Asus Eee PC
Developer | AsusTeK Computer Inc |
---|---|
Type | Netbook |
Operating system | Linux (Aurora, formerly Eeebuntu; Xandros); Windows 2000/Windows XP/7 |
CPU | Celeron, Atom, AMD Fusion |
Website | eeepc |
The Asus Eee PC is a netbook computer line from ASUSTeK Computer Incorporated, and a part of the Asus Eee product family. At the time of its introduction in late 2007, it was noted for its combination of a lightweight, Linux-based operating system, solid-state drive (SSD), and relatively low cost. Newer models added the options of Microsoft Windows operating system, rotating media hard disk drives (HDD) and initially retailed for up to 500 euro.[1]
The first Eee PC was a milestone in the personal computer business,[2][citation needed] launching the netbook category of small, low cost laptops in the West (in Japan, subnotebooks had long been a staple in computing). According to Asus, the name Eee derives from "the three Es", an abbreviation of its advertising slogan for the device: "Easy to learn, Easy to work, Easy to play".[3]
In January 2013, Asus officially ended production of their Eee PC series due to declining sales as a result of consumers favoring tablets and Ultrabooks over netbooks.[4][5] However they subsequently restarted the line with the release of the 2015 series.[6]
Contents
History[edit]
Eee 700 series[edit]
Asus announced two Eee PC models at Computex Taipei 2007: the 701 and the 1001.[7] The 701 base model Eee PC 4G was released on October 16, 2007 in Taiwan. Three additional models followed.
Both the price and the size of the device are small in comparison with similar Ultra-Mobile PCs. The Eee series is a response to the XO-1 notebook from the One Laptop per Child initiative. At the Intel Developer Forum 2007, Asus demonstrated the Classmate PC and the Eee PC, and listed specifications for four models of the Eee PC.
In some countries, the products have the marketing names EeePC 8G, 4G, 4G Surf, and 2G Surf, though in other countries the machines are still designated by the model numbers 700 and 701. The 4G Surf uses socketed RAM but some revisions do not have a door to access the slot.[8]
Asus released a version of the Eee PC with Microsoft Windows XP pre-installed in January 2008. In Japan, the version is known as the 4G-X.
Modding[edit]
Some users of the 701 physically modified the machine to replace the 4 GB solid state drive.[9]
The 8 GB versions of the 700 series leave the SSD area on the motherboard empty and connect their SSD as an internal PCI Express Mini Card. Replacing the SSD requires only an SSD compatible with the connector. The SSD area on the motherboard may also be used to install other devices, or accommodate physically larger SSDs, or even to hard-solder an SSD salvaged from a 2 GB or 4 GB 700 model. As this requires only soldering on a new device without removing an old one, the risk of doing so may be acceptable to some users.
Eee 900 series[edit]
The Eee 900 series was launched in Hong Kong on April 16, 2008, and in the UK on May 1, 2008 for £329 (approximately 410 € or 650 US$ including VAT). It was launched in the US on May 12, 2008. The Eee 900 series dimensions are a little larger than the 70x models–measuring 225 × 165 × 35 mm (WxDxH) (8.8" × 6.5" × 1.4") and weighing around 1 kg (2.2 lb). The machine has a multi-touch trackpad allowing two-finger scroll and zoom via a "pinch" gesture, and is available with Linux and/or MS Windows XP configurations, depending on the market.
The Intel Atom version is named the EeePC 900a and comes with an 8GB or 16 GB SSD. Some of these Eee PCs also have a 4 GB SSD installed similarly to that in the 701 for a total storage space of 20GB. Those that do not are named the Asus EEE 900 16G. The MS Windows XP version is named the EeePC 900 Win and also comes in two versions: one with a total storage of 12 GB (one 4 GB SSD and one 8 GB SSD) and one with 16 GB (on a single SSD). The Linux 20G version is sold for the same price as the MS Windows 12G version. In the case of the 16G EEEs, the MS Windows version costs more than the Linux version.
