Hi folks !

Pasting below an interesting article by Kiruba Shankar in rediff.com.

The question is, how accessible are these new contraptions - especially from 
the keyboard ergonomics point of view ?

Rgds

RS
--
July 17, 2008 09:33 IST
Quite a few years ago, I met this CEO who had this unbelievably small laptop. 
After ogling at it for a while, I enquired its price.

With a tinge of pride, he said its an Ultra Mobile PC (UMPC) and he paid 1.5 
lakhs for it. I gulped and looked at it with even more awe. Ever since, I had
a mental note that the smaller the laptop gets, the more expensive it becomes.

That myth got shattered to smithereens when I recently got to look at the ASUS 
EeePC, a tiny laptop that would smugly sit on your outstretched palm. It
weighed less than 1 kg. What really hit me hard was its price. A mere 
Rs.15,500. It completely changed my perception of small laptops.

The guy at the counter pulled out six pieces with different colors, light 
green, baby pink, red, navy blue, pearl white and black. My immediate reaction
was to pick a green one for my wife and a pink one for my 6-year-old daughter. 
The minute I realised this impulse buying thought, I knew these small laptops,
called 'Netbooks' are going to revolutionize the laptop industry.

Netbooks are simple, inexpensive, compact mobile devices that can be used for 
surfing the Internet, emailing, working on basic office applications, listening
to music and even making Skype video phone calls.

In my opinion, these Netbooks are perfect for traveling businesses folks. Let's 
face it, we businessmen use our expensive, bulky laptops as a giant word
processing surfing machines. Besises they give us shoulder aches from lugging 
them around.

Really, most of our laptops are over-powered for our use. It's like using a 
fire-engine to extinguish cigarettes. These Netbooks' relative high 
functionality
at low cost is good value for money, especially for small businessmen. What's 
more, they are as good looking as those expensive Rs 1 lakh UMPCs. In other
words, they'd still impress folks on the other side of the boardroom table.

It's no wonder that these Netbooks are selling like hot cakes. At the recently 
concluded Computex exhibition in Taiwan, the Netbooks were all the rage and
they hogged the biggest headlines.

Many major computer manufacturers like ASUS, Acer, HP, Dell have come up with 
their own range of low-cost Netbooks that pack a punch. They feature shock
proof Solid State Drives, Super Hybrid Engine Technology, WiFi, Integrated 
Webcam and the likes. Now, why should you bother? Take storage for example.

These netbooks use SSDs which are not only sturdier than traditional hard 
drives but produces less heat, much quieter and sucks less power which means 
more
battery life. These new breed of Netbooks will definitely cannibalize the 
traditional laptop market. This is already rattling the industry and everyone
is falling over themselves in reducing prices to stay alive in this cut-throat 
market.

The cost of the Netbooks currently range from Rs.15,000 to Rs.23,000 and will 
come down further. One of the main reasons for such low prices is because
of low cost chips from Intel, Via, AMD and Nvidia.  The growth of these 
Netbooks are staggering and in a price conscious market like India, the sales 
will
be massive.

The recommended Netbooks are the ASUS EeePC 900, Acer Aspire One and the MSI 
Wind.

The author is CEO of Business Blogging and Founder Director of F5ive 
Technologies.
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