Final Words

When the $200 One Laptop Per Child machines first started shipping about two years ago, few realized that a hot new computer market segment was being defined. ASUS recognized the potential of the small, lower-powered, low-cost computer, and launched the ASUS Eee PC 4G just 6 months later. That first 7" screen netbook selling for around $300 was a huge hit in the US and around the world. From that first netbook the market segment has quickly evolved with added performance and features, and that evolution will definitely continue.

In the year and a half since the ASUS Eee created the netbook market, the netbook has grown from a near toy to a serious computing tool. Those who only need a computer for internet access, writing, and basic computing have embraced the netbook as a tool that does the job they need "well enough" at an extremely low price. So have parents buying computers for their school-age children, where computers have become all but a necessity. So many have embraced the netbook that it is now one of the hottest market segments in the computer industry.

That demand, combined with ever cheaper prices for computer power, stimulated rapid improvements in the netbook. The original Celeron CPU was displaced by the Intel Atom N270, with a 45%+ improvement in the PCMark05 CPU performance score. The Atom also brought improved Intel chipsets that increased the final PCMark05 score some 70%. In a market just 1.5 years old a 70% improvement in PCMark05 performance is remarkable - especially considering the fact that prices have still stayed relatively close to the $300 mark set by the original ASUS PC 4G.

Similarly screen size, which started at a 7" screen at 800x480 resolution, quickly grew to 9" and today's 10" screens with 1024x600 resolution. Some are even looking to move 12" screens into "netbooks", like the Dell Inspiron Mini 12 with its 1280x800 LCD (priced slightly higher than the 10" netbooks) and the Acer Aspire One ZA3 with an 11.6" 1333x768 screen at just $349.

Battery power started with a modest 2 hours on the first Eee, with a modest 38.5Wh power rating. That has grown into almost 6 hours in our battery tests on the latest ASUS Eee netbook and to a whopping 8.5 hours wireless surfing time on the latest MSI Wind U123 which features a 9-cell 87Wh rating. That growth in battery life has had a price, however, since the original 2 pound weight of the PC 4G has grown to around 3.2 pounds in the latest long-battery-life designs. Still, a 50% increase in weight for four times the battery life on a larger higher resolution 10" screen is considered a fair trade-off by most users.

The two netbooks tested in this review - the ASUS 1000HE and the MSI Wind U123 - are very representative of the current state of the netbook market. Both feature a 10" screen in a 3.2 pound body with claims of much extended battery life. The CPU in both units is the latest Intel Atom N280, which measures some 4% to 5% faster than the N270 it replaces. That improvement is very minor compared to the dramatic improvements brought by the earler move to the Atom N270 from Celeron, but netbook performance and capabilities are definitely improving, and we will see even more in the future.

Port complements are all but the same on both machines, with three USB, external video, audio outputs, flash card readers, WiFi and wired Ethernet capabilities, stereo speakers, and a 1.3MP webcam. Both also feature a 160GB internal hard drive. Looking at the surface there is little to distinguish the two netbooks from one another which is often the case in this market.

The primary difference is in battery capacity, with Wind U123 providing a 9-cell 87Wh option that provided the longest battery life we have tested in a netbook. The MSI managed almost 8.5 hours in the demanding AnandTech battery test which should be considered a heavy use testing scenario. This compared to 5:54 with the ASUS 1000HE 6-cell design. Certainly if battery life is your first concern the best netbook choice today is the MSI Wind U123, which provides significantly longer battery life at the same weight as the 6-cell ASUS 1000HE.

If ergonomics is a larger concern then the ASUS 1000HE is an easy recommendation. The ASUS design is more refined, with better attention to details than the Wind U123. While the ASUS and MSI keyboards are the same size and layout, the ASUS has a much better typing feel and was preferred over the MSI keyboard. The touchpad is also much larger with better button feel and operation on the ASUS. MSI really needs to upgrade the touchpad on future models. This will matter if you actually use the touchpad, but for those who quickly plug in a mouse or trackball the touchpad quality is not as important.

Finally there is value. With the street price of the ASUS 1000HE and the MSI Wind U123 all but the same you can choose the unit that best meets your needs. The MSI has by far the longest battery life among this group of 5 netbooks, while the ASUS has decent extended battery life and superior ergonomics. The superb U123 battery life tilts the scale in that direction for our needs, but your needs may favor the ergonomics of the ASUS.

ASUS has also announced the 1005HA as a replacement for the 1000HE model. That could mean some better pricing of the 1000HE as it is replaced with the updated model.  ASUS specifies a very modest improvement in battery life with the 1005HA, and we have just received that model in house for testing. 

While the ASUS 1000HE and MSI Wind U123 represent the current state of the netbook market we cannot help but project a bit on where the netbook market may be going. The definition of the netbook as a cheap computer that is "good enough" for most users' computing needs is compelling. That certainly does not mean the netbook market will be static. As computing power gets cheaper new performance gains will drop down to the netbook market. The huge popularity of netbooks will also be a driving force to provide more capabilities at cheap prices to drive business to new models.

