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Steve Ballmer's $100 PC, Sans Windows

Martin_Flory writes "SolarPC has announced the $100 personal computer. Steve Ballmer's idea for reducing piracy was great after all, since this computer runs on Linux (DSL Distro). 'The design and construction of the SolarLite is consistent with the goal of an environmentally friendly computer. It uses a lightweight, recyclable, aluminum case that has a 20-year warranty. Its VIA chipset based "long-life" motherboard is a "green" lead free product. Like all SolarPC computers, the SolarLite operates on 12 volt DC power and can be run from a solar panel, car battery, or human powered (with a bicycle-based generator). The cool and quiet SolarLite uses approximately 10 watts of energy, just a fraction of what a standard PC consumes.' Sounds amazing right? This could change education all around the globe... a new Information Era is coming, and everyone is invited." The site claims they'll be available next month (minimum order 100,000 units), and promises a demo at SCALE 2005.

409 comments

  1. 10Watts of slave power by Hanzie · · Score: 4, Funny
    ... or human powered (with a bicycle-based generator)


    I have visions of slaves in third world countries on generator bicycles, all outside pedaling away, while the local bigwig surfs porn


    --
    ********* sig: If you don't like the law, get filthy stinking rich, and buy a better one.
    1. Re:10Watts of slave power by FLAGGR · · Score: 5, Funny

      I have visions of linux geeks loosing lots of weight, because they overclocked their SolarPC and it needs more juice.

    2. Re:10Watts of slave power by Gherald · · Score: 5, Funny

      > I have visions of slaves in third world countries on generator bicycles, all outside pedaling away, while the local bigwig surfs porn

      Exactly how would this be more apealing than just fucking the slaves?

    3. Re:10Watts of slave power by fourtwo · · Score: 2, Funny
      No slaves needed with the new Wanking-based generator.

      Damn, that is a seriously viable idea. I CALL PATENT!

    4. Re:10Watts of slave power by pyrros · · Score: 5, Informative

      Africa is not a country, it is a continent.

    5. Re:10Watts of slave power by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Funny

      Depending on how appealing they are, you might need one before the other.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:10Watts of slave power by kesler · · Score: 1, Funny

      The girls in the pron would have all their teeth.
      Not to mention there could be a farm animal.

    7. Re:10Watts of slave power by kfg · · Score: 1

      And what makes you think this isn't simply the functional equivelent of the way things are now?

      A slave hauling coal to the generator, or a slave pedaling a bicycle, it's all pretty much one to the slave, except, if he's at least fed decently (so as to keep up the power up) he'll be healthier on the bicycle.

      Come to think of it, where do you think your power comes from?

      KFG

    8. Re:10Watts of slave power by Zorilla · · Score: 2, Funny

      The downside is having less time available to them to keep up on their spelling skills.

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    9. Re:10Watts of slave power by Zorilla · · Score: 1

      I'd better get started on my Porn-for-Food program right away!

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    10. Re:10Watts of slave power by Tongo · · Score: 1

      My power comes from hydroelectric dams...

      :P

    11. Re:10Watts of slave power by mooncaine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The post that informs rubes and maroons that Africa is a continent should not be modded down to flamebait. It is informative -- sad, but true, in this context.

    12. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope that was a (bad attempt at a) troll. Otherwise you really should remove yourself from the gene pool.

    13. Re:10Watts of slave power by 0racle · · Score: 5, Funny

      I envision less Gentoo users.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    14. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Haha I always loved that...

      Grammar doesn't matter because the absolute majority of americans cannot put 2 sentences together...

      Africa is now a country, because most americans think it is a country

      No wonder "the majority of americans" keep bitching and complaining about how hard it is to get a job... go get yourself an education and it will be a lot easier...

    15. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same thing goes for "America"

    16. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say Americans as if America is a country.

      Are you making fun of mexicans and canadians also?

    17. Re:10Watts of slave power by samekt · · Score: 5, Funny

      Not to mention there could be a farm animal.

      Where? On the porn site or pedaling the bicycle?

    18. Re:10Watts of slave power by kfg · · Score: 1

      Which built and tend themselves.

      (Hi, I was waiting for you to show up ;-) )

      KFG

    19. Re:10Watts of slave power by Yert · · Score: 1

      I don't think many slaves are sent to get degrees in civil engineering these days...

