Alex:

Benefits of a netbook (I have the smaller of the two Acer sizes, only
something like 8.9 inches for the screen):

Size:   Yes

Weight: Yes.  My Acer Aspire One weights almost exactly 1.0 kg. (2.2 lbs.)
Acer sells one size larger screen (10+ inches), but it weights more.

Battery life:  Sucks. I get 2.25 hours. You can squeeze out another 45
minutes by turning off wi-fi, turning off sound, etc. You can get a bigger
battery, or a replacement 2d battery (to swap in), but this adds weight.

Keyboard:  85% the size of normal, but I find it tolerable -- even for legal
writing.  Not great, but tolerable.

Ham radio: I brought my tiny Acer Aspire One to Bulgaria for the LZ HF Open.
It did everything I asked of it.  It sent CW, controlled the IC-7000, ran
N1MM.  There was no internet, but on another occasion, if I needed it, I
could also run internet spotting for point and shoot. (But remember, you run
out of screen real estate faster on a small screen.) 

Business:  Smaller means easier to bring along with a projector to show
zoning people why they are wrong about their ideas on restricting antennas.

When travelling, I like the tiny Acer because it fits into a European
man-bag and weighs only 1 kg.  No need for a "computer bag."  This means I
can check e-mail whenever I find myself in a wi-fi hotspot. Some of the
hotels/inns don't have wi-fi, and I'll never remember to come back and find
that coffee shop with wi-fi. 

Downside:  CPU slower, less memory. Result: Working on a 25 MB document (a
filing with photos) is occasionally irritating because it is slower than my
desktop. My tiny netbook uses the Atom processor, which is just barely
enough.

Conclusion: MicroCenter sells Acer Aspire One netbooks about twice a year
for $199. If you break one on the road (or lose one, but thank goodness
neither has happened to me yet), you don't feel so bad. I think of mine as a
really nice toy that I thoroughly enjoy. And I really like travelling with
Skype. But I doubt I'd recommend a netbook for processor-intensive
engineering, or extensive use of Google Earth.

Bottom line to question asked:  I've used my netbook with an IC-7000 and it
ran 100%.


Fred Hopengarten, Esq. K1VR  -- hopengar...@post.harvard.edu
Six Willarch Road
Lincoln, MA 01773
www.antennazoning.com


  

-----Original Message-----
From: yccc-boun...@contesting.com [mailto:yccc-boun...@contesting.com] On
Behalf Of Alex Malyava
Sent: Saturday, August 13, 2011 5:10 PM
To: tjja...@earthlink.net
Cc: yccc; amsat-bb; obo
Subject: Re: [YCCC] Netbooks

What's the benefit of net-books?
Size, weight, battery life?
they are cheaper, but not that much - cheapest 15" notebooks are $280...320.
CPU and memory are also not as good as in notebooks.

Where you gonna use it?

If someone tested net-book+radio configuration and it runs no problem 100% -
I can be convinced that there is no reason to pay more for notebook and
carry more weight to some DX country.

AM

On Sat, Aug 13, 2011 at 9:05 AM, ANTHONY JAPHA <tjja...@earthlink.net>wrote:

> All,
> Mni tnx for the responses about netbooks.  Generally, a lot of
satisfaction
> with them, with concerns abt. speed and keyboard size.  In my application,
> neither should be a problem.  ASUS was highly recommended.
> 73,
> Tony, N2UN
> _______________________________________________
> YCCC Reflector mailto:y...@contesting.com
> Yankee Clipper Contest Club  http://www.yccc.org
> Reflector Info: http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/yccc
>
>
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