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Long story short, my day-job is locking down our company laptops leaving me with no computer for personal use when on business trips. Not really eager to carry two laptops on a business trip and already having one laptop in the family,  I'm not really considering buying another full-blown laptop. However, I am potentially in the market for a small, portable, Internet capable device or an alternative. Here are my options.

Nokia N800. This ultra portable device can be had for $220. It has built in WIFI, Bluetooth, and webcam. It has a touch screen and an onscreen keyboard and is also compatible with a bluetooth keyboard which can be had for about $50. It has upgradable SD Card storage and features two slots to make using only one of them as removable storage a breeze. There is a huge user community and lots of available applications as well. Plus, it's linux based, so it's a hackers dream come true. Assuming the audio on it is decent, it could also potentialy replace my iPod and maybe even let me trade my smartphone (currently a Blackberry) in for a tetherable dumbphone. To be fair, however, I'm going to need a few SD Cards for storage. 8GB SDHC cards run $40 right now.

Nokia N810. Very similar to the N800, this device includes a slide-out keyboard, a GPS receiver, and 2GB of internal flash ram. On the down side, the webcam is in a fixed position, it looses one of the card slots, and only accepts MicroSD. Additionally, the keyboard is very small and would be difficult to use for any real typing. I already have a Bluetooth GPS receiver if I need that functionality. And, at $400, it's almost double the price of the N800.

Asus EeePC. On the surface, this appears to have a similar feature set to the N800 and N810. However, unlike the handheld, pocket-sized N800, this device is quite clearly a laptop, although a very small one. It has a larger screen (though the same resolution), a faster processor, a full (though small) keyboard, and a built in wired ethernet port. It looses the touchscreen in trade for a touchpad and also loses bluetooth connectivity. With a more laptop-like stance, this device comes with more offline style applications and the processing power to handle running them. Like the N810, I can pick one up for $400, if I'm willing to go with Pink.

Linux bootable flash drive and my work laptop. I would have to have a fairly large card and a VERY paired down Linux distribution. Storing data on the laptop's hard-drive is not an option due to part of the lock down. Additionally, a full-blown portable hard-drive is not an option because it takes up both of my USB ports and is far more wires than I'd care to deal with. The plus side is that this would be fairly inexpensive. At average prices, I can probably find a 16GB card and small card reader for $80-140. The downside is that I'd have to roll my own when it comes to fine tuning the Linux installation. My work laptop is a bit lacking in features so this would mean I'd have to find PCMCIA wireless drivers, and the bootable flashdrive would take up one of my two available USB ports.

iTouch.  For $300, an 8GB version of the iTouch can be had. This has the apple seal of approval, which all of the apple kids say is a good thing. I'm not too familiar with anything other than my iPod which I find acceptable but not exceptionally so. While there are very few 3rd party applications available, Apple's recent release of the SDK means there is likely to be many more on the way. With what little time I've spent with the iPhone I can say that the user-experience is quite simple, intuitive, and fluid.  I have no doubt that the applications that come with the phone will be easy to use and perform as expected, if not better. The touch-screen keyboard isn't the easiest thing to use from the get-go, but iPhone users say you get used to it pretty quickly. I lose the Bluetooth connectivity offered by the N800 which means that a fullish-sized keyboard is not possible and neither is a mobile, tethered network connection. Additionally, I lose the ability to expand my available memory or swap out my storage by using SD Cards. To counteract this, a 32GB iTouch can be purchased, but the price goes up another $200. While this is the "coolest" option, it is also most likely the least flexible, least future proof, and most expensive option of the bunch.

So, what are your thoughts? Is there an option I left off? Which of these makes the most sense?

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discussion by DISQUS
Add New Comment
Viewing 14 comments — Sort by:
    farrisgoldstein 1 month ago with 1 point

    Wait, your dayjob is locking down (and presumably encrypting) your laptop, but not issuing you something newer than that old Dell you have?