      --
      Truck driver, plumber, Linux systems engineer.
    20. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Same thing goes for "America"

      You mean the continent thing, or the third world thing ?

      (with Dubbya managing the economy, you never know)

    21. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only on Slashdot this can me moderated Informative. Or perhaps in the whole U.S. ?

    22. Re:10Watts of slave power by dabigpaybackski · · Score: 1
      Exactly how would this be more apealing than just fucking the slaves?

      Damn, that's exactly what the local bigwig said.

      --
      "OH SHIT, THERE'S A HORSE IN THE HOSPITAL!"
    23. Re:10Watts of slave power by kfg · · Score: 1

      No, but servants are.

      KFG

    24. Re:10Watts of slave power by AndyL · · Score: 1

      My power comes from a trash incinerator.

      I've never looked into it, but I'm relatively sure the local garbage men aren't slaves.

    25. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Where? On the porn site or pedaling the bicycle?

      Yes.

    26. Re:10Watts of slave power by Erik+Hollensbe · · Score: 1

      Seriously, where do you get off?

      Those guys are paid pretty well last I checked, I wouldn't turn down that job if I was qualified for it.

    27. Re:10Watts of slave power by 1010011010 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Welcome to America, Land of the Free (Void where prohibited. Some restrictions apply, see DMCA/USAPA.)

      Interestingly, the French government has more power over French citizens than the U.S. Federal Government has over American citizens. The Patriot Act hasn't changed that.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    28. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the Wikipedia link really necessary?

    29. Re:10Watts of slave power by edittard · · Score: 0

      It's 10 watts of energy, didn't you read TFA?

      --
      At the bottom of the /. main page it says 'Yesterday's News'. Well they got that right.
    30. Re:10Watts of slave power by kfg · · Score: 1

      However, while you are surfing porn you are able to do so because you are paying someone to haul trash for you.

      You could pay them to ride a bicycle instead. It really makes no difference. Someone is in your service so you don't have to pedal the bicycle or haul and stoke the trash yourself, and there's no real difference between that person and a "house girl" who you might pay to wash your floors for you and call your "servant."

      Whether the person is visible pedaling in your residence or invisible in some remote facitlity shoveling trash doesn't actually change things.

      And if you are a rich person surfing porn you don't even have to perform any service in return if you don't want to. Whether that takes place in a third world country or not also doesn't change things.

      You do not "take care of yourself." Some is laboring in your behalf, right now.

      KFG

    31. Re:10Watts of slave power by kfg · · Score: 0

      Those guys are paid . . .

      Bingo!

      (By the way, I'm not sure you'd accept the job of hauling wet concrete. It doesn't pay very well and is pretty high risk. People actually die so other people can surf porn. Civil enginners aren't the people who build and maintain hydroelectric facilities).

      KFG

    32. Re:10Watts of slave power by i+wanted+another+nam · · Score: 1

      usually in my computer chair, right before i pass out for the night

      --
      The image is a dream, the beauty is real. Can you see the difference?
    33. Re:10Watts of slave power by AndyL · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "You could pay them to ride a bicycle instead. It really makes no difference. "
      It makes a major difference. If a person is riding a bike to power my computer he is working for me and me alone. This is not a fair or even economic model because I would need huge teams of people on bikes to power my house. To keep a single person in luxury a large number of people would be needed. Because of this imbalance, only a small number of privileged people would have electricity even though a large number of people worked for that electricity.

      Consider the local incinerator. They provide power for this entire region. The number of people who can power their entire homes far exceeds the number of people actually required to create that power. This is a far better model because large numbers of people get electricity including those who produced it.

      Now, I suppose the next step in your little philosophy is to argue that I could be personally down there shoveling trash into the burner. And I certainly could. But where would I get my food? I don't have the time or stamina for a full time job at the power plant and a full time job on the farm. In addition I'd also need to start working at the Water Works, the oil company, and the waste water treatment plant, and at some point I'd need to learn carpentry so I could build a house.
      In addition to those necessities, I'd probably want to get part-time jobs at the Phone Company, The Cable company, The Local Newspaper, the local Dr Pepper bottling plant, etc ,etc. I can tell you that if I followed your philosophy I'd have an extremely busy life.