The Windows version comes with Microsoft Works and Windows Live Suite preinstalled. It also includes StarSuite 8. The machines are otherwise identical to each other with 1 GB of RAM, an 8.9-inch (226 mm) 1024×600 LCD and a 1.3-megapixel webcam. This model has the same Intel Celeron CPU as the Eee PC 700, running at its full 900 MHz clock speed (rather than the 630 MHz speed seen in the Eee PC 700).
Other Eee 90x models[edit]
On June 3, 2008, Asus unveiled the Eee 901 at Computex Taipei. It was a revision of the 900 series with a different chassis. The 901 features an Intel Atom Diamondville CPU clocked at 1.6 GHz, an "expanded" battery (listed as 6-cell), and "Super Hybrid Engine" software for power management which will provide a battery life of 4.2-7.8 hours. Bluetooth and 802.11n Wi-Fi are also included. The 901 uses the Intel 945GME chipset, meeting the requirements for MS Windows Vista or 7 Aero. The 901 is otherwise similar to the 900, shipping in Linux or MS Windows XP configurations with SSD storage of different sizes. It was discovered that the Eee 901 has capacity for a "3GCard" upgrade.[10]
The Eee PC 901 Linux model featuring an advertised 20 GB SSD storage actually contains two SSD drives; one 4 GB and one 16 GB. The 4 GB drive has been reported as faster than the 16 GB drive.[citation needed]
The Eee PC 904HD was one of the first Eee PC models which features an 80 GB HDD instead of an SSD. It features an Intel Celeron M running at 900 MHz and gets power from a 6-cell battery. Like other Eee PC 90x models, it features 802.11 b/g WLAN and a 1.3M pixel webcam. MS Windows XP comes pre-installed.
The Eee PC 904HA has these dimensions: 266 mm(W) × 191.2 mm(D) × 28.5 mm~ 38 mm(H). The 8.9-inch screen has a native resolution size of 1024×600 pixels (WSVGA). The CPU is an Intel Atom N270 @ 1.6 GHz, and the standard model came with 1 GB DDR2 RAM occupying the single memory slot. The 160 GB Hard Disk Drive had Microsoft Windows XP Home pre-installed. Also standard are the 6-cell battery, the 1.3M pixel webcam and integrated microphone, and both ethernet and Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g network connections.[11]
The Eee PC 900A features almost the same specs as the Eee PC 901 (except the primary SSD, Bluetooth, 1.3M pixel webcam and the 6-cell battery, that has been replaced by a 4-cell battery) but in a case nearly the same as used in the Eee PC 900 model.
On June 17, 2009, Asus released the Disney Netpal (Eee PC MK90), which is similar to the Eee 90x models.[12]
Battery controversy[edit]
There has been some controversy regarding the battery supplied with the EeePC 900. Versions pre-released to many non UK journalists and reviewers were equipped with a 5800 mAh battery, but the first retail versions in Hong Kong, the United Kingdom and Singapore were shipped with a smaller, 4400 mAh (76% of that capacity) battery, which commentators note has led to a great variation in the machine's battery life in reviews,[13] in some cases as much as 90 minutes.[14] As a result of the objections to this, Asus provided a free battery replacement program in Hong Kong and Singapore, and ran a paid-for battery exchange program in the UK.
Asus has stated that the smaller battery is "[p]resently the standard battery supplied in the UK" and "the default standard battery pack for Asus Eee PC 900 worldwide". Asus provided a battery exchange to all UK Eee PC 900 customers for £10, and released a firmware update which claimed to extend battery life by 30 minutes ("BIOS 0601: Updated all battery discharge tables to extend battery life").
In Australia and Italy, the situation was reversed: Reviewers received EeePC 900 systems fitted with the 4400 mAh battery but the retail models were equipped with the 5800 mAh battery. Customers of Media Markt in Italy received the EeePC 900 at the beginning of sales (May/June) with a 5800 mAh battery and later (June/July) with a 4400 mAh battery.
Best Buy's custom variants of the 1000HD and 900A also both include a 4400 mAh battery.
Part of the above problem extends from the fact that the entire range were substantially more successful than Asus had originally anticipated. Currently, Asus has several large complexes scattered throughout Taiwan and China, with the largest in the city of Suzhou (China), being the size of eight football fields. Upon the unexpected success of the range, Asus factories worked around the clock to keep up supply and further development. Consequently, even within Asus testing labs in Taipei, many variations were found within test models. Generally, however, Asus does inform reviewers that the final retail model may contain different features from those offered in the review model.
