inclined to agree. The try-hard cringe persona makes a lot of the content feel too samey and like the creator has no real ability to put out anything of any real substance
@@InfernosReaperlmao what a shit take
I still have and use my 1001P Eee PC - 2GB RAM, 500GB HDD, Windows XP, and Serious Sam hovers around 60fps. Certainly not a daily driver, but it’s a great tiny super-light gamer with a 10hr extended battery. Great on flights!
My Eee PC 1015CX was my home server for a while until I retired it this year. I had to patch the BIOS to allow 64bit operation. The 1GB of RAM was painful. I had to stop other services before starting Jellyfin back when it was my only server.
Here in the tropics, the humidity destroys LCD screens in about ten years. Mine has thick lines and large black spots all over. I just scripted Debian server to turn off the screen after booting.
Replace that HDD with an SSD to make it fly!
I'm surprised that game runs on it
According to an Australian TH-camr who's pet snake is named Frank: "That's right everyone, we're bringing back the EEEPEECEE"
SPAM COMMENT BOTS ARE NOT ALLOWED
Dankpods?
@@koweedateyep
arming that nug
EEEPEECEEEEE WITH WINDOWS XP @dankpods
The 10" GPD Win Max 2 is what netbooks aspired to be. I loved my Aspire One but lamented the inherent limitations of contemporary hardware. Nowadays, my Win Max 2 has a 16 core Ryzen 7840U, 32GB DDR5, 1TB PCIE4 SSD, and a 67Wh battery. It's everything I always wanted in an ultra-portable. Long live the netbook.
except a huge part of netbook concept is the relatively low cost and low entry barrier. The GPD products are cool, but way too expensive for the average person.
@turtlelore2 that was never part of the concept from my perspective, and I say this as someone who bought netbooks in their heyday. It was the portability that was appealing.
For what it's worth, the Win Max 2 is only around $1k, which is pretty ballpark for the average laptop these days (e.g. macbook Air).
Not to invalidate your perspective, but the general market for netbooks were customers on a budget. Also, and I say this as a fellow GPD customer, one thousand dollars is a lot of money for most people, not an expense to be scoffed at.
@junko4166 you're not invalidating anything, just giving your own perspective. Thanks for sharing.
4:04 - "That weighs as much as two 1 LB weights."
Not a scientist, but that checks out.
Only for very accurate values of 1
Am a scientist, can also confirm
As a Never Not Funny fan this joke made me blurt laugh and issue the highest of compliments from Mr Jimmy Pardo, "Ha! Idiot!"
Well done ken, well done indeed
So he's saying 2 5:02 pounds via mathematics?.
"Not a scientist"
That checks out. A scientist would use kilograms.
I got an ASUS EEE PC netbook as a graduation present in 2010. 2 GB of RAM, Windows 7 starter for the operating system. Family wanted me to dispose of it a year or two ago, but I refused because it was a present from my late-grandmother.
Oh mate do I love my Hatch Pea EEE PEE CEE (I didn’t think my comment would blow up like that so thank you everyone
You watch dankpods?
Yissss mate, Aussie DankPods all the way!
@@JordanClay-nq2giI think a person who calls himself yourlocalipodfanboy does indeed watch dankpods
Nugget laptop supreme
This is the right name
I remember my eeePC 701 fondly. The battery life was exceptional. It even was my ONLY computer for a year.
I love how Dankpods has made the EEE PEE CEE so iconic and we are all referring to it in the same way!
It was iconic for me because all my highschool teachers had these with Windows XP.
DankPods reignited that memory.
I used to have on, and Dank's videos unlocked a teenage memory lmao
Now if he could only use it proficiently...
I don't care. I have no idea what you're talking about, though I watched dozens of DankPods videos.
Y'all need to stop getting boners every time you all watch the same content.
They're ONLY million subscriber channels. It's not that uncommon.
I've heard PkCell but not your weird words
Aaah! Batteries, etc...
1 grit.
Yeah, y'all all watch the same channel. How **strange** in the non h*t*r* community...not.
I got a knockoff Eee PC from smasnug (samsung nb30)
I had my Eee probably from late 2009 and next 5 years it was excellent second computer for university after desktop. With 6 cell battery it works for 8+ hours, absolutely perfect for word, net, presentation, lightweight. And it still works. Sometimes I use it for portable USB endoscope and microscope. It was great product for 350€ at time.
