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Just so we're clear, the Neutrino ships without a hard drive, a multi-format card reader (though there is a slot for one), RAM or an operating system. And trust us, if there were an easy way to add a dedicated GPU, OCZ would have left that option open as well. OCZ reckons that this netbook will appeal to a class of PC buyers that have been largely ignored by the likes of Acer, Asus, Dell and HP: the enthusiast or at the very least, the tech savvy end user. You know, the PC buyer that already has a spare hard drive or two laying around. The same person that has more SO-DIMMs collecting dust than they care to count. In other words, not your traditional, stereotypical netbook buyer.
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Honestly, we love the idea here. There are literally dozens of options for folks scouting a pre-fabricated netbook, but outside of the Neutrino, there are no options whatsoever for those looking to pay for only the basics. For consumers who already have a few spare components laying around, this seems like a no-brainer. You get a netbook for less than you'd spend on one that's fully spec'ed, and you simultaneously find a home for parts you thought were useless. It's the barebones approach that's commonly used on desktops and the occasional notebook, but not for netbooks.
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The only thing that would make this proposal more intriguing would be a lower starting price point. We understand that this is a small market device, but charging $269 for a notebook that lacks a costly HDD, a stick of RAM and an OS seems a bit steep. Of course, if you already own those, $269 is still better than the overall price of most other netbooks. We've seen Dell's Mini 9 stoop below that point a time or two before, but again, those who already own an SSD will likely save lots by choosing this route over paying other vendors a steep premium to add one. Check out the following pages to really get a feel for the first ever netbook to ship in a non-bootable configuration.
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