With a keyboard that knocks seven shades of something unpleasant out of the Eee PC’s effort it’s already on the right track and the sleek metallic design is class personified. Vitally, the keys themselves also have a crisp level of travel and response that makes typing brisk and easy.Īlready, then, the Mini-Note PC is making an excellent account of itself. It has a large and friendly Return key, suffers from no obvious quirks and unlike the Eee PC its keys are no smaller than on any ordinary notebook. Indeed, in terms of layout and feel, it apes another Asus product, the 11.1in U2E-1P057E ultra-portable, quite comfortably. Unlike the Eee PC that can be best described as “good for the size”, the keyboard on the Mini-Note PC would be no less acceptable on a machine costing a lot more than the £350 needed to buy the Linux edition we’re reviewing today. Nowhere is this quality more apparent, though, than in the borderless keyboard. Apply some pressure on the outside of the lid and you’ll be hard-pushed to transmit it to the LCD panel itself. Try and bend the screen and you’ll struggle to produce much movement at all. Everything about the machine feels exceedingly accomplished, with a compact but lightweight feel and a sturdiness that belies both its price and size. This comparison, though, doesn’t do HP much justice because it too has been designing and producing attractive notebooks for quite a while now and its experience is borne out in the Mini-Note. If the Eee PC borrows the MacBook’s iconic white finish, the Mini-Note PC feels far more like a product produced by the house that Steve Jobs built. Weighing in a heavier but nonetheless portable 1.27kg the brushed metal lid and underside complements the silver internals and gloss black bezel beautifully, while its curves make for a pleasingly tactile shape that immediately impresses. Though it lacks a catchy name, compared to the toy-like Eee PC the Mini-Note PC is a stunningly stylish piece of design. It has popped up in a number of Eee PC-alikes, albeit with mixed success, so it was something of a surprise to see it powering HP’s first foray into the sub-notebook market, the slightly awkwardly named HP 2133 Mini-Note PC. Asus’ solution thus far has been a 900Hz Intel Celeron CPU, but other companies have had to resort to less familiar options, the VIA C7-M 1.2GHz CPU being a popular alternative. There are a few machines mooted to use Atom, most notably the impressive looking MSI Wind, but it appears it could be a while before we see Atom powered machines hitting retail.Īs such, it’s been necessary for companies to find alternatives while Intel ramps up production. Meanwhile, Intel has enthusiastically embraced the idea by launching its Centrino Atom platform for small, low-power, affordable notebooks and MIDs (Mobile Internet Devices). Asus, predictably, has lead the way once again, with its updated Eee PC 900 putting right many of the issues raised by the original. Just wondering is there some sequence of keys I need to press ( tried F1 to continue etc in case it's the BIOS asking me to do something ) or what else I can do to get this going without stripping it down to fix the GPU.If 2007 was the year that Asus chose to introduce the small and affordable sub-notebook, then 2008 is the year that the concept has really begun to take off. I double checked and the data cable is plugged back in again when I replaced the drive. The hard drive light does not flicker at all. I then reinstalled the hard drive, but I can't hear the drive spin up, and I can't ssh into it. I setup a static Ip address and was able to sssh into it. I removed the hard drive and installed Centos 6.5 with low graphics. Rather than trying to fix it by applying heat to the GPU etc, I was wondering if I could use it as a headless server. I've got a dead HP 2133 mininote, and I think the issue is the GPU.
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