Barebones Notebook
Gsurface writes "The first barebones notebook makes its appearance. The barebone notebook features no display, no CPU, no RAM and no HDD, but only the case, with keyboard and touchpad."
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Where would one buy a display?
It makes a really great prop for my couch... I really needed to take those videos back to Blockbuster.
Black and grey are both shades of white.
I know I get most of the components anywhere, but where the hell do you get the LCD????
nt
If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
In two minutes? Are you kidding me?
Knightfall
Where, I wonder, would one buy individual parts for a notebook?
It's pretty easy to go to your local dealer and pick up an Athlon, mobo of your choice, some cheap RAM, hard drive, etc. I have to say that I've never seen notebook parts available a la carte like with regular computer paraphernalia.
Besides, even if you could get those things, I have a hunch it would be far more expensive than getting a brand-new notebook from Dell or Gateway. They buy their parts in bulk and can therefore pass the savings on to the consumer.
I'm totally in favour of self-building, don't get me wrong, but I wonder if the economics of the whole deal doesn't favour just buying a new notebook outright and spending the savings on some accessories.
Karma: Excellent Birds (mostly as a result of listening to Laurie Anderson)
Why back in my day, all you needed were some LED's.
And why use a hard drive when you have perfectly good cassette tapes laying around?
/. was too slow to save me this time. Next time it is portable all the way
... because 2 posts into the Slashdot thread, and the website is done-for?
I think it's their webserver that is running without a CPU.
etch-a-sketch
I couldn't read the article, but I've already got the hots on for this beauty!
How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
They should have installed the memory, HDD, ect. before posting the link on slashdot
Finally, something I don't WANT to make into a Beowulf cluster..
The server for their site must be running on one of these, because its already slashdotted.
Now all I need is a high resolution color printout of a desktop, a bag to match, and I can sit at the coffee shop pickin up chicks for a much lower price than buying an actual laptop :P
Slashdot - Sarcasm, Trolls, and Ego... All under one roof
Slashdot.. Land of nerds, trolls, and FlameBait..
No CPU, no screen, no HDD ... Are you sure they're not charging you $$$ for an empty cardboard box?
Would that mean i could whip up a small distro install and make my very first mp3/ogg/flac/whatever-the-hell-codec-here player for my car!?! sounds good to me.. cheap and efficient.
This useless space for sale, inquire at front desk.
A notebook that comes without the dreaded "Microsoft Tax" (unless they can come up with a pre-emptive "potential-use" licensing fee.)
But from what the little blurb said, this looks like an excellent way to avoid paying for Windows and all the other bundled software that people don't want or need. Though the cost of parts and installation may offset this just a bit.
The only reason I keep my Windows partition is so I can mount it like the bitch that it is.
already..?!
"The barebone notebook features no display, no CPU, no RAM and no HDD, but only the case, with keyboard and touchpad."
Because those items were turned to slag by the slashdotting!
For those of us who remember Cyberpunk 2020 and Shadowrun, it sounds like we're prepping ourselves for a cyberdeck here. Don't need no stinking LCD, just my wetwire neural headjack!!! Bring it on: I'm ready!!!
Apparently they are running the webserver on one of these things.
Tech tips: add a motherboard, processor, ram, ethernet and HDD. Might want to add some software and an OS also.
Eve Fairbanks says I drive a hybrid!LOL
... no CPU, no RAM, no HD....
Slashdotted even before a 'does it run linux' troll....
The site that speak of this notebook looks like its hosted in one of them, no disk, no cpu, no bandwidth, no network card, and no monitor to see that nobody can access it right now :)
Why in my day, we used to get up at 2:00 am, eat a plate of hot gravel, crawl to the office over broken glass, and when we got there, we'd have to pound on the computer with our foreheads in place of typing. Keyboard? Kids today have it easy.
...but how am I supposed to get any work done on a laptop without any RAM or a CPU? :)
Here's my picture of a real barebones notebook
Pretty neat, isn't it?
Will more laptops sold like this open a market for laptop parts?
Maybe this will cause laptops to be more similar to desktops, as parts are standard?
If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
Their site has been hosted on one!!!
;)
Already slashdotted
that's just beautiful, man.
Nubs rule!
-- @rjamestaylor on Ello
Nobody has asked the big question yet:
How many mouse buttons do you get with that, or do you add it/them, too?
(from my iBook, with USB 3button mouse plugged in!)
No CPU, no RAM, and no display. But on the plus side, your Windows installation opens fewer security holes than on other laptops.
