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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.
A netbook is a small-sized laptop computer; they were primarily sold from 2007 until around 2013, designed mostly as a means of accessing the Internet and being significantly less expensive. An Acer Aspire One netbook sitting on a standard sized Toshiba Satellite laptop, demonstrating the size difference
Since around 1990, where a hard drive is present it will typically be a 2.5-inch drive; some very compact laptops support even smaller 1.8-inch HDDs, and a very small number used 1" Microdrives. Some SSDs are built to match the size/shape of a laptop hard drive, but increasingly they have been replaced with smaller mSATA or M.2 cards.
Larger laptops continued to be marketed alongside notebooks for several years. Toshiba's DynaBook J-3100SS was cited by the company as the "first notebook PC" By this point, however, laptops were gaining hardware features faster than the industry could miniaturize their parts, leading to very heavy laptops—some upwards of 20 pounds (9.1 kg).
This is a very broad categorization that includes computers with a single microprocessor as their central processing unit (CPU). [2] [6] Personal computer (PC) [1] Desktop computer—see computer form factor for some standardized sizes of desktop computers Full-size; All-in-one; Compact; Home theater; Home computer
The Asus VivoBook 4K uses a 15.6" 16:9 IPS 4K (3840 x 2160) display with a color gamut of 72% NTSC, 100% sRGB, and 74% Adobe RGB. The laptop supports up to Intel Core i7 processor, up to 12 GB of RAM, up to a 2 TB HDD and up to a Nvidia 940M video card.