The last two bastions of computer tasks not well-suited to netbooks are Blu-ray/H.264 playback and gaming. Another AnandTech Editor recently emailed me about his daughter and her friends finding ways to game on their school netbooks. The ability to game on netbooks is definitely coming. It is also likely you will see full Blu-ray playback capabilities available in the netbook market in the very near future. As these capabilities emerge AnandTech will add new test procedures to compare these capabilities.

The netbook market will also likely spill over the current "less than $400" market description. There are already netbook sites defining the netbook as "less than $600" and some as "less than $800". We could argue that these more expensive "netbooks" have defiled the netbook definition but the argument, like the argument about performance not mattering on a netbook, is really moot. The market will go where people buy, and whether you like it or not there is definitely a market for small, cheap laptops that bring most of the performance people want for a very low price. Netbooks do too many things too well to be ignored, and they will do even more in the future.

MSI Wind U123 Hands-On
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  • fuberwil - Tuesday, September 15, 2009 - link

    I think this is just showing the evolution of the netbooks. A relatively recent device that now has everyone clamoring for one due to the size and portability of it. I think MSI is onto something especially with the option of the 9cell battery which can offer up to 10 hours of work time (from what i've read). Partner that with a low price tag with amazing specs then you have the new best friend of every student and businessman. Yea i think they all have their shortcomings such as the mouse track or the keyboard but like any good electronical device give it some time then it will meet consumers needs on almost every level.
  • Hrel - Thursday, August 6, 2009 - link

    A device like that would NEVER be worth more than 200 bucks to me, and I'd feel a little rotten about paying anything more than 100. Not to mention it's not really much more portable than a laptop. Laptops just need better battery life so we don't have to chug around with the ac adapter, If my laptop got 12 hours of battery life I'd take EVERYWHERE!!!
  • afkrotch - Thursday, July 30, 2009 - link

    I can't see how anyone can recommend these pieces of crap. I've owned an Asus EeePC Seashell and I would never recommend these to anyone I know. I don't care about battery life, size, or weight. The pieces of crap run so freaking slow. On a straight up HTML page, it flies, but once you get into something that's heavy in java, php, etc is lags. It lags when you scroll, move to a new page, etc.

    For simple websurfing, it fails. If all you plan on doing is typing up on notepad, ya. Go ahead. Have Office 2k7? Play with lag. It lags when I type.

    FYI, I cleaned off the XP Home they had on there and installed a clean copy of XP Pro. I thought it would help with the lagging, but needless to say. It didn't.
  • MamiyaOtaru - Monday, July 20, 2009 - link

    stop making glossy bodied netbooks. They look like trash as soon as someone touches them. Also never make glossy screened netbooks. I want to see what I'm working on, not my reflection. WOn't buy any eee past the original 900 because of this.
  • kawatwo - Sunday, July 19, 2009 - link

    Futisu and Sony both have 2 Ghz atoms overseas now in the P and the u820. It shouldn' be long before they make there way here. Also, it costs a little more but people always forget Asus own N10J mmodel with the gforce 9300m which makes it a pretty well rounded machine. A 2 Ghz N10 would be pretty remarkable I would think.

    I'm waiting for the 2 Ghz U820 though as I travel by motorcycle whenever possible.
  • AstroGuardian - Sunday, July 19, 2009 - link

    Hmmm.. 2Hhz? Like 5% more horsepower? Not feeling like waiting for it lol.

    I think the netbook future will be pushing the limits to portable CPUs and GPUs. Nowdays netbook CPUs are useless except for bare computer needs. Right?
  • Wesleyrpg - Saturday, July 18, 2009 - link

    hey guys, i know the MSI Wind 123 already has an impressive battery life, but how would it perform with an Intel SSD and would there be any better battery life?
  • richwenzel - Saturday, July 18, 2009 - link

    The lenovo s12 and the samsung nc20 both have the new via nano. I believe asus has a netbook and possibly dell as well with the nano.

    the nano supposedly can do blue ray. It would have been nice to see the differences between the two.

    the nc20 is a bit pricier, at $500-$550 or so, but the lenovo can be had for around $400.

    there is another company call top crown, www.tct.hk that looks they have some interesting developments with the nano
  • piasabird - Saturday, July 18, 2009 - link

    What is the appeal of a miniature laptop which is slow and underpowered? Better yet, just build a small nettop with a real processor. One thing I tend to wonder is why these Atom motherboards are so inexpensive, yet the via Mini-ITX motherboards are so expensive. Maybe it is just mass production fueled by the want of people for a smaller computer. Myself, I think you could just as easily hook it up to an external HD widescreen monitor. This would give such a device more appeal.

    You could just make a phone that could plug into a monitor. Why carry around a big nettop? I think it is just as possible.
  • SilthDraeth - Friday, July 17, 2009 - link

    My brother bought an EEE specifically to run some DJing software on it, so he didn't have to lug around his Macbook. Unfortunately it couldn't handle it. He then couldn't sell it on Ebay, only scammers tried to buy it.

    Not blaming the netbook, and he had the money to throw away, and still makes use of it. But something with a bit more horsepower than a slight processor clock speed increase would be very welcome.

    Looks like we may have to wait a bit longer though.

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