Asus packs the same basic components found in other Netbooks into a stylish, slim chassis for a modest premium in price, with some unfortunate keyboard-layout compromises.
With the basic parameters of what makes a Netbook fairly set in stone, it's becoming harder than ever for a new model to stand out from the crowd, as evidenced by largely identical recent Netbooks from Dell, Lenovo, and HP — though the HP Mini 1000's impressively large keyboard was a plus. To this fray returns Asus, the company that arguably created the Netbook market with its Eee PC line, with a new take on the familiar Intel Atom/Windows XP combo. The Eee PC S101 takes the same components found in other Netbooks and dresses them up in a sharp new chassis that wouldn't look out of place in a high-end ultraportable.
At AU$999, the S101 is on the high end of the Netbook price range, but it is certainly cheaper than most laptops with brushed aluminium wrist rests and bodies only a hair thicker than the MacBook Air. If you don't mind the performance compromises of a Netbook, but want something more substantial than a plastic body, the S101 and HP's 2133 Mini-Note PC are two well-built alternatives.
Unfortunately, the S101 has one fatal flaw that had us muttering to ourselves and nearly tearing our hair out — the right Shift key has been lopped in half. Touch typists beware! The tiny keyboard decently balances key size and layout to maximise typing comfort, but the right shift key has been unceremoniously cut to half size and moved just to the right of the up arrow. This seems, at first, like a minor change, but the end result is that you're always hitting the up arrow instead of the shift key, leading to some truly tortured typing experiences. For a journalist who types thousands of words every week, this is a real productivity killer, and over several days, it was nearly impossible to train out years of habit to hit the tiny shift key. The left shift key is of the correct size and in the traditional position.
The Asus Eee PC S101 looks little like the plastic Eee PC models that preceded it. Instead, this slim laptop has more in common with ultrathin ultraportables, such as the Toshiba Portege R500 or the Lenovo IdeaPad U110. Less than an inch thick, with a brushed metal wrist rest, clearly the idea was to build a Netbook that wouldn't be seen as a commodity product.
The keyboard is sturdy and doesn't flex under your fingers, but the keys are still a little small for extended typing — unlike the recent HP Mini 1000, which maximises the surface area of each key (they're about three millimetres wider on average). The HP aside, the S101's keyboard is on par with recent entries from Dell and Lenovo, except for one painfully frustrating layout decision, the aforementioned right shift-key downsize and reorganisation.
The 10.2-inch wide-screen LCD display offers a 1,024x600 native resolution, which is standard for Netbooks. It's readable, but most documents and web pages will require some scrolling.
You get a basic set of ports and connections on the Asus Eee PC S101. Nothing exciting, such as the ExpressCard slot on the Lenovo S10, but also no pointless proprietary media drive slot, as in the HP Mini 1000. The Eee PC S101 features Bluetooth, which is high on our Netbook must-have list these days, to allow phone tethering for a mobile broadband connection.
The familiar Intel single-core 1.6GHz Atom CPU is fine for basic on-the-go computing, as long as you keep your expectations modest. It's found in almost every current Netbook, so performance was on par with similar systems, such as the Dell Inspiron Mini 9 and Lenovo IdeaPad S10 — no surprises here.
Where the S101 really shines is in battery life. We've seen impressive battery scores from other Asus Netbooks, such as the Eee PC 901 and Eee PC 1000, and this new model gave us 4 hours and 5 minutes on our video playback battery test. Dell's Mini 9 came close, at 3 hours and 21 minutes. Since a Netbook is so portable and likely to spend long stretches away from a wall outlet, we recommend a battery that lasts at least 3 hours.
Source : http://www.zdnet.com.au/