When all you have is an axe, everything looks like a grindstone.
i was under the assumption that barebones meant a working system with the minimal number of parts. when it's missing a cpu and ram i guess i was wrong.
... or they could just use a LightBright for the LED display.
:)
*signs ad jingle*
LightBright! LightBright! Put out the candles and... LightBright!
Damn, I miss those things...
Tepp
I'm all for bare-bones, but I at least want all the bones!
The barebone notebook features no display, no CPU, no RAM and no HDD, but only the case, with keyboard and touchpad.
It sounds odd saying that missing things are features.
Trolling is a art,
.....The new Altair laptop also comes packaged with Basic by Microsoft, and is expected to be the boost MITS has been looking for all these years.
barebone notebook features no display, no CPU, no RAM and no HDD,
And the damn thing STILL runs Linux. Wow!
Oh. nevermind..
Operator, give me the number for 911!
how do we know this article really exists? If it was slashdotted before anyone could read it , maybe slashdot is making this sory up. How is this news if we dont really know its there?
Maybe they're using their barebones laptop as a web server. Probably not a good way to market it.
Obviously they're running their web server on one of these.
My guess would be that it is about the ECS DeskNote line of products, probably the A980. http://www.ecs.com.tw/products/a980.htm
The barebone notebook features no display, no CPU, no RAM and no HDD, but only the case, with keyboard and touchpad.
:)
Only on Slashdot would these be considered features.
In saying that I think it's a great idea! All my desktop machines are custom built, would be a shame to have to get a branded laptop now!
You wouldn't happen to know where to get a 9" TFT screen would you? I want to gut my old MAC SE and make it into a linux boxen using the mini-itx board, and a 9" TFT LCD screen. I've looked all over the web, and i can't find anything.
Someday, many agree, as speech input matures, the microphone will become more important than the keyboard.
So, my question is: What year do you think the microphone will surpass the keyboard in importance?
They're using one of these CPU-less notebooks to run their site, right?
...if I remember correctly, it was called a ZX81... :-)
Reminder: find a new sig
Har har har. I guess they are using one for their server! Oh my do I amuse myself.
What?!? This has already been posted 50+ times? Pardon me.
Try here.
They also have very small screens for your next port-linux-to-small-kitchen-appliance project.
One man's -1 Flamebait is another man's +5 Funny.
google cache for Xbit labs home page
nt
no webserver either.
1 barebones server - case, slightly fire damaged. Used to host www.exbitlabs.com.
Actually it's been possible for some time to get an Asus notebook similar to this, with just the case, motherboard, and LCD on it. I'm not sure Asus really wants you to be able to get them this way and they come in a "white box".
One of the guys at work got one of these, went to Intel's channel partner site, got a PIII mobile CPU for next to nothing, snagged a decent 2.5" HD from one of our retailers, and threw in some SODIMMs that we had in stock and he got a really nice notebook for hardly anything (this was a year or two ago).
He was even able to call up Asus and tell them the stickers wore off his notebook, and they sent him out some new ones for free, so you can't even tell it's not the real deal.
On the other side of things, I do believe from opening up quite a few notebooks for repairs that the vast majority of notebook components are somewhat standardized. The batteries tend to be the most varried components inside the notebooks. Consider that there are only a very few manufacturers of notebook computers that are outsourced by the major computer vendors, and that makes for some pretty standard stuff. It's even possible to get the "white box" version of most of Dell's notebooks direct from the company that manufactures them for Dell, last I checked anyways.
Duris MUD - The best pkill MUD. Ever.
http://forsite.com/
Think they have the $19.99 package? Some vhost with 100 sites per box. Ugly.
I wonder what the deal is. I've hated having to buy laptops as a whole system bought from a single source. I've came to just accept that I have to live with it...
Why, you ask, do I care so much? Is it just to be 'elite'? Hell no, it is because I *hate* dealing with any problems that crop up in the warranty period. In dealing with my desktops, a part breaks under warranty, I contact that particular company, send in that *one* part, and have a replacement back in short order. Some people say they are afraid of hardware manufacturers trying to blame other pieces of equipment to avoid servicing, but that has never happened to me. I send it in, they test and verify that it is broken, and they fix it or send a working part. Has always been smooth for me, thankfully.
