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I can guarantee which one you want, but
the bottom line may come into it. You can save money by buying
the 700 but then you will not have all the add-on extras on the
900. Look at them both and start to see the difference.
The outside of the computer is the same size. However the
screen on the 700 is only a 7 inch compared to the 900 screen
which is 8.9 inch. You should remember that the size of a
computer screen is measured across the diagonal, and so there
is an enormous difference in viewing area between the 700 and
900. As a result of the difference in viewing area, for the
same program, you are looking at there is less moving around
the screen to see just what you want.
The webcam is a 1.3 mega pixel standard on the 900. The 700
series has no webcam on the Surf models and a 0.3 mega pixel on
the non-Surf.
The maximum size of solid state hard drive on the 700 series is
8GB but that is increased to 12GB or 20GB on the new 900. On
the 900 model, they both have 1GB of RAM but the 700's have
512MB of RAM exception the top-of-the-range 8G which has the
1GB of RAM. This may not sound an enormous amount of RAM if you
are used to 2GB or 4GB of RAM in your current machine but
double the RAM will affect the speed that the computer
responds.
We can argue that the webcam needs more RAM to be used
effectively, but that is not the whole story.
ASUS have tried making a minimalist PC and have found that they
cannot make it go fast enough without enlarging the hard disk.
There is only one thing that really tests a computer and that
is to put it into the hands of real users who have paid for the
machine and let them use it. ASUS have said that they will be
trying later to make use of the latest Atom processor from
Intel, but until that is available the same processor is being
used in both the 700 and 900 models. Try out the 700's and see
if I am right that it does not have enough RAM or hard disc
space.
The basic 700 model starts at $445.97 on Amazon's US web site
(this is a 700 Surf 2G). It has no web cam and very little disc
space at all. The top of the range 8G is priced at $599.99.
These are for the Linux operating system. You can then change
the operating system to Windows XP. The 900 models are the same
price $549 and they have 20GB solid state drive on the Linux
machine and a 12 GB on the Windows XP version. The difference
in disc space covers ASUS for the cost of the licence that
Microsoft charges for the Windows XP Operating system.
To my mind, to be able to use Windows XP effectively you will
probably need to have more than 12GB of disc space. It would
probably be better for the Windows XP machine to have the 20GB
and increase the price, but you must make your mind up and buy
what you are happiest with. The vast majority of people who
read this article would probably say “I will go with the
Windows that I know”. I challenge you to go into a store and
try out the Linux machine for half and hour and see what is
better.
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