The Eee PC 1000 may cost over $100 more than the Eee PC 1000H, but that doesn’t necessarily mean it has better performance. It just means it has more expensive parts. eXoid‘s Cameron Butterfield ...
The folks at Laptop Magazine decided to take their Eee PC 1000H, rip out the hard drive, and install a solid state disk to see what impact the change has on performance. But wait, isn’t the Eee PC ...
The shiny brown machine in the photo there is apparently the top-of-the-range Eee PC S101 that was shown in Asus’ leaked presentation last month. It looks just a little bigger than the white 901 model ...
I would go HD as the equivalent models are cheaper, have more storage, and the flash drives in those netbooks are the pits, with terrible write speeds.