eMachines Mini-e ER1402: all the PC your mother can handle for just $300
We're guessing that you may actually save even more space if you take the Mini-e from atop that stand and actually let it lay flat on your desk, but it sure looks cute, don't it? eMachines latest, um, machine "looks more like modern art than a computer," or at least that's what we're being told in the presser hosted up just past the break. The Mini-e ER1402 measures just 7.1 inches in diameter and weighs 9 pounds, and while it won't handle the latest installment of Crysis, it should plow through those late night Hulu catch-up sessions with ease. Touting an AMD Athlon II Neo CPU, NVIDIA's GeForce 9200 GPU, 2GB of RAM, four USB 2.0 ports, a built-in card reader, 160GB hard drive, 802.11b/g/n WiFi and an HDMI port, this SFF PC can also be mounted upside your wall or closet if you so choose. Best of all? That totally reasonable $299.99 price tag, coupled with an availability of status of "right now, compadre."
New eMachines Mini-e Creates the Ideal Home Entertainment Center with a Perfect Balance of Compact Design, Features and Affordability
Looking More Like Modern Art Than Computer, the eMachines Mini-e ER1402 Small Form Factor Desktop is a Great Addition to Any Home
June 25, 2010 08:03 AM Eastern Daylight Time
IRVINE, Calif.--(EON: Enhanced Online News)--eMachines® today introduced its newest and most radically designed small form factor desktop, the Mini-e Home Entertainment Center. The size, weight and thickness of a small book, the unique glossy black diamond shaped chassis "floats" in a matte silver pedestal, while emitting a soft ambient green glow along the lower edge.
"It's an inconspicuous, streamlined computing solution for any room of the home where consumers want to enjoy movies, photos, music and other online entertainment."
Just 7.1 inches in diameter and weighing just 9 pounds, the slim and compact Mini-e ER1402 provides full HD multimedia entertainment and every day computing capabilities. While it looks great in a main living area, it can also snap to the back of most monitors or TVs, serving as a home entertainment center and streamlining limited work areas.
Simple to set up and enjoy, the Mini-e has built-in 802.11 b/g/n wireless, making it easy to connect to the Internet. The HDMI interface allows it to instantly connect to a big screen TV and an S/PDIF port allows the system to digitally connect to a home audio system. With the included wireless keyboard and mouse, families can easily play popular flash-based social media games, surf the web, view and edit photos, stream video content from Netflix® or Hulu®, or watch HD movies comfortably from the sofa.
"Today's cost-conscious consumer will find style, features and affordability come together beautifully in the low-cost eMachines Mini-e," said Steve Smith, senior business manager, consumer desktops for eMachines. "It's an inconspicuous, streamlined computing solution for any room of the home where consumers want to enjoy movies, photos, music and other online entertainment."
Powered by Microsoft Windows® 7 Home Premium 64-bit, an AMD Athlon™ II NEO Processor, NVIDIA® GeForce® 9200 graphics and 2GB of memory, the ER1402 is also powerful enough to be used for basic computing tasks, such as word processing, VOIP calls, email, spreadsheets or managing family finances.
Its intelligent design provides excellent airflow around the CPU, while ports and slots arranged around the sides allow quick and easy access and convenient cable management.
The ER1402 includes four USB 2.0 ports, a multi-in-one digital media card reader and a 160GB(1) hard drive. A mounting kit, available as an accessory, enables it to be easily attached to the back of a flat-panel monitor or a big screen TV.
The eMachines ER1402-05 is available now from leading retailers nationwide for $299.99.





















@weatherman
Love your dp spike
@Ducman69 So what you're saying is that the base probably IS filled with lead shot. That actually would make sense. Still, it seems rather heavy and you'd think they'd boast more about the weight of the unit without the stand, which is probably closer to 3-4 lbs.
@weatherman
Ya, well, but probably some cheapo grade die-cast steel rather than literally lead though.
I actually kinda like this design. Not sure how good it'll look with cables coming out of it.
Where do they find you idiots that cannot write or speak english.
"but it sure looks cute, don't it?"
@cafields
please remove carrot from butt.
They were just using playful language. Capeesh?
what a mother can handle? well then, go and ask your mother what "Microsoft Windows® 7 Home Premium 64-bit" exactly means.
What exactly is the diameter of a square?
@mr88
LOL! it's amazing you were the first one to point it out!
Thats a beautiful design.
Inspired by Jetsons cartoon. But interesting design.
Looks like a handbag but it looks cool.
If the GPU is good enough for HD video, then this would be a pretty nice little HTPC.
@cassnate6259 are you thinking 720 or 1080?
@cassnate6259 As long as your media player supports hardware decoding, it is. This should have no problem with 1080p h.264 using something like MPC-HC in windows or XBMC in Linux.
I thought eMachines went out of business.
@dicobalt Yeah, Acer bought them...
One of the few emachines product I ever liked.
Looks good. Price is great.
Details:
http://www.emachines.com/products/products.html?prod=ER1402-05
Cute? My mother wouldn't let that thing in the house on that stand. Fugly.
Give it to your Mom, so she can put it on the shelf with all your sports trophies.
I bought the low end Acer Revo for $200 at BB. Then threw a second 1GB of ram into it. It's my main comp now. I love it
@joelaf
It also has a front mounted eSata port.
Something about that computer that doesn't look like modern art.
What an idiotic design. What's wrong with a box? Once this turd is connected to something it will look awful. Art? No way. *Even* Apple finally leaned that a flat-sided box is not such a bad thing. And I'm not complimenting Apple here at all because they, more than anyone, have done some pretty stupid designs trying to look cool to the detriment of usability. I find it incredible how PCs manufactures can't seem to make a normal, clean looking, non-gooped-up box.
Let's see a hands on comparison of this to the new apple mini.
I'd love to know what apple provides for 2.5x the price of this.
I'm guessing their processor is faster.
I'm further guessing that most people for most uses of such a machine would never, ever, ever know or care about that.
"Don't it" ? Really engadget?
@gambiting
uh, this has already been covered. Please actually read everyone's posts before adding your two cents.
Therefore, same response applies to you too ;)
Thank you.
How does this compare to ION2+Atom?
In Australia the version with K325 dual core chip... which is new 2010 Vision line is almost twice faster dual-core PineView....
http://bit.ly/aBK4yb
I know they didn't invent the square sitting on its point but isn't this an just like an Acer Aspire Revo that costs a hundred bucks more?