Product ReviewsLaptops
Another month, another Eee PC, and we reach what must surely be the brand's peak size. The 1000H's 10in screen brings it in line with the MSI Wind U100 and Advent 4211 - in our view the best two mini-laptops so far. But it also makes it the most expensive Eee PC yet, a charge that puts it on the back foot from the start. For the outlay you get several new additions. The extra inch of size allows for a wider, fuller keyboard - at 254mm it's a centimetre or so wider than that of the Wind, and the difference is notable. Typing is as comfortable as on any good ultraportable, with decent travel and a layout that has just one major gripe - the tiny and poorly placed right shift key. The mouse buttons are of the same silver surround as the Eee PC 901, and they're just as stiff and clicky to begin with - they take a bit of getting used to. The trackpad is wide and pleasantly responsive, though, with just the right level of roughness to give grip beneath your fingertips.
The 1.3-megapixel webcam sits in the frame above it, and the lid is just as sturdy (and bland to look at - where are all the colours we were originally promised?) as the 901. The draft-n wireless introduced in the 901 is still here, but it's in hard disk capacity that the 1000H makes the biggest leap forward. Gone are the 12GB and 20GB SSD storage
The rest remains the same: three USB ports, 10/100 Ethernet, Bluetooth and a card reader for SD, MMC and SDHC formats. The 1GB of RAM and 1.6GHz Atom N270 propel the Asus to a familiar score of 0.31 in our benchmarks, and the battery gave the same impressive six hour light use life as the 901. The power drivers switch sensibly between saving energy and boosting performance where necessary, something we've yet to see implemented well in any other mini-laptop. Asus is merely tweaking the weaknesses with each release, and the Eee is looking more mature all the time. So does the Eee PC 1000H put Asus back on top of the mini-laptop world? Unless you plan to stick near power outlets at all times, the frankly superb battery life of the Eee gives it the clear edge over the MSI Wind and its Advent rebranding. But with MSI rumoured to be releasing a 6-cell battery, bringing those two challengers in line with the Eee in both longevity and price, the contest may become one purely of design preference. It's split the PC Pro office, because both have their strengths. The Eee is undoubtedly more solid and well-built, with a wider, more useable touchpad and separate mouse buttons. The slightly larger keyboard is a bonus but its tiny Shift key soon annoyed us.
It's a very close call, and we didn't think we'd be saying this, but the 1000H is the best Eee PC, and the best all-round mini-laptop, we've yet seen. With every size and price increase we moan about it moving away from its roots as an ultra-cheap netbook, but the simple truth we've come to realise is that you really do notice every extra inch each revision adds. Draft-n wireless and some great power saving tools give it a maturity and polish that its younger rivals can't yet offer, so until MSI releases its next, improved offering, we find ourselves leaning to the biggest brother of the Asus clan. By David Bayon SPECIFICATIONS:
1.6GHz Intel Atom N270, 1GB DDR2 RAM, 80GB hard disk, Intel GMA 950 graphics, 10in 1,024 x 600 TFT, 802.11bg+draft-N, 10/100 Ethernet, Bluetooth 2.0 EDR, 1.3mp webcam, 3 x USB, VGA, MMC/SD (SDHC) card reader, Windows XP Home, 266 x 191 x 45mm, 1.45kg, 2yr C&R warranty Sponsored Links
ASUS EEE PC 1000H Intel Atom 1.6GHz / 1024MB / 16
Intel Atom, 1.6 Ghz, 1024 MB, 160 GB
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