I bought one a few months back and I ended up selling it.
I was attracted to the form factor, and it turned out to be wonderful in that regard, I loved the tiny power adapter. I could just throw it in my bag and take it anywhere, great for college. the screen was better than I expected too
I uninstalled the original xandros OS and tried Lepord which ran way too slow, windows xp used too much resources, and I settled on ubuntu.
went everywhere with me, lots of functionality in a tiny form factor, who would have thought something that tiny could have all the necessary I/O ports when most ultraportable laptops costing $200+ cant fit them
sold it because the screen was just too small for my liking, while I could browse the web in a pinch it wasn't comfortable to do so. writing more than a page was torturous
The other reasons I decided I didnt like it were that I couldn't load much media on it causing me to shuffle through flashdrive when I wanted to watch a movie in between classes.
while I enjoyed how it weighed very little in my bag it felt very cheap to me, I was constantly worried that the plastic case would break in my bag with my books. seems like at least the bit around the screen could be metal
the biggest turnoff for me was the keyboard, I couldnt get anything done on it as I was always hitting too many keys. I wasnt a big fan of the throw on the keys, it wasnt satisfying to type on. (I have to admit my bias against all laptop keyboards here though so take this one with some salt)
overall if I wasnt a student and needed a laptop for casual use: checking CPF on the couch, looking up recipes in the kitchen, a traveling aid, portable movie viewing (with the use of USB flash sticks), or other "around the home" uses, I would grab one of these in an instant.
as a student it has less value