      I like our current system better than both the slave system where people hire large numbers of people for their own personal use, or your system where everyone does everything themselves. Namely, individual services are provided by a relatively small number of people and offered to a large number of people. This allows everyone to enjoy the benefit of services that they could not personally provide. With the introduction of currency we can keep the whole system at least roughly fair.

      Now don't get me wrong, I'll be the first to admit that our current Capitalist system is not perfect and it has many problems, but it is a major step up from rich people hiring large sets of slaves and everyone else being screwed.

    34. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Power to drag me off on a whim and hold me indefinitely without a hearing is too much. I don't give a fuck what the French have as long as that's the case.

    35. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the continent thing obviously.

    36. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the patriot act would only allow that to happen to non-US citizens. Though, during wartime, you can be held as an enemy combatant. See Ex parte Quirin.
      (though, IANAL)

    37. Re:10Watts of slave power by eofpi · · Score: 1

      Gentoo can actually use binary packages. You just have to find a 3rd-party source for most of them.

      One hot machine (something like a pentium 4 or athlon64/opteron) could provide optimized binary packages for an army of these little boxen though.

      --
      Y'know, you blow up one sun and suddenly everyone expects you to walk on water.
    38. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "watt" is a unit measuring power not energy.

    39. Re:10Watts of slave power by mikey13 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I envision fewer Gentoo users.

    40. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I cant understand how some people can be reading posts on /. and still be thinking as if they are living in the 17th centrury.

    41. Re:10Watts of slave power by wizrd_nml · · Score: 2, Insightful
      This is not a fair or even economic model because I would need huge teams of people on bikes to power my house. To keep a single person in luxury a large number of people would be needed. Because of this imbalance, only a small number of privileged people would have electricity even though a large number of people worked for that electricity.

      I remember the day when that exact same argument was used by the large number of people working to make the electricity when their jobs were made redundant thanks to automation.

      Hey wait a second, isn't that same argument STILL used by people today?

      It's not a slave system if you're paying them and if they have the option of going somewhere else if they get a better offer.

    42. Re:10Watts of slave power by Drawsalot · · Score: 1

      These references to Americans as being uneducated and incapable of correct speech are beginning to bug me. What makes you so damned superior? I see nothing in your post that would indicate it.

    43. Re:10Watts of slave power by Moderatbastard · · Score: 2, Funny

      Given:
      that the article does indeed say "10 watts of energy",
      that parent article referred to the aforementioned FA, and
      that Edittard has a habit of taunting the idiots^H^H editors, I must conclude:
      1) whoosh! and
      2) you're new here.

      --
      1/3 of jokes get modded OT. If you get the joke, mod 1 in 3 insightful/interesting/underrated to restore karma balance.
    44. Re:10Watts of slave power by alien+at+large · · Score: 1

      I envision this gentoo user having a dozen of these things all over the house (and neighbourhood) doing the distcc dance. If it moves, compile it. Yay!

    45. Re:10Watts of slave power by AndyL · · Score: 1

      I don't think I said what you think I said. Or if I did, then I don't think you said what you think you said, because your comment doesn't seem to follow mine.

      I said that a large number of people working to keep a single person electrified is unfair. When I said "large" I meant only relative to the people being provided with power. In that example "large" could have meant "three".

      The fine details as to how many employees is "fair" was outside the scope of my post, so long as it was less than the number of ultimate customers.

      In the real world, few industries have more employees than customers. Certainly not a common service like the electrical company.

    46. Re:10Watts of slave power by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

      Finally, a real use for those hampster wheels and hampsters....

    47. Re:10Watts of slave power by mooncaine · · Score: 1

      About as irrelevant as your rude assumption that you can speak for all Americans, or anyone but your self. Please don't bother us with your prejudice, hostility, and flamebait.

    48. Re:10Watts of slave power by iainl · · Score: 1

      No, I think its fair to say that there will be a lot less of any Gentoo user running this machine...

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    49. Re:10Watts of slave power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Soviet Russia Human powered PC runs you...

    50. Re:10Watts of slave power by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1

      Haven't you heard? We've been at "war" since 9/11/2001. It will be wartime in America for the forseeable future -- at least, until we've locked up all the undesireables and made the world safe for Haliburton.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
  2. Minimum 100,000? by TiMac · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I assume that's for reseller or distributor ordering...I don't know of many places that ever order computers 100,000 at a time....

