Please say yes
Before this week, my colleague Chaim Gartenberg Coated a Notebook Called. As Chaim pointed out, the Pocket’s most important advantage is its dimensions — using a 7-inch display, the thing is actually, really compact — and its price, a reasonable $399. But he did not mention the Pocket is the revival of 00s: the netbook’s. So after ten years, are netbooks finally cool again? That may be putting it too strongly, but I am prepared to hope.
If you have quite understandably forgotten the netbook Boom, it began using a computer called the Asus Eee PC, around 2007. The Eee PC has been a $399 notebook with a 7-inch display, a processor, along with a ridiculously small 4GB of flash memory rather than a hard drive. Especially if you’re a college student at the time, it was amazing. In the expense of a cheapo Windows laptop, although the Eee PC had an PC’s portability. It was a small Linux-based notebook like the OLPC XO-1, but felt really usable, instead of simply confusing. The battery wasn’t amazing, but you could eke several hours out of it at the time a great improvement over my mobile desktop, at one time. And the thing was adorable, particularly because Asus’ slogan at the time was”Rock solid, heart touching,” which splashed on the display each time you booted it up.
Over the next few years, basically each PC maker created its Own cheap notebook computer. These were fantastic if you wanted a lightweight, low-investment machine to compose on papers and surf Facebook.
The iPad wouldn’t be released until 2010, and also the MacBook Air — at that point the trendiest notebook on the market — price over $1,500. Many netbooks began shipping with some variant of Windows, which removed the barrier of switching to Linux and sizable hard drives. Battery life stretched to six or eight hours. Designs stayed light, but displays and keyboards got a little bigger, which makes the experience more comfortable.
The final time little hands were a superpower
But netbooks also came with compromises. One was The ubiquitous Intel Atom processor, which occasionally struggled with handling computer multitasking. Windows felt slow and heavy in contrast to some fantastic netbook-specific taste of Linux, but you’d be out of luck, if you needed to conduct a Windows-specific program.
(Yes, you can set up a dual-boot system. That requires more effort than many men and women want to place into a $400 notebook ) And even as netbooks grew in size, their keyboards were often packed — my small fingers began to feel as a superpower, and I still had trouble with the first Eee PC. After a while, the netbook became one of those things I’d suggest using the qualification that it was not for everybody, like my favorite cheap whiskey or a early Man Man album.
I stuck with years later they had peaked, Supplementary computers and that I was kind of a cheapskate because they had been great. But after trying to edit photos at my first CES at 2012, their performance shortcomings became more and more evident.
My choices had blossomed: that the ultrabook class gained steam, tablets were actual growth devices, and similar capacities were provided by Chromebooks at a rock-bottom price. Netbooks remain on sale today, but they holdovers from a previous time.
Send me your stray netbooks
The GPD Pocket feels like a throwback for Netbook lovers, and that’s both bad and a good thing. It brings back their mix of miniature form factor, long battery life, relatively low cost, and desktop system; you might get a variant. I presume there is a true, if market, audience, if it works well.
But without trying it, the Atom chip still makes me worried, and so does the keyboard dimensions, which reminds me a little bit a lot of that the Psion I briefly tried writing with.
Can I Receive a Pocket? Probably not. My telephone can Handle the mails and internet surfing I would have once used a netbook formy MacBook can do the typing, and if I desire a super-portable writing instrument, I’ve got a paper notebook that is literal. Besides, I have three small computers piled around my office, just two of which I rescued from neighbors and coworkers planning to throw them out.
I can’t take any more fancy new netbooks in my life — strays collect. But here is hoping that GPD resurrects this category’s features, and makes some new netbook moves along the way.