Battery drain[edit]
Some 701 and 900 models drain the battery approx. 10–15% per day when the unit is completely powered off and not plugged in, thus emptying the battery even when not in use.[15]
Eee 1000 series[edit]
The 1000 series launched at Computex Taipei on June 3, 2008.[16] It featured a new 10-inch (254 mm) screen and a 1.6 GHz Intel Atom CPU, although built in power management software can increase the speed to 1.7 GHz. The 1000 model ships with Linux, an 8 GB SSD and a 32 GB SSD (totalling 40 GB); the 1000H model ships with Windows XP Home or Linux and an 80 or 160 GB SATA HDD. Both the 1000 and the 1000H support up to 2 GB of DDR2 RAM of 667 MHz clock speed. The 1000 has a rated battery life of 4.2–7.5 hours, while the 1000H is rated for 3.2–7 hours.[17] It also offers a keyboard that is 92% the size of generic notebooks, aiming to make it more comfortable to type. Like the Eee PC 901, the new machines feature 802.11n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. WiMAX is not currently supported.
The 1000HD (released in September 2008) is a slightly cheaper version of the 1000 series. It features the same specifications as the 1000H, except it uses a 900 MHz Celeron CPU chip.
The 1000HA (released in October 2008) also costs less than the 1000H, but has the same Intel Atom 1.6 GHz CPU, a 160 GB HDD, and 1 GB of RAM. It also has wireless and on some models, Bluetooth.
The 1000XPH has the same Intel Atom 1.6 GHz CPU, an 80 GB HDD, and 1 GB of RAM. Other amenities include 10/100 LAN and 802.11 b/g Wireless LAN adapters, an integrated webcam, but no Bluetooth. The 1000HG features a Huawei 3G-Modem.
In February 2009, Asus unveiled the 1000HE, using the new Intel Atom 280 processor with a 10-inch LED-lit display at 1024x600, 6-cell battery with supposedly 9.5 hours of battery life, 160 GB HDD running at 5400RPM, Bluetooth, 802.11n wireless networking, 1.3-megapixel camera, and revised keyboard similar to Apple's keyboards.
At CeBIT 2009, Asus unveiled the 10-inch EEE 1008HA, introducing the new design concept "Seashell".[18]
The 1005HA comes in three models, from least-to-most expensive, they are the 1005HA-B, the 1005HA-V and the 1005HA-P. The 1005HA-B has a removable 3-cell battery with a rated 4-hour life per charge, a 1.3-megapixel camera, and uses the N270 processor. At the higher end, the 1005HA-P has a removable 6-cell, 5600 mAh, 63 W/h battery with rated 10.5 hour battery life, a 1.3-megapixel camera and uses the N280 processor. There is also a 1005HA-H model, sold in Poland, equipped with a 6-cell battery, an N270 processor and a 0.3-megapixel camera.[19]
Asus officially announced the first Eee with Nvidia ION graphics, the 1201N, on November 19, 2009, later replaced by the 1201PN and 1201NLand then 1215N, with a more powerful Atom D525 dual-core processor and ION2 graphics.
The 1215 series then saw the release of the 1215B,[20] which came with the AMD E-350 processor, a "Zacate" APU. The 1215B has USB 3.0 ports, as well as a CPU and BIOS that support full hardware virtualization in both Linux (via kvm, xen, Virtual Box, Vmware) and Windows (via XP mode, Virtual Box, Vmware). The 1215B is the first of the Eee PC line of computers that supports virtualization. The 1215B was subsequently replaced by the upgraded 1225B, which replaced the E350 APU of the previous model with the E-450 APU which provides a minor speed bump to the CPU and turbocore for the GPU.
Eee 1025c and 1025ce[edit]
These were released in 2012 and described as the last in the line of the Asus Eee PC series. With only 1 GB memory, standard USB2 ports and sluggish performance these were not especially notable releases other than the exceptional battery life.[21] Some other reported problems are the lack of a hatch to access the memory and so RAM cannot be upgraded without breaking open the case; also, a single mono speaker rather than dual stereo speakers.
