You’d think after running into ASUS’s next generation Eee PC 1018P and 1015PE over five months ago at CeBIT , our excitement may have waned for the stylish netbooks. Oh, but it’s actually the opposite, and when the brand new netbooks arrived last week, we grabbed the X-Acto knife (safely, of course) and eagerly unboxed them to see if the aluminum clad little laptops were as svelte as we’d remembered them. Sure, the $350 1018P and 1015PE have standard netbook internals (an Intel Atom N450 CPU, 1GB of RAM and Windows 7 Starter), but without a doubt they’re some of the best quality netbooks ASUS has made in quite a while

Here is the original:
ASUS Eee PC 1018P and 1015PE review
-
Under :
1, engadget
-
Tags: 1015pe, asus eee pc 1015pe, asus eee pc 1018p, asuseeepc1015p, asuseeepc1015pe, eee pc, eee pc 1018p, intel atom, intel atom n450, intelatom, laptop, netbooks, notebook
Another pretty little seashell has washed up on the Eee PC shore, and ASUS is making this one official — sort of. A listing for the 1005PX has appeared on the company’s site, but it’s sadly a broken link for the moment.

View original post here:
ASUS Eee PC 1005PX looks lovely in your choice of colors
Toshiba and Intel have announced that they’re partnering up to deliver the latter’s convertible Classmate PC to Japanese youths — just in time for the new school year. Sporting a 1.66GHz Atom N450 and an overhauled design , this latest iteration of the educational use netbook will start filtering through Nipponese school corridors this August.

Read the original post:
Intel Classmate PC becomes Toshiba CM1 in Japan
Intel’s been quite forthcoming over the past few weeks about its intentions to play in the booming tablet market , and apparently Oak Trail’s going to be its ticket. Despite its name, the Atom SoC platform is actually closer to Moorestown than Pine Trail or Pine View — the major difference here is that Intel’s added Lincroft and Whitney Point to enable support for Windows 7. It will also support Google and MeeGo operating systems, so feel free to let your imagination run wild with that

Originally posted here:
Intel ‘Oak Trail’ is headed for tablets in early 2011
Put on your conductor hat and overalls, because it’s time to take the rumor train to Atomsville.

Here is the original:
Intel lifting netbook screen size restrictions for next-gen Atom netbooks?
We’re not going to lie, it’s a little late in the game for Dell to update its Latitude netbook with Intel’s Pine Trail processors — you know, since the chips were released back in January — but it’s better late than never, we suppose.

See original here:
Dell Latitude 2110 updated with Pine Trail Atom, already thinking about fall semester
In a day of $300 netbooks and $500 tablets, it sure is mystifying to see Sony still pushing a secondary, $700+ Atom-powered device.

Read more from the original source:
Sony VAIO P Series review
Well, we did have some strong evidence to suggest that Sony was planning a design update to its VAIO P Series, but there happens to be a lot more than fresh aesthetics going on with the new 8-inch lappie.

View original post here:
Sony VAIO P Series gets an accelerometer, touchpad
Small form factor? Check. Low power consumption married to 1080p video playback capabilities?

Read more here:
Zotac ZBOX HD-ID11 and its Ion 2 innards reviewed
If you’ve been dying to get your hands on a ThinkPad netbook — and we mean a real Atom-based, 10-inch ThinkPad — we’ve got some good news and bad. The good is that Lenovo has indeed been making them, the bad is that you’ll have to enroll in a school in New South Wales to get one

See the original post here:
Lenovo ThinkPad Mini 10 lives, but only for Aussie students