The rise and fall of the ultraportable

Are they really such a new idea?

For some users, the new generation of ultraportable notebooks comes close to embodying the Holy Grail for road warriors. Their laptop-like keyboards make them more usable for typing tasks than smart phones, but they are lighter and cheaper than traditional laptops. The original Asus Eee PC, for instance, cost about £200 and weighed about two pounds when it was introduced last October.

However, while pundits and technology journalists have lavished attention on these products, skeptics have raised questions. For instance, is there anything really special about these devices, or do they just represent old technology in new packaging? Are users as enthusiastic about these tiny laptops as the pundits are? Will they fade away like so many other "next big things"? And perhaps the oddest question: What do we call these things, anyway?

"It's way too early to talk about this being a viable product category," says Avi Greengart, mobile device research director at Current Analysis. "I'm not sure how much of a market there is for them, particularly with subnotebooks like MacBook Air with [larger] keyboards and displays getting thinner and lighter. And you can get some real work done on, say, an iPhone or a Nokia E-series smart phone."

Not surprisingly, vendors and other proponents strongly disagree.

"The Eee PC has successfully explored user segments that have been ignored by other notebook vendors," says Kevin Huang, senior director of marketing at Asustek Computer Inc. "For example, a lot of kids use their parents' notebooks, but they are just too heavy to carry to school. But at two pounds, kids can easily put [ultraportables] in their backpacks." Huang insists that, over time, this product category will expand to become attractive to many types of users.

Ultrasmall laptops - not a new phenomenon

If small laptops like the Asus Eee, MSI Wind, Everex CloudBook and HP Mini-Note 2133 give you a sense of deja vu, it's because these are hardly the first devices of that particular size and shape. For instance, Hewlett-Packard introduced the 3 lb. Omnibook 300 in 1993, and that 386-based device developed a small but loyal following.

In the late '90s, several vendors released clamshell devices based on Windows CE (now called Windows Mobile), such as NEC's MobilePro series. These devices looked like tiny laptops, although they used a PDA operating system and could only handle "pocket" versions of desktop applications.

Another similar type of device is the ultramobile PC (UMPC). These devices - such as the Samsung Q1 Ultra and OQO - started appearing in 2006, use a variant of Windows and typically have touch screens as small as 5 in. They have never caught on broadly, perhaps because prices initially approached $2,000 and because their keyboards are only slightly more spacious than those on smart phones. However, prices have recently dropped closer to $1,000, and they have found a home in vertical markets such as hospitals and warehouses.


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Erick Lamothe | Published: 08:46 GMT, 12 August 2009

I expect the netbook market to continue to succeed particularly as prices fall. This market is designed to complement and not replace the mainstream laptop market. The biggest challenge that the netbooks present is not towards laptops which will co-exist with them, but towards the still expensive smartphones. For on the go mobility and office productivity netbooks easily better smartphones, which are likely to remain but more as an all round connected device for browsing and multimedia. And when we talk about costs netbooks are appealing to large businesses. Why give unnecessary processing power to a mobile salesforce. Is a salesman really going to edit HD video on the move? Highly unlikely, more likely to do word processing and database management, something netbooks are ideally suited to. And of course there is the youth market for whom a netbook is a fabulous computng aid.

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