Eee 1015 series[edit]
In 2013 Asus restarted the Eee PC series[22][23] with the 1015E models, some of which are on Windows 8 and some on Ubuntu Linux. These come with 2 GB memory and USB3 ports.
The 1015E fixes some of the problems with the 1025C by using a faster processor, 2GB memory and stereo speakers. The RAM is soldered in place and cannot be upgraded. Due to improved performance, the battery life is shorter than the 1025 series. It is possible to reduce the processor clock speed to increase battery life.[24]
EeeBook X205 series[edit]
In 2014 Asus relaunched the Eee PC with the X205TA model,[6] which came with a quad-core Intel Atom Bay Trail Z3735 processor. It ships with Windows 8.1 with Bing, 2GB of non-upgradeable DDR3L-1333 memory and 32GB eMMC storage.[25]
Hardware[edit]
Rechargeable CMOS battery[edit]
Asus Eee PC series Models 1005ha 1005hab 1008ha and others use Varta ML1220 or equivalent Maxell, Sanyo and Panasonic ML1220 Lithium Ion coin cell rechargeable batteries, terminated with a 2 pin Molex connector plug.[26]
Processor[edit]
Eee PC models have typically used netbook specific processors or ultra-low voltage versions of mainstream processors. The earliest Eee PC models used a 900 MHz Intel Celeron M processor underclocked to 630 MHz. Later models shipped with Intel Atom and AMD Fusion processors.
Display[edit]
The Eee PC 700 has an 800×480 pixels 7 inch (178 mm) display, measured diagonally. The screen does not cover the entire space within the lid; instead it is flanked on the sides by stereo speakers and, above, by the (optional) camera in the trim at the top. The Eee PC 900 and 901 come with a 1024×600 pixels 8.9-inch (226 mm) display, almost filling the lid.
Later models came with 10 inch to 12.1 inch displays and up to 1366×768 resolution.
With all models, an external display can be supported through a standard VGA connector. On some early models this connector lacks the screws to secure it to the Eee PC which some consider a safety precaution. The manufacturer does not give any specifications on maximum resolution and display configuration (mirroring, extended desktop), but most models can handle an external display at native resolution of 1440 × 1050, and even 1600 × 900 although performance starts to slow down. Models that ship with Xandros do not have access to the full capacity of the external VGA output by default, allowing only 'mirroring'. Users must reconfigure their xorg.conf file, or install a more recent OS to allow the higher resolution output.
Keyboard[edit]
On a normal, "full size" computer keyboard, the 10 keys Q–P measure 190 mm (7.48 in). The 700 and 900 series are equipped with similar keyboards, 82% size of a generic one, meaning that the Q–P keys measure 155 mm (6.10 in). The 1000 series, as it fits in a more spacious case, has 92% of a full size keyboard, where the Q–P keys measure 175 mm (6.89 in).
Some Eee PC lines such as the 1000HE and 1215s uses the island-style keyboard, similar to keyboards used in Apple computers and Sony's VAIO series, where the keys are reminiscent of Scrabble tiles, being spaced apart and raised from the surface below.
Storage[edit]
The early model Eee PCs use a solid-state drive for storage (instead of a hard drive), which consumes less power when in use, allows the device to boot faster, generates no noise, and is less susceptible to mechanical shock damage than hard drives. A downside of SSD storage (flash memory) is that an individual sector can be written only about 100,000 times. This problem can be partially mitigated by intelligent wear leveling, resulting in a MTBF similar to conventional platter-based hard drives.
The SSDs used in early Eee PCs also had extremely poor random write performance; the S101 does not have this problem.[27]
In the 2 GB and 4 GB models of the 700 series of the Eee PC, the SSD is permanently soldered to the board. In the 8 GB model, the SSD is a card connected via the internal PCI Express Mini Card connector, leaving the original SSD area on the motherboard empty.
The Eee PC 900 comes with a removable PCI Express Mini SSD module, with or without four additional 1 GB memory chips soldered on the main board. Different models come with different-sized SSDs. One Linux version has 4 GB, a MS Windows XP version has 8 GB, and all remaining ones, MS Windows XP or Linux, have 16 GB.
