
It looks like Asus is going to officially reveal the 10" version of the EeePC at Computex in Taiwan in an attempt to keep haead of MSI and their 10" Wind.
Maybe it's just this picture but the EeePC 1000 looks a bit too bulky to still be called an ultra-portable.









The Asus eeEPC 1000 is "too big to be really be called an "UltraPortable" only IF you DEFINE "ultraportable" as NECESSARILY having a keyboard that is so small as to be utterly useless for touch typing.
The Sony TR2A and TR3A (2004 vintage machines that also have 10 inch LCD dislays and a somewhat but not greatly reduced in size keyboard) were called "UltraPortable". And that wasn't that long ago.
Those Sony TR2A and TR3A machines had a built in optical drive... DVD ROM, CD R/W, now upgradeable to DVD R/W, a full WXGA resolution 1366 x 768 pixel resolution screen, 1 GB memory max, and a 40 GB (upgradeable to 60 GB) hard drive, and a very low power 1 GHz pentium CPU... weighed 3.5 lbs... thus much like the eeEPC 1000, but somewhat more capable and flexible. But they cost $2000 to $2500 when they were sold, new. Currently available for about $400 to $700 on eBay, buyer beware concerning condition. I own a few, upgraded to a full 1GB, DVD R/W, and 60 GB hard drive. THEY are a standard to which the Asus eeEPC 1000 should be compared. That is, either the TR3A or the 10 inch screen current $2500 or so ultraportable successors of the TR3A from Sony (tho I think the more recent Sonys in this category, while more powerful, are in some respects less desireble... ultra easy to break LCD screens, for one thing).
Note that the definition of the terms "Mainframe", "Mini-computer", "Desktop PC" , "Laptop PC", "UltraPortable Laptop PC", "Pocket PC" and "PDA" have never been fixed in stone. I recall my friend Fred Cisen dubbing the first "portable" computers... the Osborn and Kaypro CPM machines... as "Luggables"... quite appropriately so. I also note that Kyocera, with licenced varients to Epson, NEC, Radio Shack, Olivetti, and others produced a "slab computer" 'way back in the late 1980's (or was it the very early 1990's... I forget), that ran for many many hours off a few C (or was it D... I forget) batteries. This low power consumption, ultra long run time, "Book size" computer outperformed in some respects (run time, type-abliity of its keyboard) most of the small portable computers of TODAY. How many who read this remember the Radio Shack "Model 100"???