PC Pro Magazine

The 16-year review: Asus Eee PC 701

Inspirational stories from computing’s long-distant past

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PRICE Around £50 from ebay.com

Ican vividly recall the moment when I first took the Asus Eee PC 701 on a trip. It was 30 October 2008, 21 days after it had been delivered, and I was on a train to Nottingham to cover the superb GameCity 3 event taking place over the Halloween weekend.

My job was to report on the festival’s packed schedule of events for a magazine called GamesTM which, incidentally, would publish its final issue exactly ten years later. On the way, I thought I’d make some notes, so I opened the computer on the train. Suddenly, multiple eyes stared at me.

“What’s that?” asked a fellow passenger. “That’s a tiny one,” offered another. “I bet it’s expensive – look at how neat it looks,” quipped a third, mouth munching on a biscuit, leaning over for a closer look and blasting a few crumbs in my direction.

Suffice to say I didn’t get any work done on the train that day, but Asus may well have gone on to sell a few more of its affordable subnotebooks. Its unique selling point – a footprint of 225 x 170mm – practically defined the word “ultraportable”. This, combined with a weight of only 928g, justified the admiring glances.

The Eee PC 701 was – and is – a beautiful-looking computer; a considerately angled device in a

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