The Eee PC 1000 contains a fast 8 GB internal SSD and a slower 32 GB internal flash drive.[citation needed]
Some models, such as the 1000H and 904HD do not have a SSD, and instead have a SATA internal hard drive of either 80- or 160 GB, which can be upgraded by the user.
All Eee PC models also include a memory card reader, supporting SD, SDHC and MMC cards for additional storage while the Eee PC S101 also has support for Memorystick and MS-PRO.[28]
Eee PC 1004DN is the first model with a Super-Multi optical disc drive (ODD) that reads and writes data to DVD or Compact Disc.
Memory[edit]
Most early Eee PCs use 533/667 MHz DDR2 SDRAM via a standard SO-DIMM module, which can be swapped out. The 700 and 701SDX have RAM soldered to the motherboard. Other models (like the white 4GS-W010) had lacked memory access panels and required disassembly to upgrade memory.[29]
Later models, such as the black model EEEPC 4G SURF (4GS-PK008), and newer white models (4GS-W010) have a removable panel on their underside that allows the user to change the RAM without fully disassembling the system.
Asus reverted to soldering RAM directly onto the mainboard in their later releases of the Eee PC range. Although the Asus technical data for the 1025c and 1025ce models is seen as erroneous by certain online retailers offering RAM upgrades.[30]
Cooling[edit]
In an EE380 talk[31] (video archive), an Asus engineer mentioned that the Eee PC uses the keyboard shielding as a heat sink to absorb the heat generated by the processor. Three chips need heatsinking, and this is achieved by heat-conductive adhesive pads which sit between the chip heatsink flats and the keyboard shield and connect them thermally. It's *vital* to ensure that the heatsink pads are replaced correctly after maintenance such as cleaning or replacing the fan. The Eee PC has a fan, and some vents to also cool off the system.
Software[edit]
The Eee PC is shipped with either Microsoft Windows XP or a Linux distribution called Xandros. Later models (e.g. 1015E) ship with Windows 7 Starter or Linux Ubuntu installed.
Users have tried to install various other operating systems on Eee PCs. The following are known to work on most models:
- Linux especially Ubuntu, Gentoo, OpenSUSE, Mageia, Mandriva, Debian [1], Alpine [2], Joli OS, Mint, SliTaz, SLAX, Fedora and variants thereof (see below)
- Chrome and Android,[32] and other Unix-like systems[33][34]
- Mac OS X: v10.4, v10.5 and v10.6[35][36][37]
- Syllable[38]
- Haiku, development releases[citation needed]
- Microsoft Windows[39][40]
Specifications[edit]
Component | 700 (2G Surf) | 701 (4G Surf) | 701 (4G)[I] | 701SD | 702 8G | 900 | 900 16G | 900SD | 900HD | 900A | 901 | MK90H | 904HD | 1000HD | 1000H | 1000HA | 1000 | 1002HA | 1000HE | 1005HA-P | 1008HA | 1101HA | 1201HA | 1201N | 1215b | 1025c | 1025ce | 1015e | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Display | Diagonal | 7 in (17.8 cm) | 8.9 in (22.6 cm) | 10.2 in (25.9 cm) | 11.6 in (29.5 cm) | 12.1 in (30.7 cm) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Resolution (pixels×pixels) | 800×480 (WVGA) | 1024×600 (WSVGA) | 1366×768 (WXGA) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Type | TFT LCD with LED backlight | TFT LCD | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Storage | SSD soldered (GB) | 2 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 8 or 4 (US) or 0 (US/DE) | 4 (removable) | 8 (removable) | |||||||||||||||||||||
SSD removable (GB) | 8 | 8 (Windows XP) or 16 (Linux) | 16 | Only insertable if WLAN removed | 16 or 8 (DE), 0 (US), or 4 (US) | 8 (Windows XP) or 16 (Windows XP/Linux) | 32 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
HDD (GB) | 30 external in some markets | 160 | 160 | 80[16] | 80 or 160 | 160 | 160 | 250 / 320 | |||||||||||||||||||||
CPU | Model | Intel Celeron-M ULV 353 | Intel Atom N270 (45 nm Diamondville, Socket 437 FCBG8A) | Intel Celeron-M ULV 353 | Intel Atom N270 (45 nm Diamondville, Socket 437 FCBG8A)[16] | Intel Atom N280 (45 nm Diamondville, Socket 437 FCBG8A) | Intel Atom Z520 | Intel Atom N330 | C-50 or E-350 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Frequency (GHz) | 0.8 @ 0.571; 32 kB L1 cache | 0.9 | 0.9 @ 0.63 (70 MHz × 9) | 0.9 | 1.6 | 0.9 @ 0.63 (70 MHz × 9) | 1.6 | 1.66 | 1.33 | 1.6 | 1.0 or 1.6 | ||||||||||||||||||