With the whole systems approach, something under warranty breaks. I call and say 'this portion of the laptop is broken, I want to send in this part, or at least remove the hard drive so some idiot tech doesn't see Linux, freak out, and reformat with Windows'. They say 'Linux isn't supported, you must include the hard drive, it *will* be wiped and replaced with Windows so we can run our test software to verify the problem is fixed, and if we cannot do this we will not repair it'. I've been fighting for weeks to get warranty repair without losing data. The problem is easy to test, if you press the power button and the power light comes on, the problem is fixed, end of story. If the power light stays off even though AC is connected, it is still broken. The problem with it has *nothing* to do with the drive, and they don't need to run any software to figure out if they fixed it or not. Why should it be any of their business what I run, when it clearly didn't cause the problem? Guess I got spoiled when I would call this same company regarding a business laptop and had them bend over backwards to kiss my ass regarding the very same request about not shipping a hard drive.
Also, come a year and a half after purchase, say my memory has a problem. Well, the system is out of warranty. With my desktop, the memory happens to have a lifetime warranty. Having a system where everything is at least a year warranty, with some parts longer is much better than having the whole thing end after a year.
A memory manufacturer has never threatened to deny me service because of the software I run, as long as I don't overclock. A video card manufacturer has never said they can erase my drive contents if they want to run tests. Why should I have to deal with this treatment for laptops? Why is it that I can even build PDAs from parts, and to this day I cannot build a real laptop from parts?
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
I can't access the page cause idiots ./'ed it.
When TTS technology has near perfect recognition without need for training, is my guess.
slashdot!=valid HTML
Actually, I've wanted something real similar to this for a long time. What I want is a Mouse, Keyboard, and video (which this doesn't have) in a laptop footprint. If I had one of these I could stop buying expensive KVMs and just plug one of these up to a machine when I needed a direct console. Not only that, but I wouldn't lose 10U to a Monitor/Keyboard in every rack (Yes, you can get a rack mountable LCD/Keyboard tray but you still need a KVM, and they are *expensive*).
Free start-up business idea.....
Kind thoughts do not change the world
Or, if I wasn't a dumbass, that would be speech to text.
slashdot!=valid HTML
So it's a keyboard glued to a lunchbox? I'll make one and sell it to you for half of what they want.
-Valiss
Now you can have the most expensive consumer computing platform and completely do away with those pesky attributes that contribute to whatever affordability it had to begin with!
If they're smart, they'll not just sell the barebones notebook, but let the buyers "add-on" optional features like the display and hard drive. That way, they can customize their notebook however they like! Wheeee!
Of course, such a high degree of customization is gonna cost ya.
First Notebook Barebone Ever
;
Posted 2/28/03 at 10:00 am by Anton
ECS announced recently its DeskNote i-Buddie A980 mobile desktop PC, the first ever mobile barebone computer. It features no display, no CPU, no RAM and no HDD, but only the "case" with keyboard and touchpad. The indisputable trump of the novelty is that you are free to install the most high-end and cutting-edge hardware, or you may buy not really expensive components that are enough for your needs.
Here is the list of i-Buddie A980 technical peculiarities:
* Supports Socket 478 Pentium 4 / Celeron processors with 400/533MHz FSB with 3.06GHz clock-speed and above;
* SiS650 chipset with SiS962 I/O controller;
* 1 DIMM slot for up to 1GB of PC2100 or PC2700 DDR SDRAM memory.
* Integrated graphics core, ability to install NVIDIA GeForce4 Go420 mobile graphics card.
* 2-channel ATA-100/66/33 integrated controller;
* Includes an 8x DVD-ROM drive;
* Free bay for 2.5" HDD;
* 4 USB 2.0 ports;
* FireWire (IEEE1394) port
* IR port with transfer rate up to 115.2Kbit/s;
* 10/100Mbit/s Ethernet adapter and connector;
* Integrated 56K modem;
* 6-channel audio solution and built-in speakers;
* Size: 342mm (W) x 300mm (D) x 34mm(min)/50.5mm(max);
* Weight: 1.8Kg.
End-users have a lot of opportunities to expand and configure such computers, they even now can choose between 14" and 15" TFT panel, what should allow ECS' customers to get the most cost-effective solutions possible.
According to this French web-site, such barebones will be priced at $300. Not expensive, I believe, but remember that you will need to get a display, a microprocessor, a memory module and a hard disk drive to make it functional. It seems that the DeskNote i-Buddie A980 will hit the stores quite soon, as certain European local resellers of DeskNote computers already promote it and it seems that the only thing that stops them from starting the sales is the absence of appropriate LCD displays for such computers.
