Advent 4211/MSI Wind
I got an Eee PC when they 1st came out (thanks Woody!), great concept and a good package. After using it for a while though its limitations became apparent, screen too small, no bluetooth, limited disk space being the prime ones for me. On the other hand the weight, Linux support brilliant way it scales up the display when you add an external monitor, makes it a great USB stick replacement for presentations.
We are now looking at (and typing on it at the moment) the Advent badged MSI wind, and a jolly fine machine it is. Now, let’s get this straight right from the start, if you are looking for a full on review, go elsewhere, this is a quirky personal opinion (it’s the only one I’ve got).
So, I like it, a lot the screen is a good size, some people complain about the 600 pixels depth, but I haven’t found it a real problem, yes you don’t get much of a preview in say Thunderbird, but I don’t have to resort to Littlebird as I do on the Eee. At this point I must admit to not having tried the Eee PC 900 series, so maybe the comparison is unfair, such is life.
The Advent/MSI Wind is really good to use, it is doing all the things I need it to, it bluetoothed to my P1i phone like a dream, connects to all my networks, does it all with minimum fuss and is light and easy to carry.
It has its faults though:
The hinges are not very firm, this means that sitting on a train (or even in a chair with it on you knees) the screen wobbles just enough to be really annoying.
The Eee PC has a great power supply akin to a mobile phone with the transformer inthe plug, the Advent/Wind has a big “kettle lead” that attaches with that weird laptop 3 pin plus into a separate transformer then into the Wind. Too big and too awkward to carry around in a small bag.
Windoews XP, a good Linux distro would be soooooo much better, I will try Ubuntu and report back.
It gets hot, especially on the thighs.
There will be more Atom based sub notebooks out soon some better some not, and this is not a “comprehensiv review”, however I have to say that for £280 at PC World (wow I never thought I would be suggesting that anyone buys something from PC World) it is a winner for me.
Tags: hardware, technology
August 3rd, 2008 at 7:28 pm
Great little machine but where is the £ symbol ? Seems the English version comes with a US keyboard.
NOT GOOD
August 22nd, 2008 at 2:37 pm
I don’t know which one you have, mine does have a £ symbol. I have also fyi got Ubuntu running on it as well which is a relief. Had to change the MiniPCI network card to an Intel one, for the princely sum of £14.57 delivered from http://efficientpc.co.uk/