Cache | 512 kB L2 cache RAM, 8-way set associative, 64-byte line size | 2 × 512 kB L2 cache RAM | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Memory (GB) | Default amount | 0.5 | 0.5 | 1 | 1 (Windows XP), 1 or 2 (Linux) | 1 | 1 (Windows XP), 1 or 2 (Linux) | 1 | 1 | 2 | |||||||||||||||||||
and type | DDR2-400 onboard[citation needed] | DDR2-533/667 | DDR2-400, supports 533/667 | DDR2-400, supports 533/667 | DDR2-400, supports 533/667 | DDR2-533/667 | DDR2-667/800 | DDR3-1333 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Sockets (max. upgrade) | soldered RAM | 1 (2 GB) | Not upgradeable | 1 (2 GB) | 1 (4 GB) | 2 (4 GB) | 2 (8 Gb) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Graphics | Integrated GMA 900 (SMA), VGA port (up to 1600×1280 pixels) |
Integrated GMA 950 | Integrated GMA 900 | Integrated GMA 950 | Integrated GMA 500 | Nvidia Ion | Integrated Radeon HD 6250 GPU | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Chipset | Intel 910GML | Intel 915GM/GMS, 910GML Express | Intel 945GSE | Intel 910GML + ICH6M | Intel 945GSE + ICH7M | Intel 945GSE + ICH7M | Intel Poulsbo US15W | Nvidia Ion | Fusion Controller | ||||||||||||||||||||
Battery | Cells | 4 | 6 | 4 | 6 | 2 | 6 | 4 | 6 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Capacity (Ah) | 4.4 | 4.4 or 5.2 | 4.4 | 4.4 or 5.8 | 6.6 | 6.6 | 4.2 | 8.7 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Voltage (V) | 7.4 | 7.4 | 7.4 | 7.4 or 7.2 | 7.4 | 7.4 | 7.4 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Approx. run time (h:m) | 2:45 | Unknown or 3:30 | No info or 3:30 | 4:15–7:45 | 4:15–7:45 | 5:00 | 9:30 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Type | Li-ion | Li-ion | Lithium-polymer | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Camera (Mpixels) | No | 0.3; up to 640×480, up to 30 frame/s | 1.3 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.3, or none | 1.3 | 1.3 | 0.3 or 1.3 (on HA models) | 1.3 | 0.3 | ||||||||||||||||||
Size (mm) | Width | 225 | 248 | 265.9 | 264 | 266 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Depth | 165 | 170 | 175.3 | 173 | 191.3 | 181 | 191.2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | ~21–35 | ~20–38 | 22.9 | ca 24-28.7 | 38.1 | 27.6 | ca 28.5-38 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight (g) | 922 | 990 | 1,140 | 1,100 | 1,400 | 1,450 | 1,330 | 1,200 | 1,450 | 1,460 | |||||||||||||||||||
Network adapters | LAN (Mbit/s) | 10/100 (Attansic L2) | 10/100 | 10/100/1000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
WiFi (802.11) | b/g mini PCI-E card (Atheros- or Ralink-based). | b/g/n mini PCI-E card Eee PC 901/1000: Ralink RT2860. |
b/g/n | b/g/n mini PCI-E card Broadcom BCM4313 |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bluetooth | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | ||||||||||||||||||||||
OS | Linux | Xandros[II] running KDE and IceWM | No | Xandros[II] | No | Xandros[II] | No | Yes | No | Yes | |||||||||||||||||||
Windows XP | Yes | Yes | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Windows 7 | No | No | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other | Audio | Realtek ALC662 Hi-Definition Audio 5.1 codec; built-in stereo speakers; built-in microphone | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Connectors | 3 × USB 2.0 ports, MMC/SD (HC) card reader, Ethernet port, modem port (non-functional, empty), microphone input, headphone jack, AC power jack, VGA out, Kensington lock slot. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Colors | Pearl white (pure white for Surf models) or galaxy black; lush green, sky blue, blush pink (spring 2008) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Expansion | 2 × PCI Express Mini Card connectors: 1 occupied by the wireless network card; 1 empty, accessible on some models from opening on back of unit, which supports only Asus-approved SSD expansion units. The second PCIE connection is unavailable on many current-generation Eee PCs and some older models. |
- ^I. In the UK, the Eee is also promoted as the RM Asus Minibook, which is targeted at students; however, the unit itself is no different.
