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Subnotebook

Subnotebook, also called ultraportable, superportable, or mini notebook, was a marketing term for laptop computers that are smaller and lighter than a typical notebook-sized laptop.

Types of subnotebooks, clockwise from left:
Classic subnotebook (Compaq Contura Aero),
Netbook (Asus Eee PC 1000H),
Palmtop/Handheld PC (Sony VAIO C1, Fujitsu Lifebook 810U)
Sizes (smallest to largest): Nintendo DS Lite (handheld), Asus Eee PC (netbook) and 13.3" MacBook (laptop).

Types and sizes

 
Sizes of classic subnotebooks (2001's ThinkPad s30, 10.4") and early netbooks (2008's Eee PC 901, 8.9"); note to reduced keycaps size

As typical laptop sizes have decreased over the course of the 2010s, and other distinguishing features have become mainstream, the distinction between regular-size and 'subnotebook' laptops has largely disappeared. To the extent that it still exists, 'subnotebook' could be defined as machines with screen smaller than 13" but with a permanently-attached keyboard intended for two-handed typing.

Prior to this convergence, subnotebooks were also distinguished from netbooks and ultra-mobile PCs, based on both size and market position.

Classic subnotebooks were smaller than full sized laptops but larger than handheld computers. They were distinguished by smaller screens and bodies and lighter weights relative to contemporaneous laptops. The savings in size and weight were often achieved partly by omitting ports, and these were typically the first machines to omit optical disc drives or on some of the earliest models, floppy disk drives.

They were also some of the first systems which could be paired with docking stations to compensate. One notable form-factor of subnotebook-oriented docks were "slice docks" — a more transportable version of classic docking station.[1][2]

Subnotebooks relative to other laptop marketing terms
Type Screen size Weight Distinguishing Characteristics CPU type(s) Years of production
Classic subnotebook 5-12" 0.9-1.8 kg Varies, mostly x86 1992-2018 (worldwide)/

2018-current (Asia only)[3][4]

Palmtop/handheld 5-9" 0.3-0.8 kg Size, and miniaturized keyboard Varies, typically ultra-low power 1989-current
Netbook 7-13" 0.7-1.5 kg Very low cost Low power x86;

most often Intel Atom

2007-2015
Smartbook 5-10" 0.4–1 kg Mobile broadband modem x86 low power or ARM 2009-2011
Chromebook 10-15" varies ChromeOS x86 or ARM 2011-current
Ultrabook 12-17" 0.7-1.6 kg Use of premium materials,

particularly a metal chassis

Intel x86 2011-2018

(trademark is still active)[5][6]

History

Before 1992

The TRS-80 Model 100 from 1983 was one of the first mass-market portable computers, and was smaller than the clam-shell machines of the same era; it used a slate form factor, with no hinge and the keyboard and screen on the same plane. Its later sibling the Tandy 200 was a clam-shell design and smaller than contemporary laptops. Either could be regarded as an early subnotebook.

The Compaq LTE, launched in 1989, was the first to be widely known as a "notebook computer" because its relatively small dimensions — 48 × 220 × 280 mm (1.9 × 8.5 × 11 inches) — matched those of a pair of stacked US Letter (similar to A4) size paper notebooks. In 1990 the Compaq release was followed by IBM PS/2 note and PS/55note lines (later, in October 1992 they was replaced by the first IBM ThinkPad), and by the relatively compact Sharp PC-6220 model.[7]

Starting around this time, portables with noticeably smaller form factors sometimes referred as subnotebooks. The term may have been first applied to the NEC UltraLite, unveiled in 1988 — although its dimensions (1.4" × 8.3" × 11.75") were very similar to the Compaq LTE, but slightly lighter (4.4 lb (2.0 kg)).[8]

There were also a few notable smaller-than subnotebook PCs at this time, including the Atari Portfolio and HP 95LX[9] — both very small MS-DOS machines, roughly comparable in size to later handheld PCs.

