IrisEco

The ecEco is a entry-level all-in-one PC made by ecSoft in 2009. It originally came with ecOS NEXT pre-installed, because that version of ecOS also supported the Intel Celeron Tualatin, and then when ecOS Eco Edition was released, it was pre-installed on 2010 units. The 2010 units were faster because of ecOS EE's peformance tweaks. With ecOS NEXT or X, it took 1 minute to boot up, with Eco Edition, it took 19 seconds or less. It had a 50 GB hard drive, which is fast with Eco Edition at 7200 RPM. The computer came with enough RAM to run 5 programs at one - ecOffice, ecBrowser (later known as PIXAL Web Browser), Task Manager, Media Player, and Paint. Reviews of the product from 2019 said it "performed better than a HP all-in-one with AMD A4". It's one of ecSoft's flagship all-in-ones that caused a shaky start because of what you will see below.

The ecEco includes a FHD 1080p 23" (viewable) display, which can be slightly tilted up or down. It can also the used as a monitor, because it has a HDMI mode button on the back and 1 HDMI port. It included a entry-level ATI Radeon, which worked great for some games.

History
In 2009, ecSoft revealed the ecEco, named after ecOS Eco Edition. The original model has a case made of poly-carbonate, a Intel Celeron and 50 or 160GB hard drive. It received criticism for using a outdated Intel processor, which ecSoft fixed 2 years later. It also received criticism for not meeting the requirements for the latest versions of Windows, and being slow on Windows. This meant the 2009 model was a huge failure, causing ecSoft to nickname it "the stupid" starting in 2011. In 2010, ecSoft made a version of the ecEco that can run Windows 7 properly, with a Core 2 Duo, 160GB HDD, and 1GB of DDR3 memory. Said version was made 1 week after the original model was released, and ecSoft said the version could stop the criticism the Celeron version had. In January 2011, the 2009 model ecEco was discontinued. The day Intel released the Sandy Bridge chips, the 2010 version was discontinued.

In 2011, a new version was released with a Sandy Bridge Core i3, and a NVIDIA GeForce GT 420, and with the option of integrated graphics. It also came with Windows 7 preinstalled. ecSoft claimed it to be "a all-in-one to play simple games". An Intel Pentium version was also available. The price was then lowered down for the i3 model to just $399 the same year for ecSoft to target it to budget-minded customers, while the Pentium version costed $20 less than the i3 version with the price lowered down. Positive reviews on the 2011 units skyrocketed saying it was a huge improvement from the 2009 model. It was a huge success compared to the 2009 model which ecSoft nicknamed "the stupid".

In 2013, a version with a GT 710 was released.

In 2014, a new version was released with a SSD with higher sizes and a faster memory type named DDR4, and with Windows 8.1 or 7. The new version helped ecSoft capture 30% market share in early 2015.

In 2016, a overhaul to the design was unveiled with the "ecEco" text on the front changed to the ecSoft symbol, a switch designed to cover the camera similar to what HP did, a GT 1030 with GDDR5 memory, and even had a HD webcam. In 2017 it had a AMD processor for the first time, which is a AMD Ryzen 3.

In 2019, ecSoft tested ecOS '19 on a black color ecEco with a Core i3 with integrated graphics to see how smooth the OS runs on it.

In May 2020, ecSoft announced if they would change the name of the product to "ecAIO", but it was later cancelled and still referred to "ecEco", so ecSoft made the ecAIO, an ecEco alternative.