ASUS Defies Convention with the Eee PC™ 1215N Multimedia Netbook by effectively Integrating the Intel® Atom™ D525 CPU (Dual Core Atom) with Next Generation NVIDIA® ION™ Discrete Graphics to Deliver Unprecedented Performance.
The 1215N is capable of smooth, crystal-clear playback of high definition videos in 1080p on its 1366 x 768 HD widescreen display with 16:9 display ratio.
Hardware decoders embedded within the 1215N perfectly decode H.264, VC1 and MPEG2 file formats while the HDMI-output port enables Full HD 1080p playback on large screen displays.
The 1215N also features a camera cover over the webcam’s lens to give users added privacy.
The Eee PC™ 1215N comes packed with features designed to deliver an efficient computing experience to supplement its multimedia prowess.
USB 3.0 will let users transfer files at up to 4.8GB per second, almost 10x that of USB 2.0; while Bluetooth 3.0 lets users sync up with a myriad of digital devices at speeds that are 8x faster than that of Bluetooth 2.1.
More here at ASUS Facebook

No new on price and availability yet.


The 1215N is capable of smooth, crystal-clear playback of high definition videos in 1080p on its 1366 x 768 HD widescreen display with 16:9 display ratio.
Hardware decoders embedded within the 1215N perfectly decode H.264, VC1 and MPEG2 file formats while the HDMI-output port enables Full HD 1080p playback on large screen displays.
The 1215N also features a camera cover over the webcam’s lens to give users added privacy.
The Eee PC™ 1215N comes packed with features designed to deliver an efficient computing experience to supplement its multimedia prowess.
USB 3.0 will let users transfer files at up to 4.8GB per second, almost 10x that of USB 2.0; while Bluetooth 3.0 lets users sync up with a myriad of digital devices at speeds that are 8x faster than that of Bluetooth 2.1.
More here at ASUS Facebook

No new on price and availability yet.









It started in April 2009 with the announcement and Broadcom presented its 3.0 +HS version back in February 2010. Mobile devices were the first to take advantage of it, and then notebooks.