That Eee Keyboard PC is like one of the coolest unique designs I've ever seen. An entire PC build into a keyboard with its own screen, its like a laptop but far far cooler. I wish they weren't so rare, I'd love to own one.
My friend owned regular nettop one, early white model. You could set taller resolution and it will just scroll it when you move the mouse. I never seen that anywhere else. It was surprisingly quick and could play old games like heroes 3 just fine. We even used VGA out to give presentations. Yes, 14" CRT is not big but it's definitely bigger than 7" 16:9 of this little idiot.
@@vadnegru that screen scrolling feature was kind of common on laptops with low resolution screens... If you set the resolution higher than what the panel could display it would just scroll the viewable area when you moused there.
@@volvo09 i was young enough to only see 768p laptops so this was surprise for me
never managed to find it available anywhere when it came out , it was a very cool idea that didn't get support and disappeared on the limbo
I'd love for him to have talked a bit more about it,
I had an HP mini netbook in college, I absolutely loved having a small computer that I could take to class to take notes and browse my RSS feeds.
I owned one of the Eee pc laptops in 2008 and it helped me move to a different country and apply for jobs in various public WiFi areas. After that I loaded different Linux on it, and tried to make it last either bigger 3rd party batteries, even as a form of media centre attached to a tv. Thank you for bringing back the memories, and nice episode
it was great and after relplacing windbloat with ubuntu, it shined even more. I used that thing on the road to configure security camera systems (that were also running on linux)
Haha, I did something similar with my Acer Aspire One. Installed Ubuntu and bought a monster 9-cell battery.
Your channel is my childhood. Been watching since 2014 or something. Its incredible if you think about it! Thanks for everything.
I can see a netbook from where I'm sitting, I still use it for SIO2PC for my Atari 800xls and to program one of my Chinese amateur transceivers that doesn't like newer versions of Windows.
Yeah I kept mine around for that reason as well. Sometimes I have an old device the needs an XP machine to run.
I have one dedicated to running the North Korean operating system. It's my little Juche comrade. I unfortunately lost my netbooks to the tsunami back in 2011. So the ones I have now were effectively Ebay rescues.
I had one that I used primarily for loading ROMs and other files on the Skunkboard for the Atari Jaguar. Served that purpose quite well.
I still use my Dell Mini 9. I put Vista on it and I pretty much only use it for my cars tuning software since it fits in the console or glove box easily on trips.
Battery still works too!
@@volvo09 when I originally bought my mini 1012 it was just for obd 😂
12:45 "There's usually a door on the front that covers the I/O"
Not only does that thing look like a Nintendo Wii, it has the same problem as my Nintendo Wii (the I/O door flaps keep popping off and going missing).
Nowadays, they are for a crazy Australian to fill up with nugget bloatware.
I am shocked at the overlap between Dankpods and Computer Clan viewers.
@@KamenRiderGumo To be fair, both sometimes cover the same thing. Technology that doesn't always work as advertised, and old tech in general.
@@KamenRiderGumothe overlap might be big but only some dankpods fans actually stay focused on this vid for 5 mins (incl me)
that keyboard is probably the coolest frickin thing I've ever seen for an accessory. why don't they have more like it!??
Ikr!?
I had an Asus EeePC. That thing was great to carry around the house or out to the garage. Never had one issue with it till it got stolen.
I liked mine, it was a good little diagnostic machine. It was just small enough to fit in my cargo pants' side pockets.
I walked into an Apple store, this is when the had the unit that fit into an envelope. I looked at it and said, "that is cool, but", as I pulled the Eeepc out said," mine fits in a smaller envelope". They all where interested
@@tgdmso I'm not the only one that put it in the cargo pants
Mine got stolen too when my house was robbed.
I found an eeePC Netbook in a garbage bin a few years ago, I upgraded the RAM and replaced the eMMC storage with an SSD, installed Windows XP, and now it runs like a dream.
It's awesome as a super portable retro gaming system.
With linux (like Xubuntu) is still works like charm
How you see it in garbage bin?