Last year ECS did not achieve its full-year shipment targets on the DeskNote line of products (see this news-story). Elitegroup Computer Systems decided to follow its usual strategy of offering the cheapest products possible and in order to achieve this it needs to buy as few expensive devices as possible. Since LCD panels seem to be the most highly-priced parts of DeskNote systems, the Chinese company decided to sell the DeskNote PCs without LCD panels in order to keep the inventory level of such units low. This seems to be the right idea in order to keep the lowest prices possible; however, I doubt it will help ECS to skyrocket the sales of its DeskNotes in Europe or the USA, because not a lot of customers want to build notebooks on their own. On the other hand, a lot of companies sell already functional DeskNote computers, which purchase seems to be more interesting.
Time will tell if ECS is able to boost its sales of portable desktop computers by selling display-less DeskNotes.
If something I said can be interpreted two ways, and one of the ways makes you sad or angry, I meant the other one.
... no CPU, no RAM, no HD....
:)
NO SERVICE! Obviously, their laptop reserves its right to not serve.
Slashdotted even before a 'does it run linux' troll....
Silence implies convinction...it runs linux.
But I'm sure you already Gnu that.
But you know, that could be a potential use -- a case w/ no lcd; slap in a notebook-type mobo & hd, then you got yourself a nice little network server, w/ no loud fan, and that can slip behind your desk or something. Or stack up 10 of them and you got a night stand / beowulf cluster!
"Orthodoxy is unconsciousness" - Orwell
...I was just trying to find something like this recently. I wanted something that would mostly stay put, run off AC, and use a real monitor...but that was also *quiet* and small enough to move around occasionally. Various small-form-factor PCs would fit the bill, but so would a laptop would a broken display, so I actually got as far as seeing if I could find one for sale. Now there's a third option.
Slashdot - News for Herds. Stuff that Splatters.
With this "barebones notebook", /.ers have yet another way to have a Linux laptop without paying the Micro$oft tax.
So how is it better than a cappuccino pc that has been out for years?
http://www.cappuccinopc.com/
==>Lazn
CPU: 1.8 GHz Mobil P-4 $445.00
RAM: PC133 128MB $37.97
HDD: 20GB $149.00
DISPLAY: 14.1 LCD Screen $749.00
TOTAL: (APPROX) $1380.00
/. effect)
On top of the cost of the "Barebones" system. (which I don't know thanks to the
A quick vist to a certain well known retailer sells a Toshiba Satellite for 999.97.
"I wasn't even supposed to be here today!"
-Dante Hicks
A completely secure mobile computing solution...
-- http://www.criticalassets.com
Oh crap, there is nothing to mod!!! Maybe I can use my dremel on the case.
He who secures nothing, has nothing to be insecure.
-C0nfutr0llus
I think that sums-up the awesome security reviews of the barebones PC. This logic can be applied to everying, such as and not limited to, refrigerated food, slashdot, Frito-Lay potato chips, internet service, computer software, patents, Hillary Rosen's face, and Bruce Peren's laptop...
whoa!
But I'm sure you already Gnu that.
I've got on my desk here an old Toshiba that someone sat on, broke the LCD all to hell. It was sitting around and I needed a linux server...yadda yadda...so I plug in an external LCD. Now it has a display, a nice big one, but the busted one is in the way all the time while I type and use the track pad (lid is open you see) and that busted LCD is just butt ugly besides.
Scene 2: I remove the busted LCD, sew the laptop back up, fire it up on the external monitor and then I notice something; this is groovy. Sure it needs an external monitor, but I just created a fairly cool portable desktop computer out of a piece of junk. Keyboard and track pad built in. And still easy to take else where I need it, like home (where I have another monitor I can use) or a presentation, and even has a nifty built in 2 hour UPS. And it's real quite.
So would I actually buy something like that? Maybe not right away...but if the price was right I might. I'm telling you, sitting here looking at it, it looks cooler than you might imagine.
=^..^= all your rodent are belong to us
Here's a direct link to the manufacturer's website:
http://www.ecs.com.tw/products/a980.htm
and here's a mirror for the ineviatable slashdotting:
http://www.meatspace.co.uk/ibuddie/
sig:- (wit >= sarcasm)
For most people it's not so much the electronic bits on a laptop that go out, but it's screens that get cracked, keys that start sticking, touchpads that get, well, touchy and on and on. If there was some sort of laptop spec that manufacturers built parts to fit inside some specific dimensions then when a key breaks or hinge gets loose you don't have to ship it back for an expensive repair. You can just go down to Fry's and pick up a newly updated shell.
This would also be great for just keeping a laptop system up-to-date. With the way motherboards and hard disks and cd drives have been shrinking now's the time when I hope we'll see home built laptops of the same breed as home built PC's.
