I find it very interesting how the common theme in the comments section of this websites articles is "engadget bashing"...all I see is the same names all the time complaining about how "engadget journalist are biased" and "I used to like this site but I'm never coming back". Well... if you mean what you post, the jump off the engadget bashing bandwagon and move on to another tech blog and moan and groan there...
Now to the topic at hand, I personally believe this Noikia netbook is just more of the same. Same ol' cookie cutter specs as all the rest. The only real thing that can make one brand's netbook stand out next to another is design pretty much...
Yes but why can't engadget "journalists" stay professional and not write stupid sarcastic jokes to just make fanboys happy and try to disregard things that are actually good and interesting? Im not saying that they should stop criticizing, but some of the other tech blogs do that way more profesionally than engadget.
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I find it very interesting how the common theme in the comments section of this websites articles is "engadget bashing"...all I see is the same names all the time complaining about how "engadget journalist are biased" and "I used to like this site but I'm never coming back". Well... if you mean what you post, the jump off the engadget bashing bandwagon and move on to another tech blog and moan and groan there...
Now to the topic at hand, I personally believe this Noikia netbook is just more of the same. Same ol' cookie cutter specs as all the rest. The only real thing that can make one brand's netbook stand out next to another is design pretty much...
Check the 3G and GPS -- it's not exclusive, but it differentiates this from 90% or more of the netbooks.
And also 1280x720 display -- the "cookie-cutter" spec dictates a 1024x600 resolution for 9" or 10" screens.
Yes but why can't engadget "journalists" stay professional and not write stupid sarcastic jokes to just make fanboys happy and try to disregard things that are actually good and interesting? Im not saying that they should stop criticizing, but some of the other tech blogs do that way more profesionally than engadget.