Acer launches new netbook, promises WiMAX
By Tim Conneally, BetaNews
June 3, 2008, 11:44 AM
Call them sub-notebooks, netbooks, UMPCs, or what one clever Engadget poster deemed them: "Liliputers," the biggest hardware launches at Computex in Taipei this week fall into the umbrella category of "smallest."
The specifications for Acer's Aspire One are now official as of today: With a profile of 9.8" x 6.7" x 1.14", a weight of under 2 pounds, and an LED display with 1024 x 600 resolution, the Aspire One is about on par with its fellow netbooks in size.
With these new specs, Acer slightly exceeds speculation late last week when early pictures of the device emerged.

The Atom-based devices come with either 512 MB or 1 GB of RAM and come with either Linplus Linux Lite or the immortal Windows XP home edition.

Similarly, bundles can come with either an 8 GB NAND Flash SSD or an 80 GB internal HDD. Memory is expandable with two SD memory slots. When equipped with a standard 3-cell battery, awake time for the machine will reach about three hours (varying with configuration, of course) and battery life can be doubled with a 6-cell battery.
Though Acer is offering the standard 802.11 b/g Wi-Fi connectivity with its first crop of Aspire One books, it promises WiMAX-ready versions of the ultra portable "later this year."

The earliest crop of sub-notebooks -- back when most called them UMPCs -- carried a price tag that was viewed as too high for the functionality provided. Asus proved that the proverbial magic number with this type of computers is $299, and set the precedent by offering the base model of its first Eee PC at that price. Acer's first Aspire Ones will overshoot that magic price only by a little, but still remain quite competitive at $379.


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