1992–1995

 
 
Gateway Handbook 486 and HP Omnibook 300

At the end of 1992, PCMag magazine[10] described two models as subnotebooks: these were the Gateway Handbook the Dell 320SLi[11][12] (both less that a 1.6 kg weight), and another was released in Italy: the Olivetti Quaderno.[13]

Apple and Compaq did label their machines as "subnotebooks" in this period, but the PowerBook Duo and Compaq LTE Lite otherwise qualify, and both lines were among the first to broadly popularize docking stations.

Another early model was the Hewlett-Packard OmniBook 300, which was launched as a "superportable" in 1993; it was one of the first examples to use a flash memory disk instead of a hard drive, to reduce the weight.[14]

Toshiba, also entered the market that year with the Portege T3400 and T3400CT, claiming that "It's the first subnotebook computer with all the functionality of a much larger computer";[15] the T3400CT was the first subnotebook with a color screen. in 1995, Tosbiba introduced the Libretto 20, with a 6.1″ screen; CNet reported about the Libretto 50CT that "[it] is the first full-fledged Windows 95 notebook in the United States weighing less than two pounds".[16]

Compaq introduced its own short lived subnotebook line in 1994 called Contura Aero, notable for using a battery which was intended to be standard rather than only useful for Compaq products.[17]

IBM released a Palm Top PC (handheld laptop with 4.7" screen) in 1995.[18]

1996–2000

IBM had sold "thin and light" models in its ThinkPad range, such as the ThinkPad 560 ultraportable (1996) and best-selling ThinkPad 600 (1998). It finally entered the subnotebook market in 1999 with the 1.3 kg ThinkPad 240, targeted at business travellers.[19] The 240 and 240X had 10.4″ screens. Later, however, IBM replaced these with the X range, with 12.1″ screens.[20]

 
An Apple PowerBook Duo 270c

In 1997 Mitsubishi Electric released ultra-compact 12.1" Mitsubishi Pedion laptop line with ultrathin magnesium case (18 × 218 × 297 mm) and chiclet keyboard.[21] This short-living model line was sold only in Japan, and was discontinued after some hardware issues. Sony launched an ultraportable (ultrathin) less than an inch thick in Japan - the PCG-505, which reached the US in 1997 as the VAIO 505GX. This was followed by the even thinner Sony VAIO X505, which measured just 0.8 × 8.2 × 10.2 inches, and reached 0.3″ at its thinnest.[22] However, it was very expensive and had poor battery life, and was soon withdrawn.

Apple replace the aging PowerBook Duo line with relatively light-weight (4.4 lb (2.0 kg)) but short-lived PowerBook 2400c; this was co-designed by IBM, and manufactured for Apple by IBM Japan. In 2000 Compaq released a more compact successor of Digital HiNote line - the 10.3" Armada M300, with magnesium case and 1.6 kg weight.

Sony also launched the C1 range of subnotebooks, starting in Japan in 1998.[23]

2001–2006

This period was notable for a major split between lower-power-consumption and higher power x86 processors in laptops; although Intel released the Pentium 4 mobile chips, the mobile Pentium III remained available because of high power consumption on the Pentium 4 leading to high heat and short battery life. This was followed by the Pentium M, which was a dedicated line of mobile processors with no desktop equivalent. This era also featured processors from Transmeta, intended to be extremely power efficient.

One of the most notable Sony models was the Vaio PCG-C1VE or PictureBook (2001). It was one of the first machines with a digital camera built into the lid, which could be used for video conferencing or swiveled to photograph a scene.[24]

This was followed in 2005 by the Flybook convertible with a 8.9 inch touch screen. The Flybook featured a built-in phone connection for GPRS or 3G networking, and is available in a range of bright colors. This was covered in non-computer magazines including GQ, FHM, Elle and Rolling Stone.[25]

In 2006, Microsoft introduced a new ultra-mobile PC format, under the code-name Origami. These were smaller versions of Tablet PC computers; One example was the Samsung Q1.[26]

2007–present

 
 
Left: 2012's Dell Latitude XT3 - as a sample of the latest classic subnotebooks with dock station support, additional battery, ruggerized case, 35W CPU[27] and additional input options.
Right: Asus, Everex and HP netbooks/smartbooks

Since 2007, the laptop computer market has seen an increased segmentation of microprocessor lines to different purposes and power levels, including the introduction of the Intel Atom, ultra-low-voltage processors which has since having become mainstream, and the use of ARM microprocessors.

