
The NC20 is available from BT on pre-order for £399 inc VAT. When the NC10 first went on sale it cost £329.
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Intel's Atom chip has been ditched in favour of Via Nano in Samsung's second, bigger, more costly netbook

The NC20 is available from BT on pre-order for £399 inc VAT. When the NC10 first went on sale it cost £329.
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Talkback
A Russian review translated by google gives this a good review, saying suprisingly that HD video work extremely well. I currently love and use a Toshiba Portege M100 - it uses an centrino 1400MHz ULV Processor.
Yes, it has been upgraded - a 160GB 2.5 IDE Hard disk, a slot loading Optiarc DVD writer and 2GB PC2700 sodimms.
Considering this is now 5 years old and still going strong - is pretty impressive. The Portege M100 really was ahead of its game - lightweight, low power, built in DVD/CD rewriter, 12.1'' 4:3 Display 1024x768, non refective. Bluetooth, firewire, USB 2.0. It has a SD Card Slot (but doesn't support above 2GB). PCMCIA, or PC Express with adapter, used for HSPDA. Bluetooth as standard. Strong smart Alloy casing. It doesn't have a trackpad but a 'nipple', but you get used to it. Maybe the M100 was truely the first netbook.
I also bought the Asus 701 as soon as it came out and found it too limited - its now out of date - £250 pound down the tube. Yet my Toshiba Portege M100 is the machine I always come back to, and is set as my benchmark. Strong, solid - dependable - adaptable.
As yet, the Netbooks haven't beaten it - I'm going to wait for the NC20 with HSPDA before switching.
There must have been 100'000 Toshiba M100 sold - its a shame no one has come up with a motheboard upgrade to a ULV dual core.
Because everything else is perfect - the screen, the keyboard, the ports, the weight, the battery - the design - it just the processor that is feeling a little long in the tooth sometimes, and I really don't want to change it unless I have to.
Am I the only one that is beginning to think that the manufacturers are missing the point of a Netbook?
look at the orginal Asus EEE pc thats the defination of a netbook
1. lightweight
2. small
3. good battery life
4. SSD storage not traditional HD's (why would you want so much space in a netbook) if you need that much space then buy a LAPTOP......
5. Cheap (or should i say good value for money "sub £200") however they seem ot be insisting XP is pre installed (unless its m$ pushing them)
I'll get of my soap box now
I could not agree with you more. With "netbook" screens now typically 10", and I recently saw an announcement for one with a 12" screen, I've asked myself many times where is the line between "nice netbook" and "underpowered laptop"?