What can we learn from netbooks
Filed Under (Others) by admin on 25-02-2009



asus ee-pc                  hp mini note       one laptop per child
People are going crazy on netbooks (I’m referring to the other side of the world) seems like every computer brand wants to build their own Asus started it, hp is following, dell, toshiba, net books are selling like hotcakes. In the philippines this will take time and consideration to know the real value of netbooks, first we always like high end if your neighbor has pentium 3, you want pentium4, if your friend is dual core youre core2duo, they love to brag their 4gig ram, expensive video cards, cool to death casings with alien coolers, pinoys are always up to date with the latest stuff and they buy them, but impractical electronics users, what’s the point of buying 4 gig ram 200 gig drive when your just gonna do skype or ym or worse friendster, it’s like you bought a blue tooth headset put it on your ear all day and u just get one call a week and guess who? the credit card company.
Netbooks was designed to make you more productive in the least amount of money and electric power, the net has helped us a lot most of what is do is through the net ym, fb, youtube, google docs, netbooks revealed that many consumers didn’t want more out of a laptop—they wanted less. Instead of going high end pentium 1,2,3,4,5, laptop makers are going low power, smaller screens, lighter not massive and heavy.
LESSONS LEARNED
Buy what makes you productive, if a low power netbook can enable your small flowershop business why buy a super high end for gamers use only laptops, unless you really have lots of money go on and waste it.
Small but terrible, big, massive, bulgy doesn’t always mean powerful, 5′9″ Nate Robinson dunked over 7 feet Dwight Howard.
Again as always keep it simple, This one should really be learned by heart, be less not more too keep things simple.
We often do a lot of things when we have more you can’t focus coz you have lots of tasty options
If you have less you can concentrate on what really matters