    --

    1. Re:Minimum 100,000? by deft · · Score: 4, Informative

      Thi is the level that many retailers buy at. You're looking at Walmart, Target, Circuit City, Best Buy, etc., numbers.

      --

      There's nothing Intelligent about Intelligent Design.
    2. Re:Minimum 100,000? by Xzzy · · Score: 1

      I hope so. This thing is gonna be wonderfully hackable.

      With that form factor and price point, not to mention power requirements, it's begging for it.

      Can't wait to get my hands on one.. or several.

    3. Re:Minimum 100,000? by TheBoostedBrain · · Score: 2, Funny

      Are you kidding? Imagine a green beowolf cluster of these...

      --
      -- When did Ignorance Become a Point of View?
    4. Re:Minimum 100,000? by Cougem · · Score: 1

      Yes, plenty of places do. Big computer stores will place orders for that amount if they find it worth while. PC World for example, here in the UK, will prefer to make a bulk order and re-distribute.

    5. Re:Minimum 100,000? by TiMac · · Score: 1

      Right. They would be resellers. I meant *other* types of places.

      --

    6. Re:Minimum 100,000? by TiMac · · Score: 1

      Yup. As I said....resellers/distributors would....but it's a shame that the company doesn't want to sell to any small-time people directly. The question is whether the reseller/distributor will hike up the price and kill the point of the $100 price point.

      --

    7. Re:Minimum 100,000? by earthforce_1 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, Imagine a beowulf cluster of....

      3rd world supercomputer?

      --
      My rights don't need management.
    8. Re:Minimum 100,000? by ArbitraryConstant · · Score: 1

      If they've going to be selling these things to India and China, that'll be a drop in the bucket.

      --
      I rarely criticize things I don't care about.
    9. Re:Minimum 100,000? by stickystyle · · Score: 1

      I would think that this high of a min quantity is because there profit margins are so small, that at 100,000 is when it starts to make them some $$.

      --
      Pluralitas non est ponenda sine neccesitate
    10. Re:Minimum 100,000? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The shame about that, is that my little PC company can't buy 100,000 at a time. Otherwise, I'd LOVE to sell these.

    11. Re:Minimum 100,000? by Spetiam · · Score: 3, Informative

      Well, since you mention it, here you go.

    12. Re:Minimum 100,000? by SWTP_OS9 · · Score: 1

      I agree. A fun box to modify and try out!

    13. Re:Minimum 100,000? by marcansoft · · Score: 1

      Hmm, that reminds me of... At the speed Yafray is rendering some simple models I have (at Low quality) i'll need one of those for the full picture. And this is on an Athlon64 using everything targeted for x86_64 with optimizations.

  3. Miniaturizing is required. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the future of PC's are in miniaturizing.

    E.g. barebones, miniITX or subnotebooks. The industry should specialize on these things and make sure that people can afford these devices.

    1. Re:Miniaturizing is required. by Zorilla · · Score: 4, Funny

      Subnnotrenbiooklds are fgreast!@ Teh keybboardas sizzzxe dsolen't boethre me at allk!

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    2. Re:Miniaturizing is required. by moonbender · · Score: 1

      Well, they're not for everyone. People with handicaps such as grotesquely large hands will have to use specialised solutions, as always.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    3. Re:Miniaturizing is required. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Operator: "The fingers you have used to dial are too fat. To obtain a special dialing wand, please mash the keypad with your palm now."

  4. AWESOME!!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I WANT ONE!!!!

    Wow. I'd just like to get one for the coolness factor :)

    $100 is nothing! and if it actually does stuff, even better!

    It's nice to see linux getting a nice plug too.

    1. Re:AWESOME!!!!!!!! by sunbeam60 · · Score: 1

      Are you suggesting you are willing to pay USD 100 for a device that does nothing?

    2. Re:AWESOME!!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      But it does nothing so efficiently!

  5. For leaders of a new Information Era... by frenetic3 · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...they sure do have a ghetto website. :P

    -fren

    --
    "Where are we going, and why am I in this handbasket?"
    1. Re:For leaders of a new Information Era... by 14erCleaner · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's probably just their temporary Slashdot site.

      --
      Have you read my blog lately?
    2. Re:For leaders of a new Information Era... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It needs more Flash. A LOT more Flash.

