During a round-table discussion yesterday with Neo executives and Intel representatives, I asked why it took a while for the local laptop manufacturer to bring out their big guns.
The answer was pretty simple and straight-forward — they basically want to position their new Core i3 and Core i5 notebooks as among the most affordable in the local market.

So far, they did the first step to bring a Core i3 notebook in the sub-30k price point.
Neo Basic B4103
Intel Core i3 330M (2.13 GHz), supports Hyper-Threading
14.1″ display screen @ 1366×768 pixels
2GB DDR3 RAM
Integrated Intel HD
320GB HDD
DVD+RW Supermulti Optical Drive
6-cell Li-Ion @ 4400mAh
It’s pretty basic really, but the highlight here is the Core i3 processor running at 2.13GHz with 2 cores and 4 threads. And the price is just one peso shy of thirty grand — Php29,999. Since people are asking for OS option, there’s no pre-installed OS here (just FreeDOS) so it’s up to the buyer if they want Windows 7 with it.
And they’ve got a Core i5 as well (NEO Basic B4105) that’s got a Core i5 CPU for Php35,999 (see here).


Its like you read my mind! You appear to know so much about this, like you wrote the book in it or something. I think that you could do with a few pics to drive the message home a little bit, but other than that, this is wonderful blog. An excellent read. I will definitely be back.