- ^II. 701 4G (non-Surf) late releases have Windows XP pre-installed without Microsoft Works and Windows Live Suite, excluding the disc, or either Xandros OS pre-installed.[citation needed]
Configurations[edit]
Naming of the 700 series of models of the device appears to relate to the size of installed SSD, camera, and battery size. The Eee PC Surf models include the 4400 mAh battery pack and no webcam, while the non-Surf models have the 5200 mAh battery pack and a webcam installed. The model numbers (700, 701) may still be the same as has been seen on pre-production samples. Asus may offer upgrades for the SSD storage via the empty Mini PCIe slot, which has been shown to be labeled FLASH_CON in take apart photos of the 4G. When a Mini PCIe card is inserted into the spare empty slot, the internal SSD gets disabled, making the device unable to boot from the original SSD.[42] There are also signal lines for a USB port on the Mini PCIe pins which have been used to connect various USB devices internally. Some 701 models with serial numbers starting at 7B do not have a second mini PCIe slot soldered onto the motherboard, though the circuit traces and solder pads remain.[28][43]
In the 70x series, the pre-installed Xandros operating system has a Linux kernel with a kernel option set limiting the detected RAM size to a maximum of 1 GB, even if a larger RAM module is installed. The actual capacity is shown in full in the BIOS setup and under other OSes. However it is possible to recompile the kernel with support for more RAM. The 900 and later laptops had the kernel pre-configured to support up to 4 GB of memory address space.
Sales[edit]
Asus shipped 700,000 Eee PCs in September 2008 and total shipments reached 1.7 million in the third quarter of 2008.[citation needed]
See also[edit]
- ASUS EeeBox PC
- ASUS Eee Top
- CMOS battery
- Comparison of netbooks
- Comparison of netbook-oriented Linux distributions
- Internet appliance
- Rechargeable battery
References[edit]
- ^ "Asus Eee PC 1215 Series". Notebook check. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
- ^ Disruptors: The 'netbook' revolution
- ^ "Asus Eee PC". Asus. 2008. Archived from the original on 9 April 2008. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
- ^ Spurbeck, Jared (2013-01-03). "Acer and Asus to Stop Making Netbooks". Yahoo!. Retrieved 2013-01-13.
- ^ Condliffe, Jeff (2013-01-02). "Asus and Acer: The Netbook Is Dead". Gizmodo. Retrieved 2013-02-13.
- ^ a b Krawczyk, Konrad (3 September 2014). "Asus’ goofiest name returns in the EeeBook X205, a $200 Windows 8.1 notebook". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
- ^ "Asus unveils ultra-low-cost Linux laptop". Linux Devices. 2007-06-06. Retrieved 2007-07-11.
- ^ "Flickr". Yahoo!.
|chapter=
ignored (help) - ^ "Extreme modding: replacing the 4 GB internal SSD of Eee 701 with a 16 GB SD card", Netbook, Gadget Mix.
- ^ Swinburne, Richard (2008-06-17). "Asus Eee PC 901 Dissected". Bit-tech. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
- ^ ASUS. "Eee PC 904HA product page". Retrieved May 2012.
- ^ "ASUS inexplicably releases a Disney netbook". 16 June 2009. Retrieved 19 November 2011.
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