OK, two problems for that Mac Classic Format mod:
1.) They don't make a 9" monitor...the closest you can get is 8.4".
2.) That 8.4" TFT screen is hella-expensive. Almost $800! Shriek!
However, once you get past those two hurdles, it could be a very interesting mod. Just don't do it to a working Classic Mac, please! Thanks.
Can be found here.
I can't help it - I'm a 19D.
GOod GOd, man!
:)
There I was, looking at one of those trick-pictures you posted; you know, the ones where you stare at it for about 10 minutes and make your eyes lose focus and the secret picture appears...AND THERE IT WAS! Hillary Ros#$@# I mean GOATSE!
I need a break... *twiddles thums and gets kit-kat bar*
But I'm sure you already Gnu that.
"Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]
Too much of reality is based off of ideas from sci-fi (which, frankly, cyberpunk usually falls into).
So, considering the fact that we'll likely have H-ICE and 'net fragging soon enough, we should prepare proper legislation now.
I think it should be legal to hunt down 'l33t h4x0rz' and shoot them, in the head, repeatedly, with a large calibre pistol.
That'll free system admins of liability for when H-ICE kills the h4x0rz.
You can do the "VectraNote" Notebook Configurator on here, and get it with no processor, Memory, or hard drive. www.actonlinestore.com
You mean a Linux box don't you? Please, look, there are many arguments about whether boxen or boxes (or boxii, etc) is the right plural for the word box (personally, I use "boxes", but it doesn't bother me the same way it seems to bother half of Slashdot when -en is used instead) but what's absolutely certain is that the singular is "box". Just box. Nothing on the end. Bee. Oh. Ecks. BOX.
No CPU, no RAM, no Motherboard, No Power supply,
no keyboard, no Display,no battery, no case. Price: $200
How about backing up your hard drive and then sending it in?
Tony
runs at 150F...
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
I got through!!!
Here is the list of i-Buddie A980 technical peculiarities:
Supports Socket 478 Pentium 4 / Celeron processors with 400/533MHz FSB with 3.06GHz clock-speed and above
SiS650 chipset with SiS962 I/O controller
1 DIMM slot for up to 1GB of PC2100 or PC2700 DDR SDRAM memory
Integrated graphics core, ability to install NVIDIA GeForce4 Go420 mobile graphics card
2-channel ATA-100/66/33 integrated controller
Includes an 8x DVD-ROM drive
Free bay for 2.5" HDD
4 USB 2.0 ports
FireWire (IEEE1394) port
IR port with transfer rate up to 115.2Kbit/s
10/100Mbit/s Ethernet adapter and connector
Integrated 56K modem
6-channel audio solution and built-in speakers
Size: 342mm (W) x 300mm (D) x 34mm(min)/50.5mm(max)
Weight: 1.8Kg
Here is another story (french): www.clubic.com/n/n8018.html
Elitegroup, aussi connu sous le nom de ECS, annonce la commercialisation d'un nouveau barebone baptisé Desknote i-Buddie A980. Ce nouveau barebone ressemble comme deux gouttes d'eau à un ordinateur portable auquel on aurait enlevé l'écran LCD. Compact, incorporant un clavier, ce nouveau barebone utilise un chipset SiS651 dédié aux processeurs Pentium 4. Le Barebone intègre 4 ports USB 2.0, 1 port FireWire, 1 port Ethernet 10/100 et 1 port infrarouge. La partie audio du barebone est prise en charge par un chip C-Media et supporte le son 5.1 tout en offrant un connecteur SPDIF. Le Barebone embarque une solution graphique NVIDIA GeForce 4 420Go avec 32Mo de mémoire vidéo.
Vendu $300 ce nouveau barebone pèse seulement 1,8Kg.
Or, rather than replace all the hardware in your Mac SE (if it's an SE 30), you could install NetBSD. That's right, a modern unix OS running on your piece of ancient Apple hardware. Neato!
You've been able to get "barebones" laptops off of ebay for a long time.
Maybe he's using two motherboards? If you've got two motherboards in one box, is it box or boxes? I say box. Box > all.
Here's the manufacturer's product page with exactly what you'd think it looks like. And, yes, it looks a bit odd. Thanks for the text!
HIV Crosses Species Barrier... into Muppets
Mead has been selling barebones notebooks FOREVER. You just have to provide an input device.
High-end Mead notebook: $3.00 USD
Run of the mill input device: $1.00 USD
xScruffx
Never. I type much faster then I can speak, and probably faster then I can think. Speaking also leaves a lot more room for error, altho that an opinion.
