Hello people of Tom's Hardware.
I'm in the market for a netbook/small-notebook and have pretty much decided on purchasing an ASUS 1225B powered by the AMD E-450 APU. It should satisfy my needs which is internet browsing, some light gaming (from what I've read this APU will play some of the older CoDs at 30 fps on the lowest graphics setting), and possibly some Adobe Illustrator drawing with a Wacom tablet (how cpu intensive is illustrator?).
My only hold up on ordering is that I keep reading that Brazos 2.0 is right around the corner. Is there any reason to wait for this? Will the very modest cpu clock speed bump and purported power savings of Brazos 2.0 even be noticeable? Also AMD likes to delay it's releases, I'm certainly not waiting for the e2-1800 if it's 3-4 months before availability.
I'm open to suggestions on other netbooks/notebooks in the 11.6"-to-13.3" range. I do like that the E-450 has a respectable (relative to traditional netbooks) integrated GPU. Minimum 4 hours of expected web surfing battery life is required.
I'm in the market for a netbook/small-notebook and have pretty much decided on purchasing an ASUS 1225B powered by the AMD E-450 APU. It should satisfy my needs which is internet browsing, some light gaming (from what I've read this APU will play some of the older CoDs at 30 fps on the lowest graphics setting), and possibly some Adobe Illustrator drawing with a Wacom tablet (how cpu intensive is illustrator?).
My only hold up on ordering is that I keep reading that Brazos 2.0 is right around the corner. Is there any reason to wait for this? Will the very modest cpu clock speed bump and purported power savings of Brazos 2.0 even be noticeable? Also AMD likes to delay it's releases, I'm certainly not waiting for the e2-1800 if it's 3-4 months before availability.
I'm open to suggestions on other netbooks/notebooks in the 11.6"-to-13.3" range. I do like that the E-450 has a respectable (relative to traditional netbooks) integrated GPU. Minimum 4 hours of expected web surfing battery life is required.