Loved my little Eee 901! It was the first computer I could treat as a casual accessory, not just a precious piece of precision equipment. I would take it anywhere - ski trips, the workshop, the pub; I wrote a fair bit of code on that machine while sitting at the bar down the street with a pint at my elbow. It was cheap enough that I figured I could just buy another one, if it broke, but it never did. I eventually graduated to second-hand Thinkpads, a habit I've maintained ever since.
It's a shame that tablets have made this kind of form factor less desirable (also Microsoft did hobble them by reducing Windows licenses for them and thus the machines became less capable than the Linux powered ones). I'm a big fan of UMPCs - there's something very useful about having a physical keyboard so you can do serious work when needed but don't want to carry around a large laptop.
I've got a Chuwi Minibook (8inch screen) for that kind of usage and happily runs Linux on it nowadays (older versions of Ubuntu used to periodically hang which I believe was an issue with a driver for the disk).
That was really a time to be alive. It was shortly after I moved out from my parents and my mother got one instead of a tablet. She's tech-savvy I have to say :)
All she wanted was an actually portable Windows device, and Asus delivered.
Celeron was as hot as iPhone for a moment then! There was a real hype around this device category ("Netbook" was the German marketing term)
I didn't buy a Eee PC, instead picking up an Acer Aspire One. Loved that little thing – it was great on the train – and was very sad when Arch discontinied support for 32bit processors. By that time the netbook market had died a death. (I, too, went to second-hand Thinkpads at this point.)
It’s a larger device, but I’m hoping the new Framework 12 comes in at a price point to fill the “cheap hacker laptop” category. The original eee was a fantastic “throw it in your bag & bring it anywhere”, and it all but required running Linux to get anything out of it.
There was a brief side line on netbooks where you could swap in a daylight-readable display of the sort used in the OLPCs, too, but I never had the confluence of money, time, and availability to make that happen.
I think mine had the CMOS battery fail and I never got around to replacing it. Just pulled it out of a Rubbermaid container last week and thought "man I should get this up and running again, what a fun little cyberdeck it was."
This machine was key to helping me learn Backtrack Linux (Kali's predecessor) and introduced me to Fluxbox.
I miss these. I had a netbook, used it for years with Linux. Loved it. Took it everywhere, even got the battery upgrade so it would last 20h on a single charge.
Worked great until I updated Linux to discover that I could no longer install the stupid proprietary driver for the graphics, so lost hardware accelerated graphics. Was never able to downgrade successfully.
I've been idly looking for something modern to replace it but seems like there's nothing like that on the market now.
My beloved Asus 1215B finally gave the ghost last year, it served me well for travelling since 2009.
Nowadays this form factor is gone, it got injured with how Microsoft tackled the market they were initially losing, and got the final blow when tablets with detachable keyboards became widely adopted.
That is what normies are using all over the world in coffee shops, if not a regular laptop.
Likewise, now a Samsung tablet has taken over the role I used my netbook for.
I owned the eee 701 and it was fun using it in cafés. I graduated to the Acer 1410. Now I have a used Lenovo OG bought for $80 but its use case is similar to the netbook.
I still have a netbook. It's not an Asus Eee but a Samsung N102SP.
I don't really know if there's any way I can use it for anything nowadays. Windows is out of the question - it originally shipped with Windows 7 Starter, which it was already struggling with, to be honest.
I tried installing Linux on it, and it turned out that it requires a proprietary graphics driver, support for which was dropped from the kernel at some point...
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[ 158 ms ] story [ 1096 ms ] threadI've got a Chuwi Minibook (8inch screen) for that kind of usage and happily runs Linux on it nowadays (older versions of Ubuntu used to periodically hang which I believe was an issue with a driver for the disk).
All she wanted was an actually portable Windows device, and Asus delivered.
Celeron was as hot as iPhone for a moment then! There was a real hype around this device category ("Netbook" was the German marketing term)
It was perfect with fluxbox though (except for the size.)
There was a brief side line on netbooks where you could swap in a daylight-readable display of the sort used in the OLPCs, too, but I never had the confluence of money, time, and availability to make that happen.
This machine was key to helping me learn Backtrack Linux (Kali's predecessor) and introduced me to Fluxbox.
Great concept though. I wish the format would have stuck around. I'd like a premium version in that same size.
When things go wrong, the Eee is the backup to step in and fix things.
I added 4gb of ram to it and an SSD and it's ok for light loads.
It uses some AMD processor that has no cache or something ridiculous. C-50 Or C-52?
It also has a sticker for "HD Internet".
Worked great until I updated Linux to discover that I could no longer install the stupid proprietary driver for the graphics, so lost hardware accelerated graphics. Was never able to downgrade successfully.
I've been idly looking for something modern to replace it but seems like there's nothing like that on the market now.
Nowadays this form factor is gone, it got injured with how Microsoft tackled the market they were initially losing, and got the final blow when tablets with detachable keyboards became widely adopted.
That is what normies are using all over the world in coffee shops, if not a regular laptop.
Likewise, now a Samsung tablet has taken over the role I used my netbook for.
I don't really know if there's any way I can use it for anything nowadays. Windows is out of the question - it originally shipped with Windows 7 Starter, which it was already struggling with, to be honest.
I tried installing Linux on it, and it turned out that it requires a proprietary graphics driver, support for which was dropped from the kernel at some point...