If I had a way to directly communicate my thoughts to the computer, however, that would be nice.
something is missing...
Only 'flamers' flame!
I've been dealing with a company here in Canada called Eurocom and they've been selling Barebone laptops for years now.
I'm not affiliated with them at all.. I just buy from them now and then.
------88-------- Sig? Sorry, I don't smoke.
(ages) or atleast 2-3 years. Basically if you are an Intel OEM you can build your laptops online. Shiped to you with no os and no other taxes.
Totally Bare bones System BLOWOUT!!!!
For only a nice even $1000.00 !!! You get the following Barebones Laptop:
No Display!
No RAM!
No Battery!
No Extra Battery!
No CPU!
No Keyboard!
No HDD!
(1) Laptop Carrying Case.
You get to pick all the compnents you want in your barebones system - and each can be added at an additional cost.
ACT NOW! While supplies last!!!
A display and the mobo is the hart of a laptop. Laptops are custom built around both. Hard to really do a Roll your own laptop when the chassis isn't standard because the chassis is married to the display panel and the mobo.
Sounds like a lamer idea to me. I too can't RTFA.
Slashdot, home of supporters of free software, free music, and free speech.Except for Moderators that disagree with you.
It's a good thing you caught that -- otherwise, the myriad anonymous cowards and "-1 by default" posters would crawl out of the woodwork and plague you about it until slashdot disabled posting on the article.
Slashdot's first reaction to VMware
(C) Kaki Sain, 2011. By reading this, you have illegally copied my property to your brain.
This product differs from a notebook in that it does not include an integrated battery. An optional external battery is available. (emphasis mine)
I don't think so...
This could be just what the doctor ordered for that in-car MP3 player, portable server, etc...
BTW, once upon a time I decided to setup a mail server. Not wanting to buy a machine and wanting to make some use of an old laptop with the display broken off, I just installed Linux over the com port, and away it went (at least until the HD started making noises that HDs aren't supposed to make).
ive had a dead POS sony vaio for 2 years.. screen is fine..so was the harddrive.. sadly there is no component market for laptop motherboards
"Your dorm room is tiny to begin with, and you are stuck with two more roommates with so much stuff that it's flowing out of their closets. You barely have room to walk around, let alone fit a desktop in there. However, you still need to type your papers and do online research.
This is where the ASUS D1 enters and saves you from flunking out of school. Its performance can handle all your assignments and then some without taking up more room.
Final exams are coming up, but your rowdy roommates wouldn't give you a second of peace and quiet. Simply bring your D1 portable desktop to the library and get away from the chaos. The best about the D1 is that it offers portable convenience without the steep price."
Uhm, this isn't that new. The A980 has been available for a while now.
http://www.desknote.net/a980.html
First Barebone? Haven't they seen http://www.hardwarezone.com/articles/articles.hwz? cid=14&aid=397
Comes with a LCD. No CPU, RAM, HD or Battery
Saw it for $699 with 8xDVD it's still gonna cost you the price of a name brand after processer, ram, and HD is considered.
Think of it as the Commodore-64 with a Pentium 4: low-cost, built into the keyboard, and no screen.
Alright, geez! Sorry I kept you up - you could have just told me in person, instead of posting to slashdot behind my back! By the way, spilled bong water in your laptop - sorry.
This actually makes a great Beowulf cluster machine: it's small, it's cheap, and it takes standard components. Just about the only thing that's extraneous is the keyboard, but that's kind of nice for maintenance.
Actually goldfish are part of the carp family if I'm not mistaken. http://www.fys.ku.dk/~esban/kees/Species/Goldfish/ goldfish.htm
Aren't most if not all laptops built with proprietary motherboards/parts. For example, a Compaq laptop might come with a pentium III but have a proprietary setup that saves weight/whatever and fits the laptops form factor?
Sure. Oh, and typing faster than you can think? Where does the typing come from? Probably faster than you can articulate the thought in your head, but thats not the same as thinking. Who says that you'd have to talk to the computer in a natural language?
Games Workshop Petition
Something tells me they'll still find a way to do it though.
slashdot!=valid HTML
I took one look at the video server sitting on the other table in my room, taking up all that space, and wished I could get something in a laptop type form factor that was only a keyboard/monitor/mouse.
It's not a laptop, but if you add a LCD panel, keyboard, and mouse to this, your footprint problems should be 90 percent solved.
Will I retire or break 10K?
We had to keep track with an abacus, and we LIKED it!
...would be kinda nice. I think this "barebones laptop" that you could assemble/have assembled to your specs is a fantastic idea, however an industry standard would be required for it to REALLY take off as it has for desktop PCs.
