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An ASUS Eee PC 700, the first mass-produced netbook, used a 7 inch screen.

Netbooks (sometimes also called mini notebooks or ultraportables) are a branch of subnotebooks, a rapidly evolving[1] category of small, light and inexpensive laptop computers suited for general computing and accessing web-based applications; they are often marketed as “companion devices,” that is, to augment a user’s other computer access.[1]

At their inception in late 2007 — as smaller notebooks optimized for low weight and low cost[2] — netbooks omitted certain features (e.g., the optical drive), featured smaller screens and keyboards, and offered reduced specification and computing power. Over the course of their evolution, netbooks have ranged in size from below 5″ screen diagonal[3] to over 10.1″,[4] and from ~1 kg (2-3 pounds). Often significantly less expensive than other laptops,[5] by mid-2009, some wireless data carriers began to offer netbooks to users “free of charge”, with an extended service contract purchase.[6]

In the short period since their appearance, netbooks have grown in size and features, now converging with new smaller, lighter notebooks. By August 2009, when comparing a Dell netbook to a Dell notebook, CNET called netbooks “nothing more than smaller, cheaper notebooks,” noting “the specs are so similar that the average shopper would likely be confused as to why one is better than the other,” and “the only conclusion is that there really is no distinction between the devices.”[1] However, in the same month, Walt Mossberg called them a “relatively new category of small, light, minimalist and cheap laptops.” [7]

References

  1. ^ a b c “Time to drop the Netbook label”. CNN, Erica Ogg, August 20, 2009.
  2. ^ “Cheap PCs Weigh on Microsoft”. Business Technologies, The Wall Street Journal, December 8, 2008.
  3. ^ UMID Netbook Only 4.8″
  4. ^ Asus Set to Release 10.1 Inch Netbook in Japan
  5. ^ a b Netbook Trends and Solid-State Technology Forecast. pricegrabber.com. pp. 7.
  6. ^ “Light and Cheap, Netbooks Are Poised to Reshape PC Industry” (The New York Times – April 1, 2009: “AT&T announced on Tuesday that customers in Atlanta could get a type of compact PC called a netbook for just 50 US$ if they signed up for an Internet service plan…” – “The era of a perfect Internet computer for 99 US$ is coming this year,” said Jen-Hsun Huang, the chief executive of Nvidia, a maker of PC graphics chips that is trying to adapt to the new technological order.
  7. ^ “New Netbook Offers Long Battery Life and Room to Type”. The Wall Street Journal Online, Personal Technology, Walt Mossberg, August 6, 2009.

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

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