Another notable implementation was a migrate from CCFL screen backlit to more energy-efficiently and compact LED-backlit screens. On the other hand, over the course of the 2010s, with growing of sales for mainstream users, optical drives and legacy ports became uncommon, and some classic subnotebook features (like additional replaceable batteries, alternative input methods, docking options, Smart Cards, mobile broadband modules, additional storage) become rare. At Computex 2011 Intel announced a new system branding called Ultrabooks; these very much match the prior description of subnotebooks - they used lower-powered processors (but not as low-end as netbooks) and with each generation of Intel processors, the lower-powered U-series processors became a larger part of mainstream sales. typically lacked optical drives and legacy ports, and were generally compact, but as marketed the two terms were rarely used together. Noticeable releases:

In 2007 the ASUS Eee PC became the first of a new class of low-cost laptops commonly called netbooks. Netbooks are typically based upon the Atom processors, while other subnotebooks use more powerful processors such as ULV types.

 
 
13" ultrabooks: 2011's MacBook Air and 2018's HP Envy

In 2008, Apple introduced the MacBook Air, which the company claimed was the world's thinnest notebook. This model was notable for offering no built-in optical drive.[28][29]

In the same year Lenovo released last widely known hi-end 12" subnotebook line without touchpad, the ThinkPad X200, X200s and X200 Tablet models.[30]

In 2010 saw a number of semi-rugged low-end subnotebooks for the education market, including the Dell Latitude 2100, Lenovo ThinkPad x100e, and HP ProBook Education Edition; these notably had laptop charging trolley support.

 
11.6" 2012's Samsung Series 3 Chromebook[31]

In 2011, the first Chromebooks were introduced by Google, and Intel's introduced the Ultrabook branding for premium thin-and-light laptops. Over the next several years, specific marketing of laptops as "subnotebooks" died out, and since 2017 the term is essentially dead in mainstream branding.