Desktop users are blessed with a standard form factor (ATX and variants) describing physical specs for motherboards, cases, power supplies, peripheral connectors and so on. Wouldn't it be tremendous if there was a widely recognised standard for laptop/notebooks? Being that the featured article is slashdotted, I cant say if that was the idea, but links posted in the comments included the "barebones" concept as offered by ECS, and I got the impression the components were ECS-specific...
Imagine if there was an "MPX" standard (Mobile...PC...X...whatever--just to pick a 3-letter designation as an example). You could buy a generic laptop caseand power supply and load it with an MPX mobo and your choice of keyboards, touchpads, trackballs, displays, etc. These could be obtained from most any source, form a multitude of manufacturers.
The MPX spec. would specify how these components interconnected--one could go so far as to include notebook variants of PCI or AGP (whereever PC Card devices couldn't fit the bill, such as video card upgrades--not sure but does Intel's new Mobile CPU/chipset architecture not touch on that?). Perhaps devices like keyboards and touchpads would use internal USB-based connections, and there would be a standard display connector and sizes (to correspond with a selection of standard laptop/notebook case sizes).
Mmmmmm... MPX would be nirvana, and as prices came down it couls supplant ATX and it's variants. Well, I suppose not TOTAL nirvana if having Apple iBook looks is really important to you. It wouldn't be UGLY, but an MPX form-factor laptop made from a mix of Taiwanese parts might very well be as sexy as the beige box in Dilbert's cubicle. HOWEVER, there is a big market out there for boring-but-practical, and I'm sure the uber-geek case-modders and companies like VooDoo would find ways to make cool cases within the constraints of a standard like "MPX"...
If I'm ignorant of something like this already in existence, please share info!
what's the price on this bad boy?
these have been sold for years on ebay, they go by the name of "laptop, untested" :P
Software Freedom Day!.
what about the mini-itx[Mini-Itx.org] My question is is when will they make the GFX card swappable? I would swap out that POS Card with a nice ATI Radeon 9700 :)
Life is like a jar of jalapeños, what you do today may burn your ass tomorrow.
This sounds pretty much perfect for what I have been wanting to do for so long now.
:)
I have long wanted a laptop, but don't neccisarily care for the screens out there, I don't like the weight, and I don't like people beeing able to see over my shoulder.
I've seen more and more LCD glasses being produced by companies for the whole "wearables" trend and while I like the glasses, the rest of the wearables concept still needs alot of work. If I could find a compatible set of glasses that could plug into the VGA out port on one of these "barebones" laptops that would be great for it. I couldn't get to the site so I assume it doesnt come with a mobo either? The post was kindy vague on that (most barebones PC's come with a mobo but none of the other stuffs). Hmmm, and I know you can get mobile CPU's on pricewatch rather easily.
This is quite interesting. Now if only the site would come back
"The saddest words of mice and men, are not those which were, but should have been."
I've been able to get barebones notebooks for a long time (I'm a reseller). How is this news?
... and I just received my Slashdot digest moments ago ...
What's a poor geek to do?
"A generation which ignores history has no past and no future." -- Robert Heinlein
>> When TTS technology has near perfect recognition without need for training, is my guess.
I needed no training to recognize how to operate TITS...........oh no "I", never mind
I don't think this is for the do-it-yourselfer. (although the idea of making your own laptop is really cool)
I say that because, where are you going to find a motherboard for that box?
While CPUs, graphics cards, HDDs, LCDs, etc for laptops are very common, it is impossible to find an OFF THE SHELF laptop mobo!
I am an EE lead for laptops and tablets, and for every product we make, we have to build a custom motherboard that physically fits, and meets the electrical requirements of the portable we are building. And in portable develpoment, this is the longest line on the GANTT chart!
I think, unless your an OEM who will resell these laptops in large numbers, it will be EXTREMELY difficult and costly to "spin" youself a motherboard that is set up for what you want.
This senario isn't like your typical ATX while box, you can't just go out and pick up laptop motherboards for any old chassis.
Portability vs. Performance
See, if your willing to go for the "lighter notebooks" you gotta give up on some of the now-a-days common "features", like RAM, CPU, or an LCD.
As this is laptop is short on features, I expect it to be really really light weight!!
I sure hope you queers like looking at that shit.