@@rustymixer2886 I was living in an apartment, where there was shared garbage disposal, and there was a separate bin for e-waste, I currently own 3 funtional computers that I pulled from that bin, the afore mentioned eeePC, an MSÌ Cubi, and the Lenovo tower that this comment is being posted from.
@Michael-Archonaeus very cool, glad you saves the tech...people will even throw away "slow" 100% stuff but if they just install a Linux like mint the eeepc will be swift
@@rustymixer2886 Yeah, I'm currently running KDE Neon on the Lenovo.
The MSI is currently without an OS, because I needed the SSD for my work laptop lol
It is so funny, I just disassembled a battery from an EEE PEE CEE for my DIY stuff, went to take a break, opened TH-cam, and there is a video about history of EEE PEE CEE. Love the coincidence
did you google teardown instructions for the battery? If so that might explain the "coincidence"
@@techlifebio Haha nope. Disassembling the laptop batteries is just brut force and I just happen to watch Computer Clan
The camera was probably actively scanning your environment, saw the destruction, and thought you might like to consider another eeepeecee.
I had an eeePC Surf around 2007. It was fantastic for carrying around to meetings at the time without lugging my full laptop setup. I basically used it for the productivity my iPad would give me a few years later.
I've come straight to the comments for shouty enthusiastic Australian comments, and I have not been disappointed!
19:15 could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure even my Galaxy S2 had Bluetooth mouse support which would allow a mouse cursor to be displayed... It's still possible on my phone today, furthering the fact that Androids are essential pocket computers.
Thank you for clarifying that the Eee pc weighed 2lbs and that was as much as two 1lb weights. Numbers and things are really confusing and this kind of information will allow me to succeed in the future. Keep up the good work!
it was a gimmic and that was about it a laptop with a smaller screen then other laptops back then now days you want something that small get a steam deck it has more power then an eee pc🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I had one of these! I used to carry it in my bag to class and use it on the train, writing notes for class. I also used to hook it up to my Nokia N95 phone and browse the web. Mine came with a version of Windows installed.
The first iteration was Android only, but the 2nd iteration came in Windows or Android.
Before watching, is DankPods here :)) ?
Not yet, we all hope that our Vegemite eating Mate sees this.
Just a little reference at the end of the video
He’s too busy orally pleasuring Samsung.
No because not everyone simps for dank pods
@@catacocamping874damn, you seem to have some big feelings lil guy. 😢
These products were way ahead of their time.
Would love a modern version of that keyboard.
I remember the first time I heard the "netbook" name in the early half of the 2000s. It was a news video on Japanese gas stations. They showed off all the things you could buy, including an $80 low powered "disposable" laptop that was just powerful enough to check your email on the go. It was pre smart phone era.
I remember my first free eeepc it was cute but that was about it
Man, my family got an EeePc around 2009. It was slow, but functioned great for its intended use - casual consumers who wanted a portable machine to go on the internet with and maybe run some Office Suite programs (and some games too!). We still turn ours on from time to time, if only to check out what old files are still in it. Wonderful little machines, thanks for doing a video on them :]
It’s the Eeeeeee Peee Ceeee
I'm glad to see that DankFans are among the first in this comment section.
"Translate to English"
I know right! The title is spelled wrong!
EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE PEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE CEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
"Translate to English" lol
So cool to revisit this part of computing history. I am glad to say I was a small part of it having worked at Xandros in the time when then EeePC was first conceptualized and eventually released. It was so cool at the time to work on what we all thought back then, was such cutting edge tech. I remember having a pre-production version EeePC 701 with me on a flight and having all the flight attendants and some of the passengers start asking me what the hell it was and how they could get one. Also I have seen a couple other roundups of this era and many people forget to mention the One Laptop Per Child project as the inspiration for creating this untapped market. Thanks for capturing this piece of history and summarizing it so well.
Quick correction - display is 800x480, not 800x400. The Celeron M 353 CPU in the original models is actually underclocked from 900MHz to 630MHz to save power. It's the same in all 7" models, 2G Surf, 4G, 701SD, whatever. The 900 has it running at the full 900MHz.
You could use software to overclock it!