As of 2021 plenty of smaller laptops remain on the market which could adequately be described as subnotebooks, and the term is still sometimes used informally although is no longer used by manufacturers.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Lenovo ThinkPad X220 Review - Notebook Reviews by MobileTechReview". www.mobiletechreview.com. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  2. ^ Jentsch, Sebastian. "Review Sony Vaio VPC-SA2Z9E/B (i7, SSD, HD 6630M) Subnotebook". Notebookcheck. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  3. ^ Chakrabarty, Jayaditya (2020-10-13). "Panasonic Launched New Rugged Notebook CF-SV8". Review Center India. Retrieved 2021-04-23.
  4. ^ devicenext (2020-06-29). "Panasonic Toughbook CF-SV8". DEVICENEXT. Retrieved 2021-04-23.
  5. ^ "Why Ultrabook Laptops Aren't Just MacBook Air Clones". PCWorld. 2012-05-17. Retrieved 2021-04-23.
  6. ^ "Not sure what Intel Evo means for laptops? We explain it all right here". Windows Central. 2020-10-07. Retrieved 2021-04-25.
  7. ^ RIQUIER, Nicolas (1990-06-12). "Sharp PC-6220". Space-Nerd.com. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  8. ^ "Archive ULTRALITE-LIST: file specs.txt, part 1/1, size 4055 bytes".
  9. ^ "Retro Isle - HP95LX, 100LX and 200LX". retroisle.com. Retrieved 2021-01-06.
  10. ^ Inc, Ziff Davis (1992-10-27). PC Mag. Ziff Davis, Inc.
  11. ^ Torgan, Emerson (1992-10-13). Dell Breaks the Full-Featured 4-Pound Barrier with Compact 320SLi. PC Mag. p. 46.
  12. ^ Lee, Yvonne (1992-06-08). Dell's notebook drops the weight, retains the power. InfoWorld. p. 18.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 2 April 2011.
  14. ^ Hardware 2012-02-27 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Support – Business PCs - Toshiba". www.toshiba-europe.com. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  16. ^ "Toshiba unwraps subnotebook". cnet.com. 2 June 1997.
  17. ^ "QuickSpecs -- Compaq Contura Aero (Consumer Products)". www.rigacci.org. Retrieved 2021-01-06.
  18. ^ 1995 Press Release - 年のプレスリリース一 IBM.com
  19. ^ "FindArticles.com - CBSi". findarticles.com. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  20. ^ HPC:Factor. "IBM Workpad z50 Review". HPC:Factor. Retrieved 2020-12-04.
  21. ^ "Pedionペディオン (Mitsubishi) 1997年". 古いハードに囲まれて. Retrieved 2020-12-05.
  22. ^ "Sony VAIO X505 review: Sony VAIO X505". 31 August 2004. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  23. ^ "Sony Global - Press Release - Sony Announces New VAIO Notebook Computer Equipped with a Built-in Miniature CCD Video Camera for Sending Images over E-mail". www.sony.net.
  24. ^ "Sony Vaio C1 Laptop Info". Archived from the original on 2002-06-03. Retrieved 2007-02-16.
  25. ^ . www.flybook.biz. Archived from the original on 22 November 2005. Retrieved 6 April 2018.
  26. ^ Williams, Martyn (2006-03-09). "Hands on with Samsung's Q1 (Origami)". Computerworld. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  27. ^ "Intel® Core™ i7-2640M Processor (4M Cache, up to 3.50 GHz) Product Specifications". ark.intel.com. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  28. ^ "It was the MacBook Air sub-notebook". Retrieved 2017-12-27.
  29. ^ "MacBook Air (13-inch, 2017) - Technical Specifications". support.apple.com. Retrieved 2017-12-27.
  30. ^ "Lenovo ThinkPad X200 Review". www.notebookreview.com. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  31. ^ November 2012, Daniel Berg 01. "Samsung Chromebook Series 3 (XE303C12) | Notebook Review". LaptopMag. Retrieved 2021-04-26.

