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Posts Tagged ‘Asus EeePC’

Asus re-redux

Money, ebooks 4 Comments »

I haven’t read any more on the Asus since my last post about it. However, it recently paid for itself when I had a computer emergency. For three days that little thing was an absolute workhorse. It was a little slow and klunky, but it did the job and it kept me earning money. I NEVER expected to need it for that.

So for around $250, I have an emergency work computer, an e-book reader on which I can read ANY DAMN FORMAT I WANT, listen to music, surf the net, keep my data, and write.

And I should buy a Kindle/Sony/Nook/JetBook . . . why?

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October 22nd, 2009  
Tags: Asus EeePC, day job, ebook readers, ebooks, JetBook, Kindle, Nook, Sony



More on the Asus

ebooks 2 Comments »

I haven’t used my eBookWise in a while. I’ve been reading *gasp* paper and on my Asus EeePC in my recliner. So last night I went back to my eBookWise.

It’s cold here (well, for early October, it is). It was toasty warm in my bed. I ducked under the covers and read my eBookWise, holding it in one hand (and the ergonomics on this are prescient).

I could not do that with the Asus.

Just sayin’.

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October 5th, 2009  
Tags: Asus EeePC, ebook readers, ebooks, eBookWise, reading



The handy-dandy all-purpose digital reader

ebooks 5 Comments »

Some time back ago, I said I wanted an Asus EeePC to read digital books because it was kind of an all-purpose device. As time went on, I decided maybe I’d rather have an iPhone or a BlackBerry, but then I found out about their mandatory data plans and I’m a cheap bitch, so no thanks. I wanted something reasonably portable that I could 1) read digital books on in any format I wanted; 2) listen to music; 3) keep my personal data on (now that I have this awesome personal information management standalone app); and 4) to basically be able to haul my brain around with me. I don’t like talking on the phone, so I would rather not have one at all, but must. I want to keep the phone separate from my other tasks.

Anyhoo, money’s been a little too tight for frills, but then our old (you don’t want to know HOW old) desktops (all three) started nickel’n'diming us to death, so we bit the bullet. I have been given an assignment to return and report the specs and my digital reading experience.

The assignment:

On the Asus, install:

1) Adobe Reader
2) Adobe AIR
3) Adobe Digital Editions (requires AIR, hence 2)
4) Microsoft Reader
5) MobiPocket Desktop
6) Sony eBook Library
7) FBReader

Then BLOG wtf it’s like to use them on that Atom CPU. (You DO have ATOM, right, not Celeron?)

ADDITIONAL: Try a GOOGLE BOOKS PDF!!

Here are the specs:

Asus EeePC 901 (black, if you care)
Intel Atom
CPU N270
1.6 GHz
1.99 GB RAM
Windows XP Home
2-1/2 pounds (about the weight of Atlas Shrugged, I believe)
~5 hours battery life (>2 hours better than my Dell laptop)

Here’s a gallery with examples of Adobe Reader, ADE, Microsoft Reader, MobiPocket, and FBReader. I have no reason to care about Sony Reader, but will do later, and I haven’t done a Google Books PDF yet.

In normal computer-user mode.
Closeup
Microsoft Reader (LIT). Netbook rotated for reading as a
Microsoft Reader (LIT). Netbook rotated for reading as a
Closeup Microsoft Reader (LIT). Netbook rotated for reading as a
Adobe Reader (PDF). Netbook in normal computer-user mode.
Adobe Reader (PDF). Netbook rotated for reading as a
Mobipocket (PRC/MOBI). Netbook in normal computer-user mode.
Mobipocket (PRC/MOBI). Netbook rotated for reading as a
FBReader reading EPUB. Netbook in normal computer-user mode.
FBReader reading EPUB. Netbook rotated for reading as a
Adobe Digital Editions (ADE) reading EPUB. Netbook in normal computer-user mode.
Adobe Digital Editions (ADE) reading EPUB. Netbook rotated for reading as a
 

So, for the reading part. Thus far, I’ve just been on MobiPocket, reading Soul Identity by Dennis Batchelder, in my recliner. For regular reading, it’s a bit heavy, but if you find your “sweet spot” where you can press the arrow with your thumb and still be comfortable holding it, you get used to it. Naturally, the back light is sweet in the dark.

The only real annoyance I have (besides the weight) so far is how long it takes to turn it on and off. It’s not like my eBookWise, where it’s one button and on, it turns itself off after 15 minutes (or whatever you set). The Asus acts like a computer because, well, it is.

More later after I’ve had a little more time with it.

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October 4th, 2009  
Tags: Asus EeePC, ebook readers, ebooks, eBookWise, EPUB, reading



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