As far as i know it was because the system is unstable at 900 MHz, they did an oopsie in the first revision.
and there was no modem, ASUS ditched that before releas, hence the plug in the port.
I had an EeePC. It was fantastic! You could get it with an extended battery that gave it an 8 hour run time on the lowest power mode. It was perfect for travelling. Huge battery, cheap so not a disaster if it was damaged or stolen, and light weight so it wasn't tiring to lug around. I stuck an emulator on there and had a blast.
My first ever laptop was one of those Eee PCs. Web browsing was painfully slow, even back in the day. But playing XP pinball on a 7 inch screen was so cool.
cant believed ive been watching this channel for 8 years... truly a legend in my heart
I never heard of the EeePC until I learned of it's existance thsbks to Wads from the channel DankPods.
13:18 Ah... the Express Gate.
Reminds me of Cathode Ray Dude's Quick Start series :D
I had a Dell Mini 9 back in the day. Used it to write 2 books. It was a very cool little gadget. Netbooks were a neat idea at the time.
I had an Asus eeepc 901, with Puppylinux installed, which cost me €199 at the time. The autonomy and portability that this machine provided me was incredible.
"Computer Clan," I literally have a majority of the products you've mentioned:
- Asus 701 Eee PC Netbook
- Asus Transformer 101 (second tablet)
- Asus Transformer 301
- Asus Transformer 701 (Windows competitor)
- Asus Transformer 703
I might be getting these sub-names incorrect, but I've had them all.
I've seen so many products on your show that I personally have owned or still own, and they still function.
As it stands, my Asus Transformer 701 Android sits on top of my refrigerator acting as a UPnP network picture frame with "Fotoo" on a dribble charge. Unfortunately, it does not charge without the keyboard-weird.
Personally, I wish I could modify it and get it higher than Android 4.4.2, but it still functions, albeit with glitches.
I found ROM mods for my TF701 all the way up to Android 7.1 N. Works flawlessly even with keyboard battery support. I kept using all the way to 2021 until I bought a Chromebook.
@@Neojhun links and video TY
I had one of those Eee PCs. It was surprisingly adequate for someone who wanted something portable for work, but also play a few old games for fun.
I had one too and absolutely hated the tiny keyboard. I'd get almost no work done because I'd spend most of the time fixing typos :/
@@suomhiit was perfect for women. And that's why they were phased out. Because if men don't use it in tech it's done. I would love to have something in this format. It's was perfect for me.
I was so scared at the Australia joke 😅
He was gonna get the EEE PEE CEE Keyboard nugget from a crazy Aussie mate down unda!
Im Englischen lässt es sich halt gerne mal verwechseln xD
you should
I had an EeePC before I bought an iPad. I actually really liked it even though it was so slow compared to my desktops. But, it was small and I could take it anywhere and I ended up using it a lot. A lot! The reason I bought it was because I was going to do some traveling and I wanted a compact PC and couldn't afford a Mac laptop or iPad at the time. It had Windows 7 starter as the OS but I also remember seeing a model that had XP (glad I didn't go with that one). It really was a decent little computer that did exactly what I wanted it to do, which wasn't much: email, browsing, a little YouTuibing, video chat, word processing. One night I dropped it and it bricked. It now lives in a box in the basement almost forgotten. I keep it only to possibly harvest it for parts.
This was first personal laptop and I loved it so much. I recently found myself feeling nostalgic and found an almost new exact model a year ago and bought it again. Still use it sometimes for things that need XP programs.
Hi Ken. Thanks for another great video, loved it as much as all your other ones. Besides that, I also wanted to say that I appreciated very much the fact that you added metric conversions, though I can usually convert from imperial to metric easily (except temperature, that's just impossible) I always appreciate it when they just add metric
The Transformer Prime was an amazing device. An ARM-based Laptop/Tablet convertible that was well ahead of its time. Great performance, great battery life, a keyboard so good that I wrote a book on it, and all of it in a super slim metal enclosure.
I remember wanting one back in the day. Never ended up getting it, and in retrospect I can't say I regret not owning one. It would still be a cool collectable, though.
The funny Hasbro name makes me laugh
I am going to turn into a truck now
Do you still own it?
@@Unan1mouz No, the battery died ages ago.
