Triplesourced
Reporting, musing and not to mention some random scribbling on tech issues from green/sustainable IT to security. (http://adonoghue.wordpress.com/)
Friday 25 July 2008, 5:23 PM
Eee 1000 + iPhone 3G = the ultimate mobile combo
Luckily the thought of having to actually spend some money on kit for once, rather than just take what ZDNet provided or what I could scrounge from tech companies, was softened a bit by the fact that I would actually at least get to choose exactly what I wanted.
First off the phone. Having suffered through a year of HTC and Windows Mobile ownership I had no intention of spending my hard-owned on either platform. Luckily, this was never going to be my fate given that I am a bit of a Mac fan-boy and Apple has just launched the iPhone 3G. After a bit of fretting about the battery-life and having to do business with 02, I found myself a fully paid-up member of the iPhone-erati.
Despite a complete nightmare two hour sign-up process in the Apple store mostly down to O2's systems I am feeling distinctly pink and tickled with my iPhone. Yes, you do have to charge it almost once a day, but as I need to sync my Gmail and iCal calendars about as regularly, so it's not too much bother. As long as you accept that the iPhone is more like a very small and perfectly formed MacBook (is there any other kind?) and not really a phone at all, then the battery life becomes acceptable.
Leaving just enough time for the post-iPhone blush to leave my cheeks, (it genuinely still makes me smile when I use it), I turned my attention to finding a laptop. The last five years have been spent with a series of Toshibas which have varied in weight and quality but have never felt really portable enough. The new wave of netbooks doing the rounds looked a lot more like my idea of what a notebook should be. However while Asus led the way and seemed to have got it mostly right with the Eee PC, the first models looked a bit insubstantial, and the keyboard was just too small.
However with the Eee PC 1000, ASUS seemed to have solved most of the problems even if that does mean a heavier and more expensive device. A trip to London's Tottenham Court Road yesterday revealed that despite the Eee being launched a week ago most of the so-called tech specialist shops hadn't even heard of the machine and some hadn't even heard of ASUS. But in true Hollywood-cliche style, just when I was about to give-up, head home and order it online, I finally found a stockist. (Yes my iPhone should have helped with this process but the dodgy 3G connection and a sluggish Wheretobuy page on ASUS's website meant that I was back to old school foot-work).
After a day with the Eee 1000, I have to say I am pretty happy with it (I am writing this from a riverside pub on a lovely sunny Friday afternoon in Kingston thanks to the Eee). The battery life doesn't appear to be the 6 to 7 hours I was promised, but that always sounded a bit unrealistic. I think the reality is more like 4.5 which is a hell of a lot better than any of the Toshibas I have had. The keys are also satisfyingly firm, unlike the HP 2133 Mini-Note, and three USB ports are enough. Also, I don't know if it is the smaller size of the screen or better resolution, but I had no probs typing this post outside, although I was in the shade and wearing shades.
The only real down-side is that the Linux model hasn't been introduced yet, and I couldn't be bothered to wait, not when there is free-Wifi, and riverside pubs to be exploited. I was toying with the idea of swapping out XP for Ubuntu, but realised that this was going to be a pain without a CD Drive. Besides there is a nice symmetry in having one mobile device running OSX and the other on XP, which will have to do until I can get my act to go to go Windows-free completely.


