NEWS
In a fight between an iPhone smart phone and an Eee PC netbook, which chunk of mobile hardware would win?
Mobile operator Orange UK is hoping the Eee has the edge over Apple's touchscreen mobile as it has stepped up to iPhone-wielding rival O2 - which is Apple's partner for the iPhone in the UK - and launched a range of mobile broadband packages which bundle laptops rather than mobiles.
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The 'connected laptop' packages include a cheaper-than-an-iPhone £25-per-month consumer tariff offering the popular Asus Eee PC 900 mini laptop. Users get a dongle with their Eee and Orange's 'Internet Everywhere' package - with a data allowance of 3GB, and 100 texts from the laptop.
Small business users have not been forgotten, but Orange reckons their hardware needs are a bit more hardcore as it is offering three HP laptops, complete with Windows Vista: the HP 6730s (Intel Celeron), HP 6730s (Intel Core 2 Duo) and HP 6730b (Intel Core 2 Duo).
The three small business packages - all on Orange's unlimited data 'Business Everywhere' tariffs - cost £35, £40 and £45 per month respectively, with the cheaper two using dongles and the most expensive doing it dongle-less with an embedded Orange SIM.
A monthly wi-fi allowance of 500 minutes and a 5GB fair use data policy applies to the business packages.
Both types of package - business and consumer - require users to sign up for 24 months of service. The connected laptops offerings will go on sale next month.
Francois Mahieu, devices director of Orange UK, said the company plans to expand the range of laptops offered in the future. The operator also plans to include fixed line broadband.
He said in a statement: "Over time we will be looking to expand our offering even further with more suppliers who are at the forefront of laptop technology, making it even easier for our customers to connect to the internet seamlessly, whether it is for work or play."







Comments
There are 3 comments. Join the discussion
1.
If it's a fight to see which one fits into my jacket pocket it's not going to be a laptop is it.
2. Roy Corneloues
So how do you make phone calls from the laptop if the SIM is in the dongle or embedded?
3. anonymous
A laptop, however small, is never going to be a pocketable phone, just as a desktop won't be a laptop, even if you fit 3G broadband.