[CALUG] My EeePC 1000 Review

Jason Dixon jason at dixongroup.net
Wed Aug 13 07:01:41 EDT 2008


On Wed, Aug 13, 2008 at 06:43:03AM -0400, Rajiv Gunja wrote:
> David,
> 
> I applaud you for sharing your experience with EEEPC with us, but I have to
> say couple of things that are wrong with your outlook:

Dave is a big boy, so I know he'll defend his own review.  That said,
I've known him for years and he's fully qualified to give an impartial
judgement of the hardware, software, and general configuration of the
device.  Rather, your critique of Dave's email sounds defensive almost
to the point of fanboi-ism.
 
> 1. EEEPC is not a desktop/laptop replacement, it is for a traveler who wants
> to browse the internet, download some pictures from the camera and may be
> use skype or IM to talk. That is the reason why it has such a slow CPU.

I'm not sure where you're getting the impression that he didn't like the
CPU.  I read nothing but positive remarks about the hardware,
particularly the battery life.  He also compared it highly favorably to
his older Transmeta-based system.
 
> 2. Replacing Xandros (built for this hardware) by Full/modified Fedora or
> Ubuntu is an overkill on the hardware and a bad choice. Why in the world
> would you kill a small hardware with such a bloated software? Its like
> trying to fit an elephant into a car.

There's no reason another Linux distribution can't be fitted to this
device just as elegantly as Asus did with the EeePC.  It just takes
time, patience, and creativity.  Perhaps he prefers the package
management and software availability offered to him by the other
distributions.  I hate to tell you this, but the vast majority of Linux
distributions, including the native Xandros, is "bloated".

> I have used the EEEPC 701 for a few days, but had to give it up as it did
> not serve my purpose. But it serves the purpose of a computing platform when
> traveling and it should stop at that (not meant for day to day computing).

And I think Dave's email expressed as much.

> If you know your security, then you should know that by turning off Samba,
> Print sharing, NFS, you would have in effect turned off the so called bad
> services, which is what a Firewall does.
> 
> So it is not really a question of Firewall not being there or services being
> turned on, but the question of what distribution "you" like, so your whole
> point about changing the OS. If you ask me, once you install the default
> Fedora or Ubuntu, you will see lot more services than the 4 you have
> mentioned running and you will have to turn then off on those distributions
> too.

This is the sole point that I agree with you on, and I'm sure Dave knows
as well.  I'm surprised that he didn't mention this given his stance on
security.  I think he just got so hung up on the lack of a firewall that
he "couldn't see the forest for the trees".

> Trying to extract / compare EEEPC with a normal desktop / laptop is not
> doing the product justice. Its like expecting Elevator qualities from a Ski
> lift.

Again, I never saw Dave trying to compare the EeePC to a normal laptop.
He compared it to his previous "subnotebook", which is a perfect
comparison.

> My intention was not to attack your comments but over the years I have read
> so many reviews on different distributions where the reviewer has some
> notions in mind and wants something out of a product which it is not meant
> for and it just annoys me to no end.

I can't help but wonder if a large portion of your response isn't a
template from other attacks on reviewers.  With the lone exception of
the firewall, everything else you mentioned was either invalid or repeating
what Dave had already said.


-- 
Jason Dixon
DixonGroup Consulting
http://www.dixongroup.net/




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