Sub-notebooks
Guest
Posts: n/a
Anybody know of/recommend a decent sub-notebook. I need (although my wife doesn't think so) something that runs win 95/98 - not Win CE (got one of those) and has a 8.4" or thereabouts size TFT screen.
I've looked at the Sony Vaio PC1F - very carlos fandango but no modem, cd rom etc.
Any ideas?
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I've looked at the Sony Vaio PC1F - very carlos fandango but no modem, cd rom etc.
Any ideas?
------------------
Why does Paris have Few Cloudy?
Why is Brindisi Meesing?
Stop Start..
Guest
Posts: n/a
I bought a Toshiba Libretto 50CT about 18 months ago (which means of course that it's now obsolescent). It's about the size of a VHS cassette (so screen size a bit smaller than 8.4").
Later models (100CT or 110CT) have somewhat faster processor (probably about 166MHZ) and reasonable (?) disk (about 2.1Gb). It runs Win 98 I think - you can check out all the specs at <http://toshiba.com>
I use my 50CT when I'm in itinerant mode - and apart from the usual hassles with getting through hotel switchboards - have found it very satisfactory for picking up e-mail and lightweight web browsing. It also runs some of the packages I use which are not yet available for WinCE.
Libretto sure gets my vote when it comes to travel use - very light and small enough to use comfortably on what is laughingly called a table at the blunt end of a plane (not of course that you often have to take that into consideration !?!?!?). However, if it is to be the only machine you're going to own, get an external screen for home base, and indulge yourself with the docking station that includes ports for an ordinary mouse and a reasonable size keyboard.
Had a slight problem (I thought) with the hard disk a while back - very quickly sorted out by local agents FOC
BTW - Little tip when you're trying to connect through a hotel switchboard which doesn't switch from internal dial tone to external dial tone too quickly: insert a couple of commas between the number that has to be dialled for an outside line and the outside number you're trying to connect with. This stops the modem squirting numbers into the empty space between the two dial tones.
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Feline
(I Sit, I Watch, I Smile)
Later models (100CT or 110CT) have somewhat faster processor (probably about 166MHZ) and reasonable (?) disk (about 2.1Gb). It runs Win 98 I think - you can check out all the specs at <http://toshiba.com>
I use my 50CT when I'm in itinerant mode - and apart from the usual hassles with getting through hotel switchboards - have found it very satisfactory for picking up e-mail and lightweight web browsing. It also runs some of the packages I use which are not yet available for WinCE.
Libretto sure gets my vote when it comes to travel use - very light and small enough to use comfortably on what is laughingly called a table at the blunt end of a plane (not of course that you often have to take that into consideration !?!?!?). However, if it is to be the only machine you're going to own, get an external screen for home base, and indulge yourself with the docking station that includes ports for an ordinary mouse and a reasonable size keyboard.
Had a slight problem (I thought) with the hard disk a while back - very quickly sorted out by local agents FOC
BTW - Little tip when you're trying to connect through a hotel switchboard which doesn't switch from internal dial tone to external dial tone too quickly: insert a couple of commas between the number that has to be dialled for an outside line and the outside number you're trying to connect with. This stops the modem squirting numbers into the empty space between the two dial tones.
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Feline
(I Sit, I Watch, I Smile)





