HomePod Brings Music from iTunes to the Living Room
sammy.lost-angel.com writes "News.com has a story about HomePod, a device by Gloolabs that streams music wirelessly from your Mac to your living room. It's based on a Java application. The device is not very pretty, but it is priced right at $199." Not for nothing, but you can buy a used clamshell iBook for just a little bit more, and use that (along with something like iCommune, or just loading the MP3s to your library ia file sharing) ... but these guys are right, this market is going to take off, sooner or later.
It will read iTunes playlists. The server (open source, written in Perl) can be run on OS X, or on a Windows or *nix machine. No built-in wireless or amplifier, but it's the slickest and smallest component in my stereo setup now, at the cost of running an ethernet cable into the living room.
For me, the big advantage of the SliMP3 is the ability to interact with the large vacuum fluorescent display via a remote control from anywhere in the room. It would be less fun having to get up to read an LCD display (which looks tiny on the HomePod), or having to go to the computer to build a new playlist.
According to Low End Mac's iBook Deals page, the original 300MHz iBook, with only 32 MB of RAM, a 3GB hard drive, and CD-ROM drive (i.e. the original stock configuration) is selling for $678 from used computer stores.
Pricewatch shows one 366MHz model for $595 (and it even has a whopping 64MB of RAM, and a 6GB HD.)
The cheapest one that sold in the past few weeks on eBay was a 300Mhz/64MB RAM/6GB HD model for $410.
Now, I'm not one to nit-pick, but "a little bit more" should be less than twice as much. Heck, even 50% more isn't "a little bit" anymore. If I could get an old iBook for about $300, I'd have one.
Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com."
The purpose of that site was not known.
The CD slot's still in the front: