A Day with the Eee PC
Today is my first day of working exclusively from the Eee PC. It has been a long time since I've spent a work day without using my regular laptop but I figured that the only way to be able to make a decision about the Eee PC's appropriateness as a supplementary system. Certainly, the Eee PC isn't suitable as a primary computer but as a supplement to a decent desktop/home-base system it's worth looking at.
My Kit for the Day
In order to get through the day there were a number of accessories I needed to pull together so that my Eee PC 701 was usable as a serious business tool for a day. Here's the list

- Asus Eee PC 701 (obviously) with its power pack
- Proporta Gadget Bag
- Huawei E220 modem on the Three data network
- A clutch of USB memory sticks (I usually have three or four on hand)
- My Moleskine notebook and Fisher Space Pen (just in case)
- A Google account
The Day
My work day started with my daily commute to Melbourne's CBD on the train. The carriage was particularly packed today and, although I got a I was stuck between two largish gents. I managed to extract the Eee PC, connect the modem and fire up an Internet connection. I altered my Gmail account so that it's collecting all my POP3 email sources. That means that I can use Firefox(here's how I upgraded).
At work, I used a USB stick to copy a bunch of files I needed for the day's work to the Eee PC. This is probably a one-off activity as there's enough storage on the Eee PC to hold the documents I need.
The main operational issue I'm facing is the screen resolution. I'm finding that the 800 pixel width means there's lots of side scrolling in Firefox and when reading documents. I suspect that even with a 7” screen that a higher resolution would make the Eee PC 701 fr more usable.
The other, less critical, issue is font quality. I've not found a font smoothing option for the Eee PC running Xandros. This is especially problematic when using reading slabs of text. Does anyone know of a solution?
Battery life in a day of real use was reasonable but still a little thin. Three hours was good with the 3G modem constantly active but with WiFi turned off. In an ideal world I'd like to get closer to six hours off a single charge. Hopefully, a decent third party or extended battery option will come to light soon.
Can I Sell the Laptop?
I'm wondering whether I really need my MacBook Pro. Certainly, it's a far more capable computer with a great display, full-sixed keyboard and a plethora of applications. However, the Eee PC is far more portable and doesn't stop me from doing most of my day to day tasks.
I still need a decent PIM application s I don't like the supplied Organizer application and I'd prefer to not use a solution that requires a web connection like Google Calendar. I still need to do some investigation for a better solution.
The same goes for email – Gmail is OK but I prefer an offline application. Thunderbird is competent and I will need to give it a decent run. My problem is that I have a lot of folders and intelligence built into my installation of Apple's Mail.app. I'm going to need to find a way to deal with that.
The display is small but as an email reader and tool for occasional document creation it's OK. The keyboard takes some getting used to. Initially, I kept hitting the “s” instead of the “a” and find that my hands get a little sore if I type for more than about 30 minutes at a time. However, that's not something that happens often.
I'm not quite ready to give up my laptop yet. I really like the idea of the Eee PC but, and this about my capacity to change my work habits, there are many compromises. I wonder how many of these are about the form factor and how many are due to how the Eee PC's OS, Xandros, does things. I'm going to try to work mainly from the Eee PC again tomorrow and use the desktop for my main work.
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