Asus Eee Box PC launches in the UK

"A little revolution in desktop computing"


19 June 2008 9:52 GMT / By Amy-Mae Elliott

Asus has officially announced the "Eee Box" PC for the UK, the low-cost desktop offering that will further extend the Eee brand.

Aimed at users who want a "stylish, low-power computer with a minimal footprint", the company says the Eee Box will replace today's "bulky and boring PCs".

Describing the size as one litre, the claim is that the desktop offering is a slim as a paperback novel with a touch sensor button and vertical design for even better space saving.

Running Windows XP Home, it has an 80GB hard disk drive, Intel Atom 1.6Ghz CPU, 1GB DDR2 memory, and a built-in card reader.

With Wi-Fi 802.11n wireless standard, and offering Asus' "Express Gate" fast boot technology, the machine can be up and running in 7 seconds.

A unique heat dissipation module with the AI fan claims to allow allowing quiet (26dB) computing and compared to full-sized desktop solutions, the Eee Box's energy-efficient performance claims to reduce power consumption by up to 90%.

Also on the eco side of things, Asus says the Eee Box is made with only "earth-friendly" materials for reduced CO2 emissions and conforms to RoHS and WEEE standards.

Pricing and exact availability is yet to be confirmed, but we'll bring you all the details as soon as we have them.
Full tags
Hardware, Desktop PCs, Asus, Asus Eee, Eco

share print story pdf email story

Recommended articles


Search

Loading

Follow


Best iPad 2 apps

We detail the best iPad 2 and iPad apps in the app store Which iPad app should you download?

Windows 8

All the features and details of the new Microsoft operating system explained What's new in Windows 8?

iPad 3 rumours

What comes next? We look at the possible features, leaks, images, specs and more

Pocket-lint poll

Q. Will you be buying a PS Vita?

Vote YES Vote NO

» LAST TIME
When asked Will Samsung be making a mistake if the Galaxy S III isn't shown at Mobile World Congress in February? 51% said yes and 49% said no