You asked, "Do you have a netbook, and can you see a day when one serves all your PC needs?" I don't. But I did, long before they were called netbooks. I had a Zeos PPC. Did everything I needed at the time, but chewed through its little coin-sized backup cells faster than a teeny-bopper chews through Chicklets. Replaced it with a Grid Pen Convertible running MS Win 3.1 for Pen Computing. That had the size of a netbook, but twice the weight and a 4-bit gray-scale screen. But it also let you see 8-bit color on an attached external monitor. It had parallel and serial ports, an early version of PCMCIA slot and a 14.4 fax/data modem. It had all the external connectivity its day called for.
Today's netbooks, on the other hand, may have ethernet, Wi-Fi and USB connectors, but no fax/modem, no RS-232 serial port, no parallel port, no SCSI HA, no FireWire, no PCMCIA -- not even half the connectivity options I'd need. And touchpads come nowhere near a pen for productive "mouse" control (even if the Grid's pen chewed up its batteries almost as fast as the Zeos PPC drained its). Will I use a netbook? Sure, once one is available that meets all my needs.
-Fred
I bought a netbook when they were called "ultra mobile PCs." I love it for its role -- e-books, webinars when I can't do them from the office, e-mail when I'm waiting for my wife, maps when I'm traveling, etc. I'll probably upgrade within a year because I use it so much.
But to use it for everything? I can't imagine doing photo editing, document editing, Visual Studio, etc. on a netbook. Screens are too small and the keyboard size would wreck my hands. These might become a main machine for some people, but I doubt there will be that many. Someone that has only a notebook and no desktop will mostly opt for a notebook with more room to work. As far as I can tell, only physically small people with not terribly demanding video needs would be logical candidates for netbook-only.
-Bob
I just had the latest Asus Eee 1008HA delivered -- 10" by 7" by 1" and at around 2.5 pounds with the newer atom N280 chip set. It really is a small laptop, or whatever you want to call it. I have not used it just yet, but the primary use is minimal: Internet, e-mail and some other basic uses (sounds like typical computer use). We got it for personal travel, but who knows what else? I sure beats a heavy laptop.
-Andrew
I was considering purchasing a netbook due to its small form factor and cost. As much as I would enjoy it for the ability to browse and read e-mail, the one thing stopping me is poor graphics/video, even with Internet video, and lack of an optical drive. I am cheap and still check out a lot of my entertainment from the library. Sure, you could get some of this from the Web but even if you have a subscription to ATT or Verizon, the decent costing plans are limiting you to 5GB, which will be chewed up rapidly with entertainment.
The irony is that I realized that I already have something better than the netbook in a form factor which is where I see netbooks eventually going: my old Sony TR1, which is still working fine! It weighs only 3.14 pounds, has a 10.1" screen, 92 percent keyboard, 1GB of RAM, 60GB HD and (most importantly) a DVD/CD-R player! It runs full XP Pro and Office and has a resolution of 1,200 x 768, which is better than the netbooks. I realize that at the time of purchase, it was $2,000 but with today's latest technology and miniaturization, I don't see why something like this can't be made for a much lower cost. Perhaps this is what Microsoft was talking about.
-Frank
As an IT administrator and freelance computer consultant, I use a netbook very often. Due to the fact that the netbook is small, light and therefore very portable, it's easy for me to take it along on jobs away from work and home. I have found it to be so convenient that I have stopped dragging my laptop (MacBook) back and forth from work to home; I now leave my laptop at work and use the netbook at home. The main thing I need the netbook for is e-mail, remote connectivity and some browsing. Whereas I have moved all of my support documentation over to Google Docs, I have immediate access to them regardless of on which computer I am working. Oh! And I should note that I am using Ubuntu 9.03.
I think netbooks do have a future, but I am not so certain that they will be that popular for the general public. For those often on the run who need a computer for work and studies, I think netbooks will have an audience. But one final note: I don't agree with netbooks only being good for online content. I have created and edited documents and spreadsheets using OpenOffice (I could theoretically do graphics work, but I just don't do that). I will be taking it on trips in the future and can use it as a temporary silo for photos. I have watched movies on it, listened to music -- even to music on a server at home. Netbooks are full-fledged computers, so there's no reason why they can't do everything one expects a computer to do.
-Curtis