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The 901 has Bluetooth on board in addition to 802.11n Wi-Fi. Unfortunately, the machine only has one 'wireless active' LED, and it's not immediately clear whether Bluetooth is on or not. We tried to run the Blutooth utility but without success, which indicated the radio was off. The only way to turn it on was to cycle through the 901's wireless modes using the F2 key. After going through all the possible combinations of the two wireless systems being on and off, we finally got round to having them both on, at which point we could launch the config app.

The 901's Bluetooth engine can do file transfers, dial-up networking, and connect to mice and other input devices.

Asus black Eee PC 901

Too close to a full-size machine?

Anyone considering the Eee 901 will almost certainly also be pondering whether to go for the Acer Aspire One or MSI's Wind. The Wind first. It's slightly more expensive than the 901 - £334 - and it's not expected to hit the UK until almost three weeks after the 901. Crucially, the only advantage the Wind offers is storage space: it has an 80GB hard drive. It's memory and processor match those of the 901. It too has Bluetooth but its WLAN is just 802.11g. It comes with a three-cell battery. We haven't yet tested the Wind, but all in all, we think the 901 is the better offering.

The One has a slightly sub-901 spec too: 0.3-megapixel webcam, 802.11g, only 8GB of storage - but it's more stylish, we think, and it's got the same CPU, memory and screen as the 901. And given it's only £199 - £120 less than the 901, we can forgive those differences. It too ships with a three-cell battery as standard, but that £120 difference is more than enough to pick up a six-cell power unit.

Much as we like the 901, if Acer ships the One at the promised price and at a comparable build quality to the 901, Asus is going to find it hard to compete. If we're happy with a 4GB Eee PC 701, we're certainly not going to find the One's 8GB too small.

Verdict

There's no doubt, the Eee PC 901 is the machine the 900 should have been but wasn't. It's got more features, a better processor and graphics, much longer battery life and yet costs less. Even if the 900 was slightly cheaper, we'd still go for the 901. Anyone who decided to ignore the 900 and wait for the 901 instead, will find they did the right thing.

90%

Asus Eee PC 901 Linux Edition

Intel's Atom helps boost the 901's battery life well beyond its pricier predecessor's. But don't expect a big performance gain too.
Price: £319 / $559 (20GB) RRP More Info: Asus' Eee PC site
Latest Comments

Mandriva

As for other distros - my 4G has Mandriva 2008 spring installed happily and all works well.

they have also pledged to support other eees

c

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ubuntu eee

It will be interesting to see how other distros work on this machine like http://www.ubuntu-eee.com/

Any news when it hits the stores?

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lost the plot

the price point is completely wrong, it's now having to mix it with low end vista laptops etc.

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I'd get one...

Looks like it will be fun. My concerns are basically hardware/driver related. Hopefully I might be able to run a stock debian on it without any major renovation.

I don't know if we'll have or want to recompile stuff for this new chip to minimize the certain performance drop. It'll mean new compilers. I'm not sure in-order execution is really the way to go for an x86 though in all fairness.

... but I guess it saves die area and power consumption. This is the fundamental reason why a lowly in-order pentium III or celeron will spank the atom at benchmarks (cache-misses will hurt) but... I expect it should be quite usable, when you think about old 486's running linux with x...

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1024x768 please!

i want to run this:

http://www.rane.com/scratch.html

...and it only runs at 1024x768, so come on asus, gimme the resolution!

btw, the 901 is a great looking box.

tracking this space here:

http://www.eupeople.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=487

(all welcome!)

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