subnotebook, also, called, ultraportable, superportable, mini, notebook, marketing, term, laptop, computers, that, smaller, lighter, than, typical, notebook, sized, laptop, types, subnotebooks, clockwise, from, left, classic, subnotebook, compaq, contura, aero. Subnotebook also called ultraportable superportable or mini notebook was a marketing term for laptop computers that are smaller and lighter than a typical notebook sized laptop Types of subnotebooks clockwise from left Classic subnotebook Compaq Contura Aero Netbook Asus Eee PC 1000H Palmtop Handheld PC Sony VAIO C1 Fujitsu Lifebook 810U Sizes smallest to largest Nintendo DS Lite handheld Asus Eee PC netbook and 13 3 MacBook laptop Contents 1 Types and sizes 2 History 2 1 Before 1992 2 2 1992 1995 2 3 1996 2000 2 4 2001 2006 2 5 2007 present 3 See also 4 ReferencesTypes and sizes Edit Sizes of classic subnotebooks 2001 s ThinkPad s30 10 4 and early netbooks 2008 s Eee PC 901 8 9 note to reduced keycaps size As typical laptop sizes have decreased over the course of the 2010s and other distinguishing features have become mainstream the distinction between regular size and subnotebook laptops has largely disappeared To the extent that it still exists subnotebook could be defined as machines with screen smaller than 13 but with a permanently attached keyboard intended for two handed typing Prior to this convergence subnotebooks were also distinguished from netbooks and ultra mobile PCs based on both size and market position Classic subnotebooks were smaller than full sized laptops but larger than handheld computers They were distinguished by smaller screens and bodies and lighter weights relative to contemporaneous laptops The savings in size and weight were often achieved partly by omitting ports and these were typically the first machines to omit optical disc drives or on some of the earliest models floppy disk drives They were also some of the first systems which could be paired with docking stations to compensate One notable form factor of subnotebook oriented docks were slice docks a more transportable version of classic docking station 1 2 Subnotebooks relative to other laptop marketing termsType Screen size Weight Distinguishing Characteristics CPU type s Years of productionClassic subnotebook 5 12 0 9 1 8 kg Varies mostly x86 1992 2018 worldwide 2018 current Asia only 3 4 Palmtop handheld 5 9 0 3 0 8 kg Size and miniaturized keyboard Varies typically ultra low power 1989 currentNetbook 7 13 0 7 1 5 kg Very low cost Low power x86 most often Intel Atom 2007 2015Smartbook 5 10 0 4 1 kg Mobile broadband modem x86 low power or ARM 2009 2011Chromebook 10 15 varies ChromeOS x86 or ARM 2011 currentUltrabook 12 17 0 7 1 6 kg Use of premium materials particularly a metal chassis Intel x86 2011 2018 trademark is still active 5 6 History EditBefore 1992 Edit The TRS 80 Model 100 from 1983 was one of the first mass market portable computers and was smaller than the clam shell machines of the same era it used a slate form factor with no hinge and the keyboard and screen on the same plane Its later sibling the Tandy 200 was a clam shell design and smaller than contemporary laptops Either could be regarded as an early subnotebook The Compaq LTE launched in 1989 was the first to be widely known as a notebook computer because its relatively small dimensions 48 220 280 mm 1 9 8 5 11 inches matched those of a pair of stacked US Letter similar to A4 size paper notebooks In 1990 the Compaq release was followed by IBM PS 2 note and PS 55note lines later in October 1992 they was replaced by the first IBM ThinkPad and by the relatively compact Sharp PC 6220 model 7 Starting around this time portables with noticeably smaller form factors sometimes referred as subnotebooks The term may have been first applied to the NEC UltraLite unveiled in 1988 although its dimensions 1 4 8 3 11 75 were very similar to the Compaq LTE but slightly lighter 4 4 lb 2 0 kg 8 There were also a few notable smaller than subnotebook PCs at this time including the Atari Portfolio and HP 95LX 9 both very small MS DOS machines roughly comparable in size to later handheld PCs 1992 1995 Edit Gateway Handbook 486 and HP Omnibook 300 At the end of 1992 PCMag magazine 10 described two models as subnotebooks these were the Gateway Handbook the Dell 320SLi 11 12 both less that a 1 6 kg weight and another was released in Italy the Olivetti Quaderno 13 Apple and Compaq did label their machines as subnotebooks in this period but the PowerBook Duo and Compaq LTE Lite otherwise qualify and both lines were among the first to broadly popularize docking stations Another early model was the Hewlett Packard OmniBook 300 which was launched as a superportable in 1993 it was one of the