I got an eeePC because I'm a pedestrian freelance journalist with back problems who works primarily out of bars.
Why in the world would I a) Want to lug a heavy computer around when this does everything I need and b) want to shell out more than $350 for something I regularly work on in a rowdy dive in Alaska?!
I've been watching ultra portables for a while, but was hesitant to shell out so much money for something I would be putting into risky situations on a daily basis. The same could go for anyone who travels a lot in places where things are often stolen/lost/mishandled, or works in the field, et cetera.
These computers definitely fill an important niche in these ways, and I am thrilled.
The Galaxy Tab 10.1, much like its Limited Edition sibling that we reviewed last month, is ever-so-slightly thinner than the iPad 2, a slate that most sane individuals (and competitors, for that matter) would confess is the market leader today.
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All this talk about "why" someone would want it:
I got an eeePC because I'm a pedestrian freelance journalist with back problems who works primarily out of bars.
Why in the world would I a) Want to lug a heavy computer around when this does everything I need and b) want to shell out more than $350 for something I regularly work on in a rowdy dive in Alaska?!
I've been watching ultra portables for a while, but was hesitant to shell out so much money for something I would be putting into risky situations on a daily basis. The same could go for anyone who travels a lot in places where things are often stolen/lost/mishandled, or works in the field, et cetera.
These computers definitely fill an important niche in these ways, and I am thrilled.