The Eee PC rocks!
It’s been two months now with my Eee PC and I’m pleased as punch. This is easily among the most useful gadgets I’ve acquired.
The Eee PC is incredibly small and light. It fits everywhere, even in my camera bag with the camera also in it. Despite the miserly 800x480 resolution, or perhaps because of it, I keep all windows maximised and work distraction free. The screen’s just wide enough for a column of text, which makes it a great ebook reader. OpenOffice with read-only documents defaults into viewer mode, which is great. I no longer have to convert stuff into PDF to make a comfortable reading experience, like I needed to do on the Mac. Vim, with my customised vimrc, works splendidly for editing in reStructuredText, my text markup format of choice.
When I’m not working with documents or code, I’m working with people, and XChat when maximised once again delivers the goods. I can keep the device aside, an eye on the conversation, while I’m working on something else.
Because it’s always in my bag, I can pull it out when waiting at a coffee shop, make a note, read something, or otherwise generally be productive instead of twiddling thumbs. The device is low profile and the keyboard comfortable. The battery life isn’t great, but I’ve managed to stretch it as much as 3:30 hours. It lasts long enough between the average visit to the power socket.
That said, the quibbles:
- The trackpad’s scroll area is way too sensitive. I use a scroll mouse occasionally just for the scrolling comfort.
- The PgUp/PgDn keys are overloaded on the arrow keys. Navigating documents a page at a time is that much less convenient.
- Boot time with Hardy is several seconds longer than it should be, while suspend-to-ram sucks juice.
- I miss Skim. It made reading and annotating PDF on the Mac such a joyous experience. There’s nothing like it on Linux.
All minor. The device overall gets two thumbs up.
keyboard
Software names
No doubt that even the geekiest of creative people prefer macs even though they are comfortably competent and have time to use Linux.


Perhaps the next iteration with the Atom processor will yield much better battery life.