{"id":383,"date":"2008-08-14T21:33:48","date_gmt":"2008-08-15T02:33:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/unitstep.net\/?p=383"},"modified":"2008-09-10T07:20:32","modified_gmt":"2008-09-10T12:20:32","slug":"acer-aspire-one-unboxing-canadian-version","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/unitstep.net\/blog\/2008\/08\/14\/acer-aspire-one-unboxing-canadian-version\/","title":{"rendered":"Acer Aspire One Unboxing – Canadian Version"},"content":{"rendered":"

I finally received my much-awaited Acer Aspire One<\/a> this week and have been enjoying it ever since. I ordered the 1 GB\/120 GB HDD\/Windows XP Home edition from DirectCanada.com last Friday (an online store that is most likely a front for NCIX.com, which I’ve also ordered from) and the package arrived on Monday – this was with the free shipping option!<\/p>\n

\n\"Keyboard<\/a>\n<\/p>\n

Update<\/h4>\n

I’ve since completed my full review of the Aspire One<\/a>. Please read if you’re interested.<\/p>\n

I’m still forming my final opinion of the device but my initial impression was very<\/strong> positive – I don’t have any major complaints. The device is well-designed, stylish, easy-to-use and very snappy. The 1.6 GHz Intel Atom N270 that powers the laptop is more than enough for the things you’ll the Aspire One – and it supports hyper-threading and so shows up as “two” cores in Windows.<\/p>\n

The Canadian Keyboard<\/h3>\n

The one downside to the Aspire One that is specific to the Canadian version is the inclusion of a “bilingual” keyboard layout<\/a>. Apparently, it is required(?) that laptop vendors sell a version of the laptop with this layout in the Canadian market, so many laptop vendors are just switching completely over to this layout for their Canadian versions in order to simplify things and not have to deal with multiple models. This keyboard layout differs from a standard “US” keyboard layout in two ways:<\/p>\n