 The new MSI Wind U135 in all four colors (Source: MSI)
 The MSI Wind is light and slim and slender and features Intel's new Pine Trail platform, endowing it with superior battery life. (Source: Newegg)
New netbook from MSI is ultra-energy efficient
Micro-Star International (MSI) is known
among enthusiasts for its graphics card designs and motherboards.
However, the Taiwan-based OEM makes a variety of other products
including servers and barebones PCs. Among its most successful
entries outside the component market has been the MSI
Wind, a netbook.
Now MSI has refreshed its popular design,
releasing a new version, the MSI
Wind U135. The specs on the netbook are pretty standard --
Windows 7, 1 GB of DDR2 RAM, a 160 GB or 250 GB HD, a choice of
several colors (Silver, Charcoal, Ruby and Sapphire). The
netbook's new ECO engine features five modes -- Gaming, Movie,
Presentation, Document and Turbo Battery -- which help conserve
power.
What is important about the new design is that it
sports a brand new type of Intel Atom processor, which Intel
codenamed Pine Trail and announced on December 21. The
new processor, the Intel Atom N450 drops power consumption from
11.8 W to 7 W for the entire kit (including integrated
graphics).
A shortcoming of the platform is that unlike
NVIDIA's Ion and Tegra products, it does not have HD
graphics built in. Integrated graphics on the platform are
driven by the Intel GMA 3150, a 45 nm die-shrink of Intel's
ubiquitous GMA 3100 chip.
Moving on to the netbook's
peripherals, look, and feel, the new netbook features a 1.3M webcam,
D-Sub port, 3 USB 2.0 ports, a mic jack, a headphones jack, and 4×1
card reader. The keys on the keyboard have been expanded 20
percent, making it easier to type for those not naturally endowed
with tiny fingers. The notebook measures 12.22"x8.87"x3.35",
weighs 2.4 lb for the 3 cell battery variant and 2.6 lb for the 6
cell variant.
Its battery life in six cell form comes in at an
estimated 7.5 hours, putting it perhaps behind behind the Eee PC,
which claims 14 hr. on a 6 cell battery. Real
world testing, though, shows that the Eee PC's (1005 edition)
actual battery life is closer to 8 hours, so the pair may be closer
than the claimed battery performance indicates, though the Eee PC is
expected to lead, at least slightly.
The MSRP is $309.99 for
the 3 cell variant and $329.99 for the 6 cell variant with 160 GB and
250 GB hard drives, respectively. This makes it cheaper than
most of the Eee PCs currently offered, though one Pine Trail Eee
PC (the white 1001P) is retailing
for $299 on Newegg.com (it has a 160 GB HD).
The netbook
features is currently
available on Newegg. It's going to face tough competition
as HP (HP Mini), Toshiba (NB305), Acer (Aspire One), ASUSTek (Eee
PC), Samsung N150, and Gateway (LT series) have all released N450
designs.
Ultimately, the MSI Wind U135's strengths and
shortcomings are signs of things to come for the netbook industry.
With the power draw of the processors (CPU, IGPU) reduced
dramatically, the display is quickly becoming the limiting obstacle
in terms of power and battery life. Physics and chemistry
dictate that it hard for displays to get much more efficient while
maintaining brightness, without switching to pricey new technologies
like OLED. In the meantime, pressure is on battery makers to
achieve higher battery densities.
"This week I got an iPhone. This weekend I got four chargers so I can keep it charged everywhere I go and a land line so I can actually make phone calls." -- Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
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