Awesome video. I’ve had a few Asus Eee products and still use an 11 inch under 2 pound fanless N4000 Asus Vivobook today. It’s a surprisingly well engineered lightweight laptop that was so cheap I expected it to break or die long ago but it still works great. It came with Windows 10 S but suffered under Microsoft’s bloated spyware OS. Running Linux, however, it boots quickly, is plenty fast for most tasks, and has 9+ hours of real world battery life. It also fits great on any airline tray table. I expected it to be disposable but here it is 5 years old and it’s been indestructible and even still has amazing battery life.
I still have my EEEPC701. I most often used it with Puppy Linux 528 installed on an external drive. It is a very usable machine except that the available web browsers are basically none. Back when 32bits was considered worth having, it did all I really needed it to do. I could easily do emails and watch cat videos and stuff like that. Using the VGA port, I could get a picture big enough that more than one person could see what was on the display. The sound on headphones was good enough to watch a movie or even listen to music. The built in speakers were about "voice grade".
The WiFi was sensitive compared to most laptops.
It was small enough to travel in a small briefcase with lots of other stuff in with it.
It also provided USB ports that I could use to charge my phone. It was a bit odd but if you plugged in the adapter and the cell phone, the phone would get charged without EEEPC being on.
It was extremely handy when traveling semi-light because of its small size.
Yes, it has surprisingly good WiFi, better than phones could do at that time. Like it was made for public hotspots or something.
Falkon browser?
@@gentle285 I will look into it
I had the Eee Pad. It was a gift from my dad. Strangely, he split up the tablet part and the docking station part into two gifts. I got the Eee Pad tablet from my dad for my birthday, and he gave me the docking station for Christmas.
Had a 1005hab back in the day. I could watch movies on it and play 16 bit games on emulators. I used it to read computer magazines in PDF format. As long as your use case stayed within the hardware limitations, the little laptop was great.
I am a first time viewer and I found this video not only informative but beautifully done.
I really miss netbook form factor. I have a desktop with a massive screen at home, I don’t need a massive laptop on the go. Having a tiny laptop was a game changer back in the day, though performance on them was absolutely terrible.
Yeah the closest thing you get in modern laptops right now is a 13 inch ultrabook with very small bezel that feels like a 12 inch laptop, but even it's still too large to be called "netbook form factor"
How about a tablet with a keyboard ?
There are still such options , but smallest I saw are 13.3 inches , and rarely with weak specs , these are usually gaming or production laptops with very limited upgradeability and low i/o ports.
The other option is some basic android tablet with keyboard , if you need light work , like Office apps , internet browsing and very light media consumption. :)
@@sihamhamda47 Thats why I have bought a ton of Samsung Chromebook 3's, they have full size usb ports (not like current that just have type-c ports), they are EOL and go for ~$40 used, are 11.6in and if you remove the write protect screw on the motherboard linux works great on them
The Chromebooks are the successors to Netbooks. Something like the 100e provides an acceptable level of performance at a 11" form factor.
Heck, my old n22 managed to be way more functional with a Celeron (still is, minus the EOL part...) than the Atom Windows netbooks.
21:47 I was able to get into the pilot for the Cr-48. I was amazed at how well it worked at the time, and I was very disappointed that I spilled beer on it only to never have it turn on again.
Someone better call up DankPods.
Cause we got the EEEEEeeeePeeeeCeeeeeee
I loved my netbooks. Full blown Windows on a 10 inch screen for under $300. Now it's difficult to find a x86 laptop smaller than 13".
I didn't expect to see the Transformer Prime on here! I used it for my first 4 years of ministry as my sermon-writing tablet. Great memories!
I still have mine. Its got freebsd on it. Used it in college for my CS classes and it was awesome.
Took me all night to compile applications from stratch on it when the ports tree was compromised and you had to build binaries yourself.
I had the Eee PC 1005 HAB, I upgraded the RAM to 2 GB and it ran XP great and I sold it to my cousin who used it for his insurance sales job. It was also great on cramped airplanes.
I've got the same white Eee PC you have. It does'nt turn on anymore, but it still works as a great USB charger when it's plugged into the mains.
"2 pounds is as much as 2 1 pound weights" wow. I learn something new every day!
