Your Ad Here

Dell Mini 10 netbook line to get specs bumped in January

Dell_Inspiron_Mini_10_2010_family_highres

Dell’s line of Mini 10 netbooks will be getting a few boosts here and there sometime next month. For starters, you’ll be able to get one outfitted with an Atom N450 CPU at 1.66GHz. The six-cell battery option will apparently provide up to 9.5 hours of battery life as well.

Aesthetically, the netbooks will be available “with a fresh new look” sporting “a textured, smudge-resistant palm rest [and] sculpted keys.” You’ll be able to further personalize the design of your Mini 10 “with a broad range of optional colors or hundreds of optional custom artwork designs available in the Dell Design Studio.”

Full feature list includes:

  • Intel Atom N450 CPU at 1.66GHz
  • 10.1-inch display with 1024×600 and 1366×768 options
  • HDTV tuner and GPS options
  • Broadcom Crystal HD GPU option for HD videos
  • 802.11b/g wireless standard, Bluetooth optional
  • 1GB DDR2 memory
  • 160GB or 250GB hard drive
  • Three- or six-cell battery
  • Windows 7 Starter, XP Home, or Ubuntu
  • Starting weight of between 2.75 and 3.1 pounds with three-cell battery
  • Prices starting at $299

Again, no firm release date yet except for “early January.”

Press Release



  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • email
  • PDF
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • RSS

This post is tagged: , ,

Leave a Reply





  • Korea’s largest ISP plans ‘network fees’ for datahogs like YouTube, internet TVKorea’s largest ISP plans ‘network fees’ for datahogs like YouTube, internet TV

    South Korea's biggest internet provider plans to recoup high traffic network upgrades by charging YouTube and other data-hungry sites. KT will start by blocking access to a few TV apps found Samsung's internet TVs, seeking to strike up a payment deal where data-heavy services might ought to share advertising income or pay fees to the ISP. According an interview with Reuters, KT's vp of… »
  • Google, Microsoft and Netflix want DRM-like encryption in HTML5Google, Microsoft and Netflix want DRM-like encryption in HTML5

    HTML5 is meant to set the internet free. Free to deliver and shape online media in any web browser. However, several of the standard's greatest champions like to have the ability to restrict the usage of and tags through encrypted media extensions. A draft proposal have been submitted by Google, Microsoft, and Netflix to the W3C -- the curators of HTML5 -- to feature encrypted… »

Categories

Subscribe

Enter your email address: