Article Illustration
Helps give us an idea of the form factor for such a desktop machine tagging the article with a picture of a blonde in a low cut top using a laptop.
Asustek is developing a desktop version of its ultra-compact Linux-based laptop, the Eee PC, the company's marketing chief has said. It wants to get the mini machine into shops sometime next year. Jonathan Tseng, Asus' President of Marketing, told Taiwanese site Digitimes that the desktop will not incorporate a display. So …
...and those desktop versions of the eee PC sound nice too. I'm already planning to replace my media playing PC (with a projector for a display - currently a slightly awkwardly poised Shuttle XPC), my file and print server and my proxy with eee PCs. Low power consumption, not many moving parts, physically small and amply powerful for all my purposes. Not sure if I can wait for desktops though.
I can't remember the last time I upgraded a machine (apart from adding disks, which is easy done with USB, and RAM, which I do rarely). Low-cost, quiet, convenient boxes like these would definitely do almost everything that I do with my machines better than the noisy, hungry PCs I use at the moment (apart from software development; I'll hang on to my more powerful workstation for that).
It really surprises me that I'm so enthusiastic about these machines, but I've been moaning for months or years that nobody seems to want to produce a cheap, low-spec but dependable machine these days, so ever since the eee PC I've actually become a fan of a piece of hardware for the first time since the Psion 5mx!
Always liked the Book PC form factor, which Taiwan hoped would be the next big thing around the time of the 386sx, but it never became popular.
I have always hated laptop keboards, and the display was always a waste of money - I used to use the customer display and keyboard when on site.
But now that flat displays are cheap and good, less reason to care if they bundle a display in with my portable desktop PC.
So the only reason to buy this is if they include the mains power supply in the package -- dongle power supplies are a pain in the butt, and one more thing to loose.
Virtualization.
Cheap, can boot on their own, but will boot off the server when available. Ideal system for most work environments - run from the server based XP / Vista most of the time, but can still function on Linux if the server goes down. All at a very low price and comparitively low power consumption.
Got one of these, and it's nice. Keyboard's not the greatest, and I suspect that the rumoured 10.2" screen version would be better still in the usability stakes, but for 180 odd quid, it's a superb device for a small bag or largish coat pocket.
Already had it up and running with XP and a external keyboard/mouse/screen, and it's a great alternative to a slimclient plus a PDA. Startup time is not bad either. Recommended.
I take it a RegHardware review is in the offing,especially as it'd give the team a chance to run *that* photo again