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ASUS Eee PC 1002HA Fargo ND

The ASUS Eee PC 1002HA has the sophisticated look of a high-end ultraportable laptop in an affordable package. Firstgeneration netbooks had limited appeal. Since the keyboard can only be as wide as the screen, the original eight-inch displays meant that the keyboards were equally cramped.

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Computer Techs
(701) 478-4400
1622 Main Ave Ste A
Fargo, ND
Netrix It
(701) 298-0175
1323 23rd St S Ste H
Fargo, ND
Kiland's Office System Inc
(701) 232-4070
2796 5th Ave S
Fargo, ND
S & L Computer Services Inc
(701) 298-3725
704 28th St S
Fargo, ND
Computer Renaissance
(701) 281-0566
4340 13th Ave S
Fargo, ND
Information Management Systems
(701) 364-2718
303 14th St N
Fargo, ND
Plains Technology
(701) 293-8300
16 Broadway N Ste 212
Fargo, ND
Harland Financial Solutions
(701) 293-7198
2701 12th Ave S
Fargo, ND
Software Solutions Ltd
(701) 293-3197
1335 2nd Ave N
Fargo, ND
Corporate Technologies Llc
(701) 893-4000
2000 44th St S
Fargo, ND

Author: Jamie Bsales

In 2008, sales of laptop PCs outpaced sales of desktops for the first time, according to a report by market intelligence firm iSuppli. At least part of the credit for that growth belongs to a new class of portable that emerged during the year: netbooks.

These diminutive machines are notebooks writ small. They pack a usable screen, keyboard and requisite Ethernet and Wi-Fi connectivity into three-pound packages you can slip into a bag and take with you everywhere. But unlike ultraportable-class laptops, netbooks dont have all the features or performance of a full-scale laptop. Whereas a 3-pound ultraportable typically runs $1,500 to $2,000miniaturization costs, after allnetbooks typically cost less than $500.

ASUS Eee PC 1002HA

The ASUS Eee PC 1002HA has the sophisticated look of a high-end ultraportable laptop in an affordable package.

Firstgeneration netbooks had limited appeal. Since the keyboard can only be as wide as the screen, the original eight-inch displays meant that the keyboards were equally cramped.

The limited screen real estate and resolution also meant you would have to scroll both horizontally and vertically to see a Web page or document, which quickly gets bothersome.

But the big stumbling block for mainstream buyers was the operating system. To keep prices and hardware requirements to a minimum, early machines used variants of Linux, not the more familiar Windows.

Read Full Article at Wi-Fi Planet