I find netbooks to be a lot more logical than tablets, given the fact that they're not tied down to some mobile operating system or stripped of the proper I/O that comes with a PC. For that reason they get to be in my book of electronics under the category of "full-fledged computers," unlike tablets, phablets, smartphones, smartwatches, et cetera.
I owned two separate netbooks that carried me through some tough times over the past year, actually. Though, the majority of that time was spent with one netbook – a Toshiba – that was my favourite little thing despite having a broken hinge and a tiny keyboard. I typed so fast on that thing, too. Even maxed out the RAM capacity and put an Intel Cherryville SSD inside it so it could run Windows 7 okay!
Eventually, I got a full-fledged laptop that had a big edge on that netbook. My Sony VAIO, this thing here, wasn't limited to the i686 (32-bit) instruction set, it came with 6GiB of RAM and could be upped to 8 (instead of shipping with 1GiB and going up to 2), it had a 16:9 768p screen over the netbook's tiny 1024x600 resolution, had Intel's VT-x technology that enables 64-bit virtualization, and also came with 4 native USB ports and a Blu-ray drive. So, I dropped the netbook in favour.
During some of that time in between Iunet (the netbook) and Waset (the VAIO), I had another second netbook my cousin loaned to me that I dubbed "Iunet II." It was very similar to Iunet I, except it was an Acer instead of a Toshiba, and eventually... I slapped XP on it and gave it back so my cousin could loan it to her sister out-of-state. It was fun while it lasted I guess – I just toyed around with different Linux and Windows installs on it to see what it could handle.