    3. Re:For leaders of a new Information Era... by Zorilla · · Score: 1

      ...or cowbell.

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    4. Re:For leaders of a new Information Era... by Anonymous+Custard · · Score: 2, Funny

      ...they sure do have a ghetto website. :P

      It's a $100 website, too.

  6. i just wonder by BlackShirt · · Score: 1

    would'nt "server per classroom" be a better solution?

  7. solid-state? by caino59 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    using flash drives....whats the lifespan on these given ther write limits on the drives...

    1. Re:solid-state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      100.000 writes per sector usually. Sandisk has some with 1 million writes too. But I guess (or hope, at least) these drives are mounted read-only, with some other kind of memory for saving documents etc.

    2. Re:solid-state? by bcrowell · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Yeah, it's not so incredibly surprising that they can sell a PC for $100 if they leave out the power supply and the hard drive, and if $100 is the wholesale price in quantities of 100,000.

      I've been buying Great Quality brand PCs from Fry's, and have been very happy with them. The retail price normally runs from $180 to $220, and it includes a hard drive and a power supply. Yesterday, as a day-after-Thanksgiving promo, they were selling them for $99. I almost went down there to get in line before dawn and snap one up, but my wife said lots of unreasonable things like, "You don't need another computer," and "What's wrong with the computer you have now?"

    3. Re:solid-state? by richcoder · · Score: 3, Informative

      using flash drives....whats the lifespan on these given ther write limits on the drives...

      The press release states that it uses a compact flash drive. I'd assume it is a micro drive and not solid state, so the number of writes are the same as your desktop PC.

      -rich

    4. Re:solid-state? by richcoder · · Score: 1

      Doh... Missed the part about "no moving parts" perhaps it is a flash chip on board after all.

      -rich

    5. Re:solid-state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I've seen Linux-based routers using Sandisk Compact Flash running for years in harsh environments.

    6. Re:solid-state? by HerbieStone · · Score: 1
      If you have no fans and no harddrives on a computer, you can get a fairly ruggedized machine. Of course you need to turn off the swap-space, else you will run out of your 100'000 write cycles pretty fast. There are also drivers which try to use all parts of the solid-state drive equaly.

      A solid state drive used like should outlive a harddrive easly.

    7. Re:solid-state? by grozzie2 · · Score: 5, Informative
      Typical flash today is good for a million writes per cell. If you use a file system that's not doing wear levelling, and write on average once a minute, you will see the cells start breaking down in 2 years. But, include wear levelling into the flash (most off the shelf flash drives today actually include it at the hardware level), you can increase that lifetime by a factor of 100, so useful life heads up to around 200 years. if you assume it's turned off for even 8 hours a day, it goes up to on the order of 300 years (based on rewriting the same data once a minute for all the time it's turned on).

      Using flash drives is only a problem if you build it without enough ram, and do something stupid like put swap on the flash drive. If you build a system that's not thrashing the swap, and use modern wear levelled flash, the unit will likely outlive the owner (even a typical /. first year college kid) before the flash starts to die from wear.

      While it's true, flash does have write limits, they are vastly overrated today. if you are going to compare flash to spinning media, then factor things like bearings into the equation, and write frequency, and possibly even power consumption. Flash with wear levelling, after you factor in bearing failures on traditional spinning media, is actually more reliable than a hard drive. If you are truely paranoid, use a reed-solomon based write methodology so you can recover data after a cell failure from writes, and you are looking at a system with _at least_ an order of magnitude higher reliability ratings (mtbf) than one with spinning media, and that's even before you factor in some 'harsh environment' details, like 'ooops, it got dropped' etc. It doesn't matter what kind of error handling/correction you apply to the spinning media, bearings and motors will give it a useful lifetime that's not in any way tied to read/write cycles, but rather to calendar time and physical handling.

      note, i'm comparing reliability here, not cost per bit of storage. Spinning media is still a couple orders of magnitude cheaper for large storage quantities, but that's changing rather rapidly these days too.

      I've got a unit on my desk here, with a 266 mhz processor, and 1 gig of flash. After bringing up X, i've still got on the order of 600 meg of free flash on it, with a basic set of gui apps isntalled and running. This box is all solid state, no fans, runs on a 19v laptop supply. It's actually quite amazing what can be done with this box if you aren't concerned about stupid games, and just want a basic productivity platform (email, word processing, etc).

