Eee PC Flare 1025C review, Asus's attempt to revive netbooks
31.12.69
The Asus Eee PC Flare 1025C features a substantial processor, long battery life, and a low price. 1-inch Eee PC Flare 1025C. That should be enough ports and connections to keep the most contraption-happy person fully hooked up. But although the Atom is the state-of-the-art netbook processor, the Flare has nowhere near the power of a laptop. So if you pauperism to save a little money, and don't care about the power you'd get with a laptop or the apps a tablet offers, a netbook like the Flare might be a feasible choice for you. That's exactly where Asus placed its priorities when it developed the 10. As has happened with many other netbooks, I often accidentally hit the Page Up or Phase Down key and found myself typing on the wrong line. The netbook includes the latest Intel Atom dual-core processor with new integrated graphics. Bottom brand: Tablets are a lot more convenient than netbooks, for the most part. Thanks to its anti-glare properties, the matte display is easier to think of in bright places than the screens on tablets and laptops with glossy displays. After all, the Apple
iPad and some Android tablets are much more exquisite solutions for most of the tasks you'd do on a netbook. But netbooks have a keyboard and more ports for connectivity. Netbooks could be going the way of the rotary phone: We've seen very few new models in the good old days several months, and that's not surprising.
Source: ConsumerReports.org