Saturday, October 4th 2008
ASUS Debuts the Eee PC S101 Netbook
ASUSTeK Computer released today its newest and most expensive Eee PC netbook, the Eee PC S101. Designed to attract users with its style and premium finish (available in three colors - brown, champagne or graphite), the S class Eee PC also offer the latest hardware that a netbook can integrate. Measuring 264 (W) x 180.5 (D) x 18 ~ 25 (H) mm, the Eee PC S101 will be available in 3 different models. The first one has a 16GB SSD + 16GB SD card (32GB total storage space), Windows XP OS and a retail price of around $699. The second version comes with a 32GB SSD, Linux OS and will retail for around $699 as well. Finally, there's the 64GB SSD model with Linux which will have a price tag of around $799. Feature-wise all three Eee PC S101 models have a 10.2-inch wide active matrix LED backlit screen (1024x600 resolution), 1.6GHz Intel Atom CPU, 1GB RAM, 10/100/1000 Mbps ethernet controller, WLAN support, Bluetooth, 4-in-1 MMC reader and a 0.3MB integrated webcam. For more information, please visit the Eee PC - Blog.
Source:
Eee PC - Blog
19 Comments on ASUS Debuts the Eee PC S101 Netbook
For that money, I would rather get this: www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16834220385
At least it has dedicated video!
A dual core atom would be nice, but again is unneeded, what are you going to be doing on a netbook that requires more than the hyper-threaded atom that comes in them now?
As for the other requests, my netbook(EeePC 1000H) has 2GB of RAM and a 6-Cell battery.
You may be using it only for browsing/word processor but a lot of people use it with demanding portable applications like advance GPS mapping (huge maps) the single core Atom struggles slightly, HiDef 720P videos also stutters a bit so I'm sure the dual core version would eliminate those issues...
The Asus EEE PC 901 can manage 8 hours max with WIFI off and brightness turned down a bit, with a proper power efficient chipset/IGP it could pass 10 hours, unfortunately Intel doesn't seem bothered with releasing one yet.
I'm looking forward to AMD's offering, their mobile CPU plus a power efficient chipset/IGP would wipe the floor with ease.
On a side note, my 1000h should be here by next tuesay:rockout:
So is getting the 2 gigs of ram worth it?
I've had no problem with 720p video on my EeePC, I just watched IronMan in 720p on it actually. Though with only a 600p screen, what is the benefit of watching 720p content?:confused: I've watch both standard DivX/XviD movies and 720p H.264/X.264 movies on my EeePC, and there is no difference on the tiny screen. The screen doesn't have the resolution and it isn't big enough to benefit from 720p content. The 945GSE is about as power efficient as it gets, 6w is pretty damn low for a chipset. I certainly hope you realize the 945 chipset used with the same 945 chipset that was used in desktop, or even the same one that is used with the Atom processors in Desktops. The mobile 945GSE is a completely different beast. AMD's offering is pathetic compared to the Intel solution. They have already demoed it, you should really look into it. It is just a single core desktop processor underclocked to 1GHz to allow it to run at low voltages. It still uses more power than Intel's solution, while only barely managing to outperform the single core Atom. Yeah, getting the 2GB of RAM is worth it. I run Vista on mine, and the 2GB really helps speed the machine up. If you are going to stick with XP though, 1GB is enough, 2GB doesn't hurt though.