    If you were getting a new one, with built-in wireless and whatnot, I'd say go with linux-on-a-flash-drive in a heartbeat. Even a decently well stocked Ubuntu install can come in under 2GB, and flash sticks are coming down on $/G all the time. Even WITH the old laptop, I'd probably go that route, since Feisty hasn't had any trouble with any cardbus 802.11 card I've thrown at it so far.

    You got it. They are locking down and encrypting the old Dell.

    I'm thinking that this is certainly a good cheap, option. The problem
    is that, despite the fact that it'll look like a "real laptop", it
    will not have the storage space of a real laptop since I don't think
    I'll be able to get Linux to read or write to the internal drive once
    it is encrypted. Throwing ~$100 at this problem doesn't solve it very
    elegantly. It's still a regular sized laptop, but it has the reduced
    features and capacity of a smaller laptop, but not the portability or
    convenience of a true mobile-internet-device.

    Then again, beefing up the N800 to these same capabilities will cost
    ~$150 (SD Cards, bluetooth keyboard) and I'll still have to buy the
    $230 device (i.e. $380, total). So the cost difference is quite
    substantial which makes it seem more worthwhile, despite the fact that
    it isn't exactly clean.

    Can you recommend an Ultra Portable linux distribution that's
    customizable like Ubuntu but considers reduced size as one of its top
    priorities?

    On Wed, Mar 26, 2008 at 6:08 PM, Disqus

    farrisgoldstein 1 month ago with 1 point

    Xubuntu. You'll love it.

    Otherwise, if you really want to go as tiny as possible, go with DSL (Damn Small Linux), but it's not nearly as cool as Xubuntu.

    Martin Atkins 1 month ago with 1 point

    I've been considering an EeePC, but ASUS has said that a newer model with a higher-resolution screen is on the horizon, so I've been holding out for that. Hopefully they'll add bluetooth as well; it seems like a bit of an omission for a portable computer.

    Certainly! I mean, with all the stuff they packed into that little
    device, what more is a bluetooth radio. I'd rather have it than a
    wired ethernet port, myself.

    Of course the new version will probably have a much high price point
    as well -- at least at first. Which puts it into a different class all
    together.

    On Wed, Mar 26, 2008 at 7:00 PM, Disqus

    lys1123 1 month ago with 1 point

    "Additionally, a full-blown portable hard-drive is not an option because it takes up both of my USB ports and is far more wires than I'd care to deal with."

    Actually that isn't true anymore. We do almost all of our work on VMs at my dayjob and we have several external HD's that we use for this and they all use just a single USB cable.

    Right. But. How do you power them?

    lys1123 1 month ago with 1 point

    They get power from the USB port. Just one cable, really. I can show you if you come over sometime.

    I've seen some bus powered drives. They're just usually slow, small, expensive or all three. I'd love to see otherwise.

    lys1123 1 month ago with 1 point

    What you need to look for is an External HD no larger than 2.5". Basically a Notebook HD, that uses less energy so can be powered by a single USB. At work we use 2.5" 40GB 5400 rpm drives, but we have a lot of them and swap them often. Basically we have different VM's for each client configuration and we change VM's several times a day to deal with issues from different clients.

    Since you are just getting one you would probably want something bigger than 40GB. Something like this maybe:
    http://www.buy.com/articles/loc/63266/channelty...

    Awesome. Price is a bit high, but possibly worth it. Gotta find out if my laptop is USB 2.0 or not.

    Thank you! I looked for these bus powered drives not too long ago and couldn't find anything I'd be willing to buy. This is much closer.

    Whoa. Wait. This is 200gb for $140. That's perfect!

    If all you want to do is browse the internet, you might want to look into picking up a used fat model PSP. It won't load flash players or some of the larger pages, but if you just want to do some browsing, it would work great.

    I hadn't considered that, but it's certainly an idea worth looking
    into. Thank you!!

    On Thu, Mar 27, 2008 at 7:43 PM, Disqus