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First Setup On Asus Eee PC 4G

Informed first boot, I personified recognized not by the acquainted chime of Windows but by a license agreement for the Asus Desktop OS. After clicking "I agree," I continued through with the First Boot Wizard. I decided my keyboard type (English/US), figured my name, selected a password (you can set it up to log in automatically upon system start-up), adjust the date and time, allow the system reboot, and voila, I was off and flowing.

The system right away rebooted into the Linux-based Asus screen background user interface. And immediately, I recognized that I wasn't in California anymore. Asus reports the device "as easy to use as any electric convenience, like a toaster or a microwave oven." I wouldn't become quite that far, but I accord with the company's confident affirmation that the Eee PC is simple easily to usage.

Asus's controlling environment mimics a lot of Windows' functionality (for representative, a Home button where the Start button would be a Taskbar that appearances open apps and apps in memory; and window minimize, maximize, and resize controls). A good accession is the cheerful face icon at the lower right for Eee PC usage tips, and the green SOS icon (hover the cursor over the icon to figure out what it is) to indicate you which apps are open in the background and how to close them.

The unclearest part of the user interface is the row of icons in the Taskbar-equivalent at the bottom of the display. The icons are small, and occasionally I opened apps without actualizing I hadn't closed them--which in turn sapped memory and created the Taskbar more littered till I got back to close those apps.

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