    8. Re:solid-state? by geminidomino · · Score: 1, Funny

      Wives can be such pains in the ass that way (as well as many many others), especially one who just "doesn't get it" (like yours seems not to).

      "Don't need another computer" indeed. That's like saying I don't need to pay $90 for a mint copy of Lunar:EB or Rhapsody.

    9. Re:solid-state? by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
      "What's wrong with the computer you have now?"

      "You've had that desktop for over a week? Throw that junk away man it's an antique."

      -- Weird Al.

    10. Re:solid-state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmm..after reading this. I guess, you could even optimize the linux kernel a bit for this kinda of thing. That's something someone should start looking at now, to be ready when these machines become more common.

    11. Re:solid-state? by starm_ · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think it would be interesting for it to have no HD only a big USB hub for memsticks (and periferal) and cd rom. You could either boot from the CD or a mem stick and have your /HOME on another stick or something. When the sticks are getting old just replace them.

    12. Re:solid-state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      This works with my wife:

      "You don't need another pair of shoes. What's wrong with the ones you're wearing right now?"

    13. Re:solid-state? by Chemical · · Score: 1

      People would actually pay $90 for Rhapsody? Mind-boggling.

    14. Re:solid-state? by Sique · · Score: 1

      You won't throw out antiques, won't you?!

      Collectibles, I say! Collectibles!

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    15. Re:solid-state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't feel too bad about missing the deal at Fry's. My friend's son showed up at the Atlanta area Fry's at 5 am (one hour before opening) and there were hundreds (he thought 1,000!) of people already in line. He turned around and drove home.

    16. Re:solid-state? by Lethyos · · Score: 1
      I almost went down there to get in line before dawn and snap one up, but my wife said lots of unreasonable things like, "You don't need another computer," and "What's wrong with the computer you have now?"

      Get out. Get out now... before you end up having children.

      --
      Why bother.
    17. Re:solid-state? by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      I'm a collector, and it *WAS* NI's first stateside release. Of course, I payed $127...

      In my defense, it did turn out to be better than Phantom Brave.

    18. Re:solid-state? by Chemical · · Score: 1
      I guess I can understand. I've paid high sums on ebay for rare games before (not $127 mind you). Since Nippon Ichi games seem to be so prized, I hope Disgaea and La Pucelle are worth something someday :)

      Of course I'd be willing to pay just about anything for the PS version of Umihara Kawase Shun.

    19. Re:solid-state? by pcmanjon · · Score: 1

      "
      The press release states that it uses a compact flash drive. I'd assume it is a micro drive and not solid state, so the number of writes are the same as your desktop PC. "

      I have a IBM Deskstar, so that would be like... say... 6 months?

    20. Re:solid-state? by Ignominious · · Score: 1

      and that's even before you factor in some 'harsh environment' details, like 'ooops, it got dropped' etc

      I agree. Couple weeks ago I left my USB flash drive in my jeans. You guessed it. 40 degree max spin cycle machine washed flash! Couldn't believe it when I mounted it and it all verified ok. Try that with a hard disk, I dare you.

    21. Re:solid-state? by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      If nothing else, Disgaea and La Pucelle are FUN to play.

    22. Re:solid-state? by cakefool · · Score: 1

      We have some foreign object tests coming up soon in the washing machine lab - I kid you not - I'll mention it...

    23. Re:solid-state? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't work with my girlfriend.

  8. that's cool by MeatBlast · · Score: 4, Informative

    this will give kids whoo dont's have much money a chance to have a computer and learn. It also allows schools to buy computer cheaply w/ software already installed. I think SolarPC is doing a great thing here and should continue on with more ideas like this.

    1. Re:that's cool by frenetic3 · · Score: 5, Funny
      whoo dont's have much money a chance to have a computer and learn
      And not a moment too soon. :)

      -fren
      --
      "Where are we going, and why am I in this handbasket?"
    2. Re:that's cool by MeatBlast · · Score: 1

      oops, guess I should double check my spelling next time.

    3. Re:that's cool by damiam · · Score: 2, Funny

      Even single-checking it would be a good start. :-)

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    4. Re:that's cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      of course, computers ARE the ONLY way to learn anything

    5. Re:that's cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just hope there are enough educational software for linux for all subjects in K-12 from basic level to gifted level.