first examples to use a flash memory disk instead of a hard drive to reduce the weight 14 Toshiba also entered the market that year with the Portege T3400 and T3400CT claiming that It s the first subnotebook computer with all the functionality of a much larger computer 15 the T3400CT was the first subnotebook with a color screen in 1995 Tosbiba introduced the Libretto 20 with a 6 1 screen CNet reported about the Libretto 50CT that it is the first full fledged Windows 95 notebook in the United States weighing less than two pounds 16 Compaq introduced its own short lived subnotebook line in 1994 called Contura Aero notable for using a battery which was intended to be standard rather than only useful for Compaq products 17 IBM Palm Top PC 110 with and without slice port replicator IBM released a Palm Top PC handheld laptop with 4 7 screen in 1995 18 1996 2000 Edit IBM had sold thin and light models in its ThinkPad range such as the ThinkPad 560 ultraportable 1996 and best selling ThinkPad 600 1998 It finally entered the subnotebook market in 1999 with the 1 3 kg ThinkPad 240 targeted at business travellers 19 The 240 and 240X had 10 4 screens Later however IBM replaced these with the X range with 12 1 screens 20 An Apple PowerBook Duo 270c In 1997 Mitsubishi Electric released ultra compact 12 1 Mitsubishi Pedion laptop line with ultrathin magnesium case 18 218 297 mm and chiclet keyboard 21 This short living model line was sold only in Japan and was discontinued after some hardware issues Sony launched an ultraportable ultrathin less than an inch thick in Japan the PCG 505 which reached the US in 1997 as the VAIO 505GX This was followed by the even thinner Sony VAIO X505 which measured just 0 8 8 2 10 2 inches and reached 0 3 at its thinnest 22 However it was very expensive and had poor battery life and was soon withdrawn Apple replace the aging PowerBook Duo line with relatively light weight 4 4 lb 2 0 kg but short lived PowerBook 2400c this was co designed by IBM and manufactured for Apple by IBM Japan In 2000 Compaq released a more compact successor of Digital HiNote line the 10 3 Armada M300 with magnesium case and 1 6 kg weight Sony also launched the C1 range of subnotebooks starting in Japan in 1998 23 2001 2006 Edit This period was notable for a major split between lower power consumption and higher power x86 processors in laptops although Intel released the Pentium 4 mobile chips the mobile Pentium III remained available because of high power consumption on the Pentium 4 leading to high heat and short battery life This was followed by the Pentium M which was a dedicated line of mobile processors with no desktop equivalent This era also featured processors from Transmeta intended to be extremely power efficient One of the most notable Sony models was the Vaio PCG C1VE or PictureBook 2001 It was one of the first machines with a digital camera built into the lid which could be used for video conferencing or swiveled to photograph a scene 24 This was followed in 2005 by the Flybook convertible with a 8 9 inch touch screen The Flybook featured a built in phone connection for GPRS or 3G networking and is available in a range of bright colors This was covered in non computer magazines including GQ FHM Elle and Rolling Stone 25 In 2006 Microsoft introduced a new ultra mobile PC format under the code name Origami These were smaller versions of Tablet PC computers One example was the Samsung Q1 26 2007 present Edit Left 2012 s Dell Latitude XT3 as a sample of the latest classic subnotebooks with dock station support additional battery ruggerized case 35W CPU 27 and additional input options Right Asus Everex and HP netbooks smartbooksSince 2007 the laptop computer market has seen an increased segmentation of microprocessor lines to different purposes and power levels including the introduction of the Intel Atom ultra low voltage processors which has since having become mainstream and the use of ARM microprocessors Another notable implementation was a migrate from CCFL screen backlit to more energy efficiently and compact LED backlit screens On the other hand over the course of the 2010s with growing of sales for mainstream users optical drives and legacy ports became uncommon and some classic subnotebook features like additional replaceable batteries alternative input methods docking options Smart Cards mobile broadband modules additional storage become rare At Computex 2011 Intel announced a new system branding called Ultrabooks these very much match the prior description of subnotebooks they used lower powered processors but not as low end as netbooks and with each generation of Intel processors the lower powered U series processors became a larger part of mainstream sales