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The Netbook Diaries: Day 5 (The Verdict)

November 18th, 2008 @ 10:09 am

5 Comments

Categories: Computers, Travel Tips

Tags: Battery, Acer Inc., Worth, Acer Aspire, Engineering, Keyboards, Mice, Microsoft Windows, Hardware, Peripherals

acer-aspire-one.jpg The Netbook Diaries chronicles our day-to-day experiences with the Acer Aspire One. Click here to read the previous installment.

Well, I’ve just spent four days on the road with the Aspire One, and to my surprise, it was a mostly positive experience. The small screen and slightly cramped keyboard didn’t bother me nearly as much as I expected, though I’m glad I brought along a travel mouse — the Aspire’s tiny trackpad and poorly placed buttons are terrible.

In fact, I have another trip coming up, and I’m thinking of again packing the netbook in lieu of my trusty, but comparatively behemoth, six-pound Compaq. The Aspire’s 120GB hard drive is ample for my needs, and I like how quickly Windows XP boots. Plus, there’s definitely something to be said for the compact, lightweight form factor.

Just one problem: battery life. For reasons I don’t understand, the netbook guzzles power. Based on my experiences, you’d be lucky to get two hours’ worth of work (or movie-watching) time. Now, one could make the argument that for the Aspire’s bargain price of $349, a few compromises are to be expected. Unfortunately, this is perhaps the hardest one to live with.

If Acer could somehow wring an extra hour or two from a battery that’s the same size and price, the Aspire One would be one netbook worth owning. As it stands, it’s still a netbook worth considering.

Check out some other netbook-related posts, including Guy Vs. Guy: The Net Value of Netbooks, Turn Your Netbook Into a Kindle, and Six Ways to Make Your Netbook More Like a Notebook.

Update! Read the all-new Netbook Diaries 2009!

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    1

    robanderson72

    11/19/08 | Report as spam

    RE: The Netbook Diaries: Day 5 (The Verdict)

    The two biggest criticisms that you make of the Acer Aspire One in your series is that it didn't contain bluetooth and that the battery life is meager. The Asus EEE 1000 has both bluetooth and a 6-cell battery giving it a good 5 hours of intensive usage. I've been using one of these almost exclusively as my travel computer for the past two months and always found it to be a joy to use. In fact one of the primary reasons I had chosen the EEE 1000 over the Aspire One is the battery life issue.

  •  
    2

    BizHacksRick

    11/20/08 | Report as spam

    RE: The Netbook Diaries: Day 5 (The Verdict)

    Good info! But does the 6-cell battery protrude from the bottom or rear of the Eee? I'd find that disappointing. Also, what's the weight with the 6-cell? My concern is, and long has been, that the more you tweak/upgrade a netbook to make it more usable, the larger, heavier, and more expensive it gets. At which point you might as well just buy a full-fledged notebook.

  •  
    3

    robanderson72

    11/20/08 | Report as spam

    RE: The Netbook Diaries: Day 5 (The Verdict)

    The EEE was designed so that the 6-cell battery doesn't protrude from the rear or the bottom. The weight of it is 2.9 lbs (1.3 kgs), so still very portable. Samsung is coming out with a netbook (the NC10) that would be very competitve to the EEE 1000. The only real differences that I can determine are that the keyboard is better laid out, the touchpad has a dedicated scroll strip instead of using multi-gestures (which the EEE supports) and it doesn't have the option to have a solid-state drive (my EEE came with a 40-gig SSD making it more rugged).

  •  
    4

    lccurtis1@...

    12/10/08 | Report as spam

    RE: The Netbook Diaries: Day 5 (The Verdict)

    I just recently purchased the Acer Aspire One Netbook and I think it is great. I chose to go with the top model which has everything the average person needs for everyday computing.
    Let???s face it unless your an avid gamer or really into HIGH END digital media the Acer is all you need to view emails, web browsing, and composing any type of documents including PDF.
    The ONE(as I call it) is even great for a main unit if you would like to use it for that. With 160gb, 3 USP Ports, VGA Output, 2 SD Card Slots, Ethernet as well as Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g for the price of $349-399 you can???t beat that regardless the lack of Bluetooth (which is really not all that great anyway).
    The Acer really looks and feels like a solid device and if you want to use it as your main pc go for it.

  •  
    5

    isoutar

    02/02/09 | Report as spam

    RE: The Netbook Diaries: Day 5 (The Verdict)

    My family recently started buying Dell Mini 9 computers. The 4 hours of battery life was a factor ... the other was the availability of a 64 gig SSD drive.

    For myself this has replaced my Acer TravelMate 5520. The Dell Mini 9 runs Ubuntu and I am working on VirtualBox for runnng a copy of XP for those rare occasions where I need to use a chip programming tool.

    My partner Barbara and I find that the machine is very reliable with a very long battery life. We have both run Ubuntu or Linux for about 6 years now. So we feel right at home with Dell's version of Ubuntu (after blowing away the children's interface).

    Ian

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