That is just fucking disgusting.
the site (http://www.ecs.com.tw/products/a980.htm ) there says that you can use northwood P4 cores (socket 478) AND socket 423 Williamettes... what the hell? last time i checked, they had different numbers of pins on them, and you had to buy a new mobo if you got suckered into getting a williamette, and still want to upgrade this would still be a neat LAN party rig... usb mouse and keyboard, get a decently big CRT or LCD screen... you'd have a really neat setup... no lighted cases or anything though
www.necroticobsession.com
about that description on the product page is the *EXTERNAL* battery?!
Once you find a working lcd display, just head over to your local hardware store and buy some hinges to attach the lcd to the barebone laptop.
This would be the perfect laptop for the blind.
Might be something for my barebones boss, he also comes without brain, memory and persistent storage of any significant knowledge.
I still got my abacus and when that didn't work, there were always the quongdong seeds (a bit like puckered wooden marbles). and when I was really good, we got pencil and paper and a log tables book. But I was always foiled by those when I added 2 and 3 and got 6. I wouldn't mind one of those shells though. I want a burglar decoy. ie get a 486 laptop, fairly slimline, no cd player or floppy drive maybe, and use the kensington lock. Hopefully any burglar will waste his time on that and miss anything I really care about.
-- it must be true, it's on the internet.
Unused surplus Wyse WY520A amber screen terminal and keyboard for $90 shipped.
Well, I have a Compaq Presario 1200-X111 laptop sitting here that won't turn on. I took it to the local "Compaq Authorized Repair Center" who charged me a hundred bucks to discover that the motherboard has "a problem." (I'm still not convinced it's not just the power switch, but how do you unsolder that little bugger from the board?)
I checked laptopparts and they want $695 for a new motherboard, but I can get the same part from Compaq's parts store for just $500. The big question though, is why would I spend that kind of money when I can almost replace the laptop for that?
So, there it sits in little pieces. Anyone know where to find the pinouts for the ribbon cables on the LCD? I could always wire in a standard monitor connection and have a cool second monitor to hang on my wall!
Crocuta
but not waste space on a full sized keyboard/monitor/mouse.
Then use a Pocket PC system. There's a reason to have a full-size screen; otherwise, either you have to squint all the time or you have to scroll all the time. There's a reason to have a full-size keyboard; otherwise, your fingers get cramped. (If your big concern is the two blocks of keys to the right of the main keyboard, get a Happy Hacking keyboard.)
The system can go under the desk, the KVM components can't. :)
Then just use the mini-PC as your KVM component using X11 or VNC, and connect it to your bigger iron via 100BASE-T Ethernet. You won't need to upgrade it unless you want to, say, watch a movie or do something else that involves huge amounts of data transfer from the CPU to the screen.
Will I retire or break 10K?
If it could be set to run wiout LCD (i'd assume it has composite or s-video) then you could have a real winner for pseudo-embedded applications.
True, the Via Eden's rule that niche right now, but one of these would be a real winner with everything you need embedded in the physical box space. Also, it uses one power connector that makes hacking a power supply for your app much easier. See car Mp3 players for how much work people do to get normal hardware to work without a wall socket or $500.
I'm thinking particularlly about, say an ER-1 robot. You need more horsepower than a Eden can give you, and you need it to be reletively enclosed and sealed with no parts sticking out--attached keyboard and mouse is good but the monitor is a liability in those applications, and standard SBCs are way too expensive. They make single slot P3's about the size of a GeforceFX, but they cost tripple what this ECS or the Via Eden's cost. (they're worth it, just not to me)
I've got an 800x600 touchscreen and before too long I'd plugged a mouse into it. There are a few inherent problems with it :
Applications are made for a WIMP paradigm
When you are trying to navigate with your finger around your desktop it obscures the image underneath, user interfaces assume you can see it all and that your hot spot is on one pixel. Double clicking becomes challenging and clicking with anything but the left button becomes annoyingly over complicated.
Of course, a bit of hacking could probably overcome such restrictions. I did a web site targetted at a vendor's touch screen which proved usable (apart from them moaning "the buttons are too big" when they tested it via mouse).
The next downside is the gorilla's forearm syndrome. Repeatedly pushing the screen becomes tiring on the forearm. If the screen is in front of you then you are holding your arm off the desk which involves more of the shoulder too. Putting the screen horizontal helps but then it's harder to read.
As input devices mouses are pretty hard to beat. Especially in non-windows environments where cut & paste comes as a standard feature rather than a proprietry mouse extension.
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
quit When the quit statement is read, the bc processor
is terminated, regardless of where the quit state-
ment is found. For example, "if (0 == 1) quit"
will cause bc to terminate.
-- seen in the manpage for "bc". Note the "if" statement's logic
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