Netbooks are small laptops, with screen sizes between approximately 7 and 12 inches and low power consumption. They use either an SSD (solid state disk) or a hard disk for storage, have up to 2 gigabytes of RAM (but often less), lack an optical disk drive, and usually have USB, Ethernet, WiFi and often Bluetooth connectivity. The name emphasises their use as portable Internet appliances.
Netbook distributions
There are special Linux distributions, called netbook distributions, for these machines. All such distributions are (supposedly) optimized for use with small, low-resolution displays. They tend to include a broad mix of VOIP and web-focused tools, including proprietary applications rarely seen installed by default by mainstream desktop distributions[citation needed]. For instance, Nokia Maemo and Asus's customized Xandros both ship with Skype and Adobe Flash installed, and Ubuntu's Netbook Edition offers the option to do the same to OEMs.[1]
Comparison
Features
Specific features
Google Trends
While no public numbers measuring the install-base of these operating systems are available, Google Trends data on a handful of them indicate their relative popularity:
See also
References
See also
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| - Acer Aspire One
- Asus Eee PC
- Classmate PC
- CloudBook
- Dell Inspiron Mini
- Doel
- ECS G10IL
- Elonex ONE
- Gateway LT31
- Gdium
- Gigabyte M912
- HP Mini 1000/Mini-Note
- IdeaPad
- MSI Wind
- Nanobook
- Noahpad
- OLPC XO-1
- One A110
- Samsung N130/N140 NC10/NC20
- Skytone Alpha-400
- Sony VAIO M series
- Sony VAIO W series
- Tianhua GX-1C
- VIA OpenBook
- PAC-nBook 1
| | - Perbandingan -- netbooks
- Netbook manufacturers
- Perbandingan -- netbook-oriented Linux distributions
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