I did enjoy my eee pc 901 netbook for years... I ran ubuntu 8.04 on it... it was great to watch video's during flights to and from clients. I still have it and it still works... eventually I picked up a macbook air in 2013 and never looked back...
Ah, the Eee PC. I remember gifting one myself for my birthday when they were kind of new (I think second "generation", 1001H or so with Windows): Compared to a full sized Laptop this thing was great. Used it during my last two semesters at university and it was really just a great and convenient experience.
the Eee PC marked the beginning of the death of optical drives in laptops🤮
@@raven4k998 Well, I wanted to get the same super fancy looking PC Case from Fractal Design that my brother bought. Turned out it doesn't have a drive bay, and that's becoming the norm ... And I'm the only one in my circle of friends/family with a Blu-Ray drive in his PC 🤨
I had the windows XP EEEpc and it was great for my office work at my business. cheap. portable. connected to internet. 2 gig of ram. 1.3ghz celeron. I hooked it up to a 15 in monitor and used a plug in wifi USB. It was perfect for the use case. 👍
I was kinda waiting for a DankPods reference to be thrown in there somewhere through the video but yet realistic about how that wouldn't happen.
I'm happy, and satisified.
I retired from my career in 2008 and decided to drive around the USA. While waining to fly out I saw one of these at Manchester Airport UK. So I bought it and it was a life saver for Banking, Photo Storage and keepimg in touch with family Many Happy Memories with the Eee Pc.
Intel also had a hand in the death of netbooks. Their Atom processors were notorious for being slow yet still power hungry resulting in both a bad experience *and* bad battery life. While iPads with ARM CPUs had comparable or better performance while sipping electricity. Later attempts to save netbooks by switching to Windows for popular appeal only exacerbated this problem and hastened their demise. Windows could not run on ARM at the time, and was a terrible experience on low end x86 CPUs.
On the Android side, there was a chance to sidestep this issue thanks to ARM processors, Google deserves the blame for the failure of Android tablets by not investing sufficient resources to polish the user experience. They cheaped out because Android phones were already popular enough and thought they could just push through by relying on their dominance in other areas, but instead permanently ceded the tablet form factor to Apple. Notably, the other division within Google that did take the different form factor seriously - Chrome OS - achieved massive success with Chromebooks.
Will you ever make an episode about chromebooks specifically? i would love to learn more about them, especially after the surge of them in schools around my area in 2015
The obligatory EEEPEECEE comment
The EEEPEECEE
Dingus of a nugget
I wish modern tablets had the option to have those keyboards with the USB ports on them they actually feel like proper bottoms to a laptop.
The only thing is is that to do it properly you're going to have to make it heavy enough so that the thing isn't top heavy which is what happened with the one I had.
Having an extra battery that you can charge in the bottom can help with the weight like as mentioned in this video.
DankPods fans - - - >
The day it died 😢
I had one of these EEE PC back in early 2008 when I was starting High School. These things were cool at the time because they were not as expensive compared to a lot of laptops and the MacBook. Plus, it was small and light enough that I could fit in my backpack and use it on my desk during class.
THE EEEPEEECEEEE
My netbook got me through my deployment… then I used a TF-101 for college.. was awesome having the ASUS transformer keyboard for notes
now, that's a nugget
How is this possible; I just received my EEE PC 900 two weeks ago. Installing Win XP on the 4GB internal flash was a Nightmare (not installing, but booting). A mini-PCI to Msata adapter, a new 128GB and bios upgrade solved it for me. The internal flash is not visible any longer after placing the MSata SSD. Thanks for the video!
Eeextremly good video.
16:27 bit sad how we have orders of magnitude more compute now but that UI is graphically richer than almost anything in iOS today
Confirmed: ASUS was inspired by Rainbow Dash.
Coincidentally, I took my 15 year old EeePC 1000HE out of storage two days ago, and managed to re-install Linux on it. Except for some issues with wifi, it still seems to run fine. The hard part was finding a modern distro that still actively supports it
wait this isnt a dankpods video…
That's my 1st laptop i play dota frozen trons and counter strike 1.6
I still have mine. I use it to tune up my annual light show.
