Updated with HP statement on geographic availability.
Hewlett-Packard has announced that its Compaq division will kick off a netbook that makes use of the identical simple Android operating method as Motorola’s Droid phones and Google’s Nexus One.
The Compaq AirLife 100 is a cloud-white netbook that HP will sell exclusively through Telefónica in Europe and Latin America this spring.
Gizmodo writer Jesus Diaz describes it as “an iPad for the Apple haters.”
The AirLife combines a 10.1-inch diagonal screen, a “92 percent full size” keyboard,
Windows 7 Serial Key,16 GB solid state internal storage, an SD card slot,
Office Professional 2010 Key, a fully multitasking Android operating technique and a touch interface.
The interface features a new touch-based tabbed browser, a touch-based way to zoom web pages,
Office Enterprise 2007 Product Key, and a touch-optimized media apps and shortcut menu.
HP’s announcement is timed to the start of Mobile World Congress,
Office 2007 Ultimate Product Key, a major cellphone conference in Barcelona on Monday. As for where the AirLife will be available, an HP spokesman emailed me,
Windows 7 Ultimate Key, “It will be southern Europe and Latin America to start with. We will announce country availability at start by Telefonica.”
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