typically lacked optical drives and legacy ports and were generally compact but as marketed the two terms were rarely used together Noticeable releases In 2007 the ASUS Eee PC became the first of a new class of low cost laptops commonly called netbooks Netbooks are typically based upon the Atom processors while other subnotebooks use more powerful processors such as ULV types 13 ultrabooks 2011 s MacBook Air and 2018 s HP Envy In 2008 Apple introduced the MacBook Air which the company claimed was the world s thinnest notebook This model was notable for offering no built in optical drive 28 29 In the same year Lenovo released last widely known hi end 12 subnotebook line without touchpad the ThinkPad X200 X200s and X200 Tablet models 30 In 2010 saw a number of semi rugged low end subnotebooks for the education market including the Dell Latitude 2100 Lenovo ThinkPad x100e and HP ProBook Education Edition these notably had laptop charging trolley support 11 6 2012 s Samsung Series 3 Chromebook 31 In 2011 the first Chromebooks were introduced by Google and Intel s introduced the Ultrabook branding for premium thin and light laptops Over the next several years specific marketing of laptops as subnotebooks died out and since 2017 the term is essentially dead in mainstream branding As of 2021 plenty of smaller laptops remain on the market which could adequately be described as subnotebooks and the term is still sometimes used informally although is no longer used by manufacturers See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Subnotebooks List of computer size categories Netbook Palmtop Intel Mobile Internet Device UMPC a small form factor tablet PC platform SmartbookReferences Edit Lenovo ThinkPad X220 Review Notebook Reviews by MobileTechReview www mobiletechreview com Retrieved 2021 04 25 Jentsch Sebastian Review Sony Vaio VPC SA2Z9E B i7 SSD HD 6630M Subnotebook Notebookcheck Retrieved 2021 04 25 Chakrabarty Jayaditya 2020 10 13 Panasonic Launched New Rugged Notebook CF SV8 Review Center India Retrieved 2021 04 23 devicenext 2020 06 29 Panasonic Toughbook CF SV8 DEVICENEXT Retrieved 2021 04 23 Why Ultrabook Laptops Aren t Just MacBook Air Clones PCWorld 2012 05 17 Retrieved 2021 04 23 Not sure what Intel Evo means for laptops We explain it all right here Windows Central 2020 10 07 Retrieved 2021 04 25 RIQUIER Nicolas 1990 06 12 Sharp PC 6220 Space Nerd com Retrieved 2021 04 26 Archive ULTRALITE LIST file specs txt part 1 1 size 4055 bytes Retro Isle HP95LX 100LX and 200LX retroisle com Retrieved 2021 01 06 Inc Ziff Davis 1992 10 27 PC Mag Ziff Davis Inc Torgan Emerson 1992 10 13 Dell Breaks the Full Featured 4 Pound Barrier with Compact 320SLi PC Mag p 46 Lee Yvonne 1992 06 08 Dell s notebook drops the weight retains the power InfoWorld p 18 Lavorare dovunque i computer portatili Olivetti Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 2 April 2011 Hardware Archived 2012 02 27 at the Wayback Machine Support Business PCs Toshiba www toshiba europe com Retrieved 6 April 2018 Toshiba unwraps subnotebook cnet com 2 June 1997 QuickSpecs Compaq Contura Aero Consumer Products www rigacci org Retrieved 2021 01 06 1995 Press Release 年のプレスリリース一 IBM com FindArticles com CBSi findarticles com Retrieved 6 April 2018 HPC Factor IBM Workpad z50 Review HPC Factor Retrieved 2020 12 04 Pedionペディオン Mitsubishi 1997年 古いハードに囲まれて Retrieved 2020 12 05 Sony VAIO X505 review Sony VAIO X505 31 August 2004 Retrieved 6 April 2018 Sony Global Press Release Sony Announces New VAIO Notebook Computer Equipped with a Built in Miniature CCD Video Camera for Sending Images over E mail www sony net Sony Vaio C1 Laptop Info Archived from the original on 2002 06 03 Retrieved 2007 02 16 Fly book The world s most popular frequent flyer community Fly book is a living growing community where frequent travelers around the world come to exchange knowledge and experiences about everything miles and points related www flybook biz Archived from the original on 22 November 2005 Retrieved 6 April 2018 Williams Martyn 2006 03 09 Hands on with Samsung s Q1 Origami Computerworld Retrieved 2021 04 26 Intel Core i7 2640M Processor 4M Cache up to 3 50 GHz Product Specifications ark intel com Retrieved 2021 04 26 It was the MacBook Air sub notebook Retrieved 2017 12 27 MacBook Air 13 inch 2017 Technical Specifications support apple com Retrieved 2017 12 27 Lenovo ThinkPad X200 Review www notebookreview com Retrieved 2021 04 26 November 2012 Daniel Berg 01 Samsung Chromebook Series 3 XE303C12 Notebook Review LaptopMag Retrieved 2021 04 26 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Subnotebook amp oldid 1126603237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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