Eee wanted to be easy and excellent, but they only created e-waste. Calling it a boom or revolution is being nicer than it deserved. Everyone seems to like the idea of a smaller laptop until they realize the specs are shit. And Netbooks ended up with hardware on par with higher end cell phones. Eeessentially useless for eeenything other than browsing the internet.
That's all I needed. Just because you don't see a user for it it doesn't mean other people won't. Plus in developing countries where normal regular notebooks were really expensive as PC helped a lot here in Brazil for students. Not everyone wants to run incredible games on their notebooks. It was much better working in a netbook than working with a tablet.
Hey, I remember these! It was a great yet miserable experience using these.
In the end having a 14 inch laptop that's still thinner and lighter than one of these proved to be the best comrpomise, and for anything smaller phones and tablets took over.
I remember Asus had a Padfone which was a Android smartphone that connected into w big screen and transformed into a tablet, which than had an Keyboard dock to make it into a laptop.
As a kid I really wanted it but they discontinued it after 1 generation.
I really like the Eee Keyboard PC with the lcd screen. I've been looking for quite a while and never managed to locate one that worked. Found 2 that were very broken at the e-recycling center. They were beyond repair by the time I got to them sadly. Congrats on getting your hands on one. They aren't powerful by any stretch, but they're weird and I like that weirdness about them. Cheers.
One interesting product missed is Eee netbook with ION nVidia graphics. A beefier 12" netbook with dual-core Atom CPU (with very bad thermals) paired with dedicated nVidia graphics.
I loved that device, despite all its shortcomings. It could play low demanding games (if those are not CPU bound) and was very good at playing video, due to hardware decoding in its nVidia graphics, unlike other netbooks at that time.
I had that one. It was a great PC but it melted itself after a few years . Mine had a duo core though.
12:47 the door covering the I/O of my Eee Box has long since dissapeared too.
I had a 701. Still have it somewhere. My greatest accomplishment with it was around the time it came out, having it in a leg-mounted pack driving a VR headset to display a webcam image of what's in front of me overlaid with a badly modded game and using Wiimotes and a GPS feed from my smartphone for controls. The fans screamed, the batteries lasted minutes, everything was on the lowest possible settings, but the little thing was juuust capable of giving a portable augmented reality experience.
Fantastic little thing.
I think I still have one of the later versions out in the garage. It was my wife's machine for several years, and did everything she needed it to. Its Achilles heel, for us anyway, turned out to be the miniscule 'hard drive.' I mean, we sold machines with 4 gig HDDs when I worked at Best Buy in the mid 90s. By 2010, you could pretty much run it out of storage in under 6 months without even trying.
But now I'm feeling kinda nostalgic. Might have to dig it out and see if it still works...
i had one of these and it was an alright system. (after i added more ram and cleaned up win7)
the best part about these was its long battery life, which is why i bought it in the first place.
now i got myself a acer swift 1, which is also a small form factor laptop with good battery life and is even quite snappy.
CR-48 mention brings a tear to my eye. I don’t think I’ve ever been as excited as when I found out I was selected for the pilot. Only purchasing my first kindle or first iPad would probably compare in being as excited for a product.
That's awesome 😌
That keyboard with the little screen is pretty dang cool! Damn shame it never took off, cause that looks pretty dang cool!
And lol, Dankpods is now being referenced by other TH-camrs now. I still remember the days when I first found him back in 2020. So proud of him. (Wipes tear)…And it’s okay Ken, you tried, nobody can capture the magnificence of how that crazy man pronounces EeePeeCee like he can.
My first computer ever was an eeePC notebook. Came home from school one day and there was it as a surprise for me. I have fond memories of it, lasted years. Which is still why Asus is my first pick when I want to buy a new laptop
Not a fad at all. I still love tiny pc's. Had an Acer. An ASUS transformer book got me through college. Looking at a GPD Win Mini right now, actually.
I think it started with that ATM scene in Terminator 2. I'll bet I'm not the only one.
I've still got two original 701 units and they still work and I use them. Super compact PC which I use for basic diagnostic software. Very reliable. I run them on MicroXP.
I still remember Christmas morning, 2008. Next to the Christmas tree sitting on a desk there was a brand new Asus EEE Box set up with a bow and my name on it. 9 year old me couldn't believe that I had my very own computer.