The ever-growing audience that is embracing the netbook, or mini-notebook, computer is all agog about its potential, its price, its portability and its personality.

For many, the netbook is a step up from the smart phone or the P.D.A., and that’s fine. For many others, for whom the netbook is an acknowledged step down from a full-functioned laptop computer, there’s a major element missing.
The optical disc drive.
Besides playing DVDs and CDs — nonessential uses, one might argue — the optical drive’s main functions are to load programs and applications that come embedded on those shiny round program discs, and contain gobs of data, data that would be difficult and time-consuming and, in some cases, impossible to install in any other way.
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