Wednesday, May 20, 2009




Asus EEE PC 1000HE Test Scores
•Features 77
•Design 85
•Overall 85
•Performance 85
Asus Eee PC 1000HE is a netbook. This notebook is very necessity for whole generation. It is possible to use easily. Even this is latest netbook for internet user's.

Display Size (inches): 10" Display, CPU: 1.66-GHz Intel Atom N280, Wide Screen: Yes, Min. Weight (lbs.): 3.2Lbs., Total HD Size (GB): 160GB Hard Drive.
Bottom Line: Asus delivers a more refined take on its Eee PC -- and manages to do it for less than $400

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With the latest incarnation of the Eee PC 1000, the "HE" might as well stand for "Holy Enhancement!"
To Last year's This model bears only a passing resemblance to Eee PC,
Improves upon just about everything from the keyboard to the CPU.
In addition to losing some unsightly girth, Asus also trimmed the price to $400.
Let's take a quick tour around the machine to kick this off.
The first, most obvious thing you'll spot is the cut-out keyboard.
The keys poke through the plastic, creating a wide gap between buttons.
This unit's 10.1-inch backlit LED display is bright and capable of good color reproduction; its glossy coating helps the image pop a little more than you usually see on netbooks.
However, the highly polished bezel that keeps the screen in place can get a little distracting at times.
A number of aerodynamic nips and tucks make this 10.3-by-7.4-by-1.4-inch netbook just a hair thinner than the older, clunkier Eee PC 1000 we reviewed last year.
Features:
** It's also a little on the "heavy" side for a netbook, weighing 3.2 pounds.
** It's the price of strapping an 8700mAH battery to the bottom of this thing;
** Asus promises that the 1000HE will deliver 9.5 hours of performance (but we got a solid seven hours, nine minutes in our tests).
In short, netbooks in this generation are finally packing the battery power required for marathon computing sessions.
** The Asus Eee PC 1000HE sports Intel's 1.66-GHz Atom N280 CPU. For the sake of comparison, most of the netbooks that came out late last year used the N270 CPU, which runs at a lower frequency (1.6-GHz) and a slower frontside bus speed (533MHz as compared with 667 MHz in the N280). The difference, however, was minimal. Our test unit got a 35 in WorldBench: an average score for what you'll find in netbooks.
** with 1GB of RAM,
** A 160GB hard disk drive,
** 802.11b/g/n /Bluetooth wireless.
** A fairly standard set of three USB 2.0 inputs.
Therefore this is a fairly solid -- and sizable -- jump over.
Its selling in some places for as little as $380, you could do worse.

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