Posted on 10 August 2010
Tags: 3g, airlife 100, EeePC 1005GO, ipad, mobile, MSI Wind U123, nokia booklet, samsung N150, Toshiba AC100, ultraportable, UMTS, vaio p, viliv S10
Long-gone are the days where netbooks were available at the 1KG mark. The Asus 901, Acer A150. Classic 1KG, 8.9” netbooks that worked well as mobile-focused PCs for getting things done almost anywhere. The EeePC 901GO was arguably one of the best mobile bargains around at the time, at least in Europe. No hard drive, sub 1KG, 3G and a great price. Oh how things have changed. All we seem to see now are 10-12” devices at 1.2KG or more with moving hard drives. The 800gm-1KG mark is now a specialist segment.

If you take a long hard look though and are prepared to relax your requirements a little there are a few gems hidden in there that would work well for ultra-mobile fans so I’ve taken a long look at the netbook segment, spoken to a few people (thanks Avram and Sascha) and come up with a shortlist for you. I’ve also taken a look above and below the netbook segment to give you a few alternative options.
Requirements.
Ultra Mobile devices need to be feature-rich, rugged and connected. They are the Swiss army knives of PCs that need to be ready for anything. Getting the best productivity out of any situation is important. 12” devices give great comfortable real-estate. 10” devices can be good value. 7” devices get right under the 1KG mark. Here are some other important features.
- No Hard Drive. Ideally you don’t want any moving parts at all in a mobile PC. Hard drives and fans can fail or get damaged and even rotating screen hinges need to be thought about very carefully. If an SSD doesn’t come as standard, I’ve looked at the upgrade possibilities.
- Bright screen. Matt finish. 10 – 12” for comfortable productivity. 7-10” for lighter weight.
- 3G, Wi-Fi-N and BT 2.x (but not self-upgrade unless the antenna is pre-installed)
- Long battery life (6+hrs)
- Lightweight PSU, Car Kit
- Other useful options – GPS, memory upgrades. Case
- Latest CPU technology.
- Weight – 1KG or less. (I’ve looked at devices up to about 1.2KG here.)
The Netbook Shortlist
Based around the 10” form factor, these are the gems that I’ve managed to dig out. Of the 400+ devices that I’ve searched through, these match the requirements the best. Quite amazing that there are really only this many that I would class as truly mobile devices. Note, these devices may not appear in your local market (and there may be others in your local market that I haven’t seen – please lets us know if you find one.)
Posted on 21 May 2010
Tags: airlife, airlife 100, Android, compaq, snapdragon
In terms of mobile productivity, I’m sorry to have to report that the Compaq Airlife 100 has a lot of holes. It does, however, prove that there’s a lot of potential in the ‘smart’ platforms. Long battery life (due to extremely low idle drain) and always-on/connected are features that, once you’ve experienced them, are hard to let go of. Android has potential too but there are 2 key things that need to be done. 1) The browser needs to be improved. The Airlife 100 is not up to doing any web-application work. 2) The marketplace needs to be put into place so that developers have a channel for productive and large-screen apps. Once these two issues are fixed though, it’s only a matter of time before productive mobile computing moves to ‘smart’ platforms with advanced mobile operating systems.
Do you agree?
As a consumer device, the Airlife is also missing a few features. Better media support and management is badly needed for a start so with the costs running close to that of the iPad, I suspect the latter would be a better choice.
Great progress by HP and signs of real promise mean that smart books have a future for mobile computing / mobile productivity but it could be 2011 before we se a real netbook competitor.
I’ve reviewed the Airlife and published the article over at Carrypad.com
Posted on 21 May 2010
Tags: airlife 100, Android, froyo, google io, smart devices

Meet:Mobility Podcast 50 is now available.
In this show, number 50 on the 21st May 2010 we have a lot to talk about from Google IO in San Francisco to Computex in Taipei. Sasha and myself will be giving you feedback from our time with the iPad and we also talk about the netbook summit.
Full show notes, download and listen links at MeetMobility
You can also find the podcast on iTunes (Please rate the show on iTunes.) You can also subscribe via RSS.
Posted on 18 May 2010
Tags: airlife 100, Android, compaq, Live, Netbook, qualcomm, smart devices
The Compaq Airlife 100 just arrived from Spain
It’s one of the first true smart-books / social netbooks (*1) and a device I believe will show us exactly how touch, always-on, always connected and social networking will play a role in netbooks of the future. It will be available soon in Spain through Telefonica’s Movistar service provider.

Here’s the plan. The unboxing and overview is done and uploading now to my YouTube channel
Later, I’ll get down to the studio for a LIVE video and chat session. Lets say, 2200 CEST (check the time at your location) at Carrypad.com/live. See you there for a few hours testing of one of the first ever social netbooks. (*1) Some parts of the session, not all, will be recorded. Tomorrow I’ll write my first impressions here on Carrypad.
[*1 Smartbook is a trademark of Smartbook A.G. in Germany where my company is based. They sell netbooks and laptops. To avoid legal issues, Carrypad uses the term ‘social netbook’ to describe an always-on, always connected netbook running on a mobile focused OS and hardware platform.]
Posted on 12 February 2010
Tags: airlife, airlife 100, Android, compaq, hp
We had heard that HP were going to unveil a new ’3G’ device on Monday at MWC and we suspect this is it.
Extended battery life, light weight, touchscreen, 3G and a lower price (or at least some very cheap ‘free with data’ offers) means this is one for us to check out at MWC. No confirmation on the processing platform yet and clearly there’s a question over Android makes a good productive platform. It will be interesting to see if the Google apps are on this one.
Compaq Airlife 100 puts Android OS, Snapdragon CPU, and an SSD behind 10.1-inch touchscreen — Engadget.