I’m in the market for an ultralight laptop to serve half-way between my cell phone (Nokia E61i; very portable and always on me, but painful for anything more than a few hundred words) and regular laptop (Apple MacBook Pro; all round performer but not a joy to lug around). The primary use will be for email and extended note taking. There appear to be only two suitable candidates available for purchase in Bangalore today.
| Feature |
ASUS Eee PC |
HCL MiLeap Y |
Advantage |
| Size |
7″ |
7″ |
Match |
| Display |
800×480. Painfully inadequate. The dialog boxes of
several apps are too large to fit on screen. |
1024×600. Feels comfortable when apps are maximised. |
MiLeap Y |
| Build |
Traditional laptop design. Feels solid. |
Tablet PC design. Feels like an accidental drop
could break it. |
Eee PC |
| Finish |
Matte. Leaves no smudges. |
Glossy. Fingerprint magnet. |
Eee PC |
| Weight |
920 grams |
980 grams. The 60 gram difference may seem
paltry but is noticeable. |
Eee PC |
| Battery Life |
2.5 hours as per reviews. This is pretty much what
makes or breaks a device’s usability. ASUS has announced plans
for higher capacity batteries. |
2 hours as per reviews. Poor show. (I wouldn’t go
with manufacturers’ claims of battery life in idle mode.)
No news on better battery availability. |
Eee PC |
| Startup Time |
15-22 seconds cold, lesser from suspension |
1:30 minutes cold, 45 seconds from hibernate |
Eee PC |
| Power Adapter |
Feels like a large cell phone charger. You could
tuck it into a pocket and carry the Eee PC like a notebook when moving around. |
Brick with cables both ends. Major fashion faux pas
to be seen toting one, besides being unwieldy. |
Eee PC |
| Storage |
4-8 GB. The 8 GB versions don’t appear to be
available in India. |
80 GB. Serious advantage here. Solid state storage’s
perceived reliability isn’t so much of a plus point for me as disk crashes
aren’t all that common, replacement disks are easy to obtain, and disruptions
can be minimised with regular backups. |
MiLeap Y |
| Trackpad |
Relatively large. Single button with separate left
and right sensors. Not possible to press both together. |
Relatively small, but with separate left and right
buttons. Separate scroll buttons on screen. |
MiLeap Y |
| Touch Screen |
No |
Yes. The touch screen is pressure-based however, and
unusable for actually writing on unless you don’t mind
scratches. In my testing, it failed to recognise writing
unless I pressed hard. High quality write-on screens use
a special pen with a conductive coil that requires a very
light touch. |
MiLeap Y |
| Alternate Form Factor |
None |
The MiLeap Y in tablet form factor makes a great
ebook reader / web browser. The screen’s sides have a fairly usable button
mouse, arrow direction pad, scroll buttons and a few extra (hopefully)
reprogrammable buttons. |
MiLeap Y |
| OS |
Linux. You can choose your own distro and UI.
Dedicated community providing customisations tailored for the Eee PC. |
Windows Vista Home Premium. The UI is still toyish
(WinXP’s UI was like a candy factory meltdown) and switching is not an option, as
parts of the hardware are unsupported on Linux. |
Eee PC |
| Pedigree |
ASUS, which is committed to first class Linux
support. Everything just works. |
Also available as the Kohjinsha SH-series. HCL is a
licensee. I wouldn’t expect HCL to build high quality hardware given they
have neither the track record nor market presence, so this is good news. The
upstream manufacturer, however, appears uninterested in Linux support and
HCL’s voice will remain unheard unless they have enough demanding customers. |
Eee PC |
| Processing Power |
900 MHz, but underclocked to 630 MHz. |
800 MHz, but Vista’s sluggishness makes it feel
slower. |
Match |
| Cost |
Rs 16-20,000 |
Rs 35,000 |
Eee PC |
| Obsolescence |
Given the rapid pace of improvements in small form
factor computers, the Eee PC will be very obsolete in a year. It will,
however, have a second life as that little network file server tucked away
under the desk. It is also cheap enough to give away. |
The MiLeap’s spotty Linux support makes it a less
likely server, and far higher cost makes it harder to give away. The touch
screen could however mean it’ll turn into some kind of a wall mounted device,
although its hard disk won’t survive on a treadmill (which is where I’d want
a touch screen). |
Eee PC |
| Final Tally |
10 |
5 |
Eee PC |