Skip to navigation

Asus Eee PC Seashell 1005P review

in Laptops

Verdict

Intel's Pine Trail improves battery life, but some unwise design changes drag the Asus back down

Review Date: 25 Jan 2010

Reviewed By: Sasha Muller

Price when reviewed: £235 (£276 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
4 stars out of 6

Features & Design
4 stars out of 6

Value for Money
4 stars out of 6

Performance
3 stars out of 6

Details
Part Code 1005PE-BLK009S
Review Date 25 Jan 2010
Price ex VAT £235
Price inc VAT £276
Overall rating 4 stars out of 6
Features & Design 4 stars out of 6
Value for Money 4 stars out of 6
Performance 3 stars out of 6
Warranty
Warranty 1yr collect and return
Physical specifications
Dimensions 262 x 178 x 37mm (WDH)
Weight 1.270kg
Travelling weight 1.5kg
Weight with extended battery N/A
Processor and memory
Processor Intel Atom N450
Motherboard chipset Intel NM10
RAM capacity 1.00GB
Memory type DDR2
SODIMM sockets free 0
SODIMM sockets total 1
Screen and video
Screen size 10.1in
Resolution screen horizontal 1,024
Resolution screen vertical 600
Resolution 1024 x 600
Graphics chipset Intel GMA 3150
Graphics card RAM 64MB
VGA (D-SUB) outputs 1
HDMI outputs 0
S-Video outputs 0
DVI-I outputs 0
DVI-D outputs 0
DisplayPort outputs 0
Drives
Capacity 250GB
Hard disk usable capacity 233GB
Spindle speed 5,400RPM
Internal disk interface SATA/300
Optical disc technology N/A
Optical drive N/A
Battery capacity 4,400mAh
Replacement battery price inc VAT £0
Networking
802.11a support no
802.11b support yes
802.11g support yes
802.11 draft-n support yes
Integrated 3G adapter no
Bluetooth support yes
Other Features
Wireless hardware on/off switch no
Wireless key-combination switch yes
Modem no
ExpressCard34 slots 0
ExpressCard54 slots 0
PC Card slots 0
USB ports (downstream) 3
PS/2 mouse port no
9-pin serial ports 0
Parallel ports 0
Optical S/PDIF audio output ports 0
Electrical S/PDIF audio ports 0
3.5mm audio jacks 2
SD card reader yes
Memory Stick reader no
MMC (multimedia card) reader yes
Smart Media reader no
Compact Flash reader no
xD-card reader no
Pointing device type Touchpad
Speaker location Front edge
Hardware volume control? no
Integrated microphone? yes
Integrated webcam? yes
Camera megapixel rating 0.3mp
TPM no
Fingerprint reader no
Smartcard reader no
Carry case no
Operating system and software
Operating system Windows 7 Starter
OS family Windows 7
Recovery method Recovery partition
Software supplied N/A
Battery and performance tests
Battery life, light use 9hr 31min
Overall application benchmark score 0.30
Office application benchmark score 0.29
2D graphics application benchmark score 0.32
Encoding application benchmark score 0.29
Multitasking application benchmark score 0.25
3D performance (crysis) low settings N/A
3D performance setting N/A
Subscribe to PC Pro magazine. We'll give you 3 issues for £1 plus a free gift - click here

From around the web

User comments

Intel suffering from "Not Invented Here Syndrome"

I thought it was a stroke of genius when after Intel released the Atom processor, Nvidia released their Ion graphics chipset for the Atom. Take a low-power cpu that is just about capable for everyday computing and extend this into a genuinely useful platform by adding a little graphical grunt. Both companies do well as a result. Not competition, symbiosis.

But that's not good enough for Intel, so come the next iteration of their product, they shut out third parties like nvidia by putting their own graphics and chipset on the same die as the cpu. The result, a more sterile ecosystem that won't result in innovative products people actually want.

Intel need to realise that they are bad at graphics (to put it mildly) and that leaving the door open for third parties, who have the graphical know-how, to build upon their platforms is good business sense. Add to this the squeezing of AMD out of the market by under-hand tactics, Intel are behaving like the Microsoft of yesteryear, when MS were at their most predatory.

By iclbmc1 on 28 Jan 2010

Let nVidia in.

Spot on iclbmc1. Intel need to stop the 'we must do everything' view and let Atom based systems really fly with some proper graphics from nVidia.

Until these netbooks can handle HD content properly, I'm just not interested.

By Grunthos on 29 Jan 2010

Small CPU + HD Graphics please!

Agreed, the CPU is fine, just needs a decent HD chip to drive video, and Intel can't do that!

By Wilbert3 on 30 Jan 2010

Leave a comment

You need to Login or Register to comment.

(optional)

Latest Category Reviews
Alienware M17x R4 review

Alienware M17x R4

Category: Laptops
Rating: 5 out of 6
Price: £1,840
Disgo Tablet 8104 review

Disgo Tablet 8104

Category: Tablets
Rating: 3 out of 6
Price: £161
Toshiba AT200 review

Toshiba AT200

Category: Tablets
Rating: 4 out of 6
Price: £329
Novatech nFinity 2367 Plus review

Novatech nFinity 2367 Plus

Category: Laptops
Rating: 4 out of 6
Price: £625
HP Folio 13 review

HP Folio 13

Category: Laptops
Rating: 5 out of 6
Price: £799
Compare reviews: Laptops

advertisement

Most Commented Reviews
More From PC Pro
Latest News Stories Subscribe to our RSS Feeds
Latest Blog Posts Subscribe to our RSS Feeds
Latest Features
Latest Real World Computing

advertisement

Sponsored Links
 
 
SEARCH
SIGN UP

Your email:

Your password:

remember me

advertisement


Hitwise Top 10 Website 2010
 
 

PCPro-Computing in the Real World Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk

Register to receive our regular email newsletter at http://www.pcpro.co.uk/registration.

The newsletter contains links to our latest PC news, product reviews, features and how-to guides, plus special offers and competitions.