top | item 36032296

(no title)

oneearedrabbit | 2 years ago

This may be a bit esoteric -- eee pc 701/901 if you get can get by with Atom N270.

discuss

order

giantrobot|2 years ago

Such a system could be fine up until you need to open a graphical browser. If you can get by with 2008 workloads it would be fine. I don't say this as a disparaging comment about the eeePC, it was an alright machine for the workloads of its era. It's more a problem with modern websites being festooned with JavaScript.

The other issue with an older eeePC is the original SSD may have non-trivial wear issues and the battery is likely shot. Unless you get the machine for next to nothing fixing those issues will cost as much as just a brand new cheapo laptop.

sethrin|2 years ago

I loved my eee but I can't imagine going back to that platform these days; it's workable for programming but it struggles with almost every task. You're going to want to run xfce or something rather than gnome or kde, among other things. I'd prefer a system76 laptop these days.

bacchusracine|2 years ago

>>I loved my eee but I can't imagine going back to that platform these days

I really miss my old eeepc901 some days but I agree. Going back to those slow atom processors is really a nonstarter. But the size and form factor (with exception of the nonstandard screen aspect ratio) was just about the perfect 'take anywhere' laptop. I used Ubuntu on it and if I had to do it again in this day and age I'd try to see if I could make Ubuntu-Mate to work on it. Being able to set the font sizes and the icon sizes made that nonstandard screen aspect ratio work far better than it ever did in Windows XP.

Toutouxc|2 years ago

My ex-girlfriend used to have a thing called Asus E200HA. It was amazingly cheap, cute as hell and even reasonably fast in Windows. I’d immediately buy a newer machine like that if it could run Linux.