

#Hp mininote 2133 hdd movie#
It's the kind of device you could watch a movie on. The nice screen was complemented by decent speakers on either side. The quality of the 8.9-inch screens on the Mini-Notes are excellent, with 1,280-by-768-pixel resolution. Most netbooks launched so far appear to use light plastic materials as their outer covering, a big difference from the Mini-Note in terms of feel.
#Hp mininote 2133 hdd Pc#
The difference in the aluminum build compared to other netbooks such as the Eee PC by Asustek Computer of Taiwan, is striking. The small device is 255 millimeters by 165mm and 33mm thick. The aluminum finish doesn't add significant weight either, with laptops in HP's Mini-Note line-up ranging between 1.2 kilograms (2.6 pounds) to nearly 2 kilograms for the top-end model with a six-cell lithium ion battery that I tested. The sturdy build of the Mini-Note will help limit damage from drops, which are bound to happen more often with a mobile device than one that sits on a desktop all day. It does a lot of the things a netbook should do well, for a mobile device aimed at Internet surfers. The Mini-Note is made of aluminum and is the most professional looking netbook I've seen so far, a mini-business laptop that runs well.

The company also offers Mini-Notes with Windows Vista Home Basic OS, one with Windows XP available only in China, and FreeDOS.īut this is a situation where you really get what you pay for. In Taipei, one with Suse Linux and a 120GB HDD (hard disk drive) sells for NT$17,900. HP offers a variety of Mini-Note models at different prices and software.

And there are rival netbooks even less expensive than the cheapest Mini-Note, such as Acer's Aspire one, which I found for NT$13,500 ($440) at one store in Taipei. Prices start at $499 for a Mini-Note running on Suse Linux Enterprise Desktop 10 from Novell, a three-cell lithium ion battery and a 4GB flash memory module for storage. HP's Mini-Note is the most expensive netbook I've tested so far at NT$25,900 ($844) in Taiwan for the premium model running on Microsoft Windows Vista Business.įor a lot less money, you can get a much less powerful Mini-Note. Hewlett-Packard's 2133 Mini-Note may end up as the premium choice among the entire mini-laptop, or netbook, category of devices announced so far.Īnd people interested in the device will pay for it.
