Acer's first Aspire One mini-notebook was a Linux-based model that impressed us despite its modest components. Now the Windows XP Home version of the Aspire One is here, equipped with a larger hard drive and more RAM. Though it isn't superswift, the latest Aspire One is a fine netbook at a fantastic price of $349. That's $100 less than the next-most-affordable XP-based model, the Lenovo IdeaPad S10.
The XP-based Aspire One retains the physical profile, excellent keyboard, and small but crisp 8.9-inch screen of the Linux model. Significant changes lie beneath, however: A 120GB hard drive replaces the Linux model's paltry 8GB flash drive. An SD Card slot for additional storage supplements the unit's five-in-one card reader. The system also bulks up to 1GB of RAM (the Linux model had 512MB). Yet the price is virtually unchanged. Unfortunately, this Aspire One produced a mark of just 34 on the PC World Test Center's WorldBench 6 tests, landing toward the back of the pack of Atom-based netbooks we've evaulated (whose scores have averaged around 36).
Even worse, the Aspire One's three-cell battery lasted for just 2 hours, 16 minutes. As a result, you'll probably want to spring for the six-cell battery, which costs an extra $100--thereby negating the Aspire One's price advantage.
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