    6. Re:that's cool by Agret · · Score: 1

      "this will give kids whoo dont's have much money a chance to have a computer and learn"

      Have a computer AND learn? Now I've heard everything but I suppose making a PC not powerful enough to run games will fix the problem ;) But of course I can always get distracted by MUD's :P

      --
      Have you metaroderated recently?
    7. Re:that's cool by Silverlock · · Score: 1
      this will give kids whoo dont's have much money a chance to have a computer and learn.

      So you're saying I should give up on my tech support job ever coming back to the states?

      Damn these people!

    8. Re:that's cool by afinnie · · Score: 1

      this will give kids whoo dont's have much money a chance to have a computer and learn

      You should really read The Flickering Mind.

    9. Re:that's cool by MeatBlast · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I'd like to pick that one up. Have you read it?

    10. Re:that's cool by afinnie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I read most of it during the course of a research project about computers and education for one of my classes. Very easy to read, and you get some startling facts about education in America.

    11. Re:that's cool by MeatBlast · · Score: 1

      Okay, thanks I'll pick that one up sometime soon.

  9. Chinese (ugh) VIA is NOT Environmentally Friendly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    The Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition (SVTC) has been doing an annual survey of how environmentally friendly Chinese companies (including Taiwanese ones), Korean companies, Japanese companies, and American companies are. The Koreans and the Chinese failed to meet even the bare minimum passing grade on the survey.

    VIA may have produced a lead-free motherboard, but VIA abuses its workers and integrates lead into other products.

    Ballmer should wake up and license his new PC to American and Japanese companies, particularly those on the SVTC's list of recommended companies.

  10. specs? by BMojo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Can I get even one piece of useful information pertaining to the actual performance of this thing?

    --


    -BMojo

    1. Re:specs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Here's a hint: think low, and then think lower.

    2. Re:specs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It probably depends on the weather.

    3. Re:specs? by Zorilla · · Score: 1

      I see a good opportunity for creating the first Linux spyware aimed at users concerned at managing power.

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    4. Re:specs? by _the_bascule · · Score: 1
      right here

      Funnily enough I don't see any $100 machines in that list. Where have they gone?

      --
      Our diversity is our strength
    5. Re:specs? by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Nope. Although you get a pretty good piece of kit for $189. a 500MHz machine with a gig of ram is pretty functional. Hell, you can do quite a bit with a 50MHz machine and 4 megs of RAM. More than enough to play doom at a decent frame rate (except you'd possibly want a monitor).

    6. Re:specs? by discord5 · · Score: 1
      Can I get even one piece of useful information pertaining to the actual performance of this thing?

      Well, performance of Vias is less than your average intel or AMD. I've played with a couple of Via based machines, and to be honest they're good enough for cheap low-end desktop solutions, but don't start doing things that need power. You can run the average webbrowser, wordprocessor and mailclient on it, but don't expect things to be fast. But hey, they're 100$.

      These things are ideal for PXE booting kiosk PCs. Schools, libraries, etc can be greatly helped with cheap solutions like these.

      Down to the facts, I've used some Vias to encode some DVDs to divx format and it takes a looooooong time. Most likely due to the fact that the CPU misses some extensions that Intel and AMD provide.

      Conclusion: don't build your 1337 gaming boxes on these things. It won't work.

    7. Re:specs? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Can I get even one piece of useful information pertaining to the actual performance of this thing?

      Well, you won't be able to run your modern games: your nethack, your ADVENTURE, your fortune, but it can probably do hunt the wumpus if you overclock it.

    8. Re:specs? by ahdeoz · · Score: 1

      Most likely due to the fact that Vias (Cyrix) don't (or didn't) have hardward to do floating point math -- it's all done in software, and fractions are very common in graphics.

    9. Re:specs? by AoT · · Score: 2, Funny

      Monitor?

      Doom is so much more challenging with a braille output.

  11. am I just behind on the times? by twiggy · · Score: 1

    Steve Ballmer endorsing something running linux?

    Last I remember, he was the crazy guy at Microsoft (er, one of them). Did he leave Microsoft and I didn't hear about it?

    --
    http://www.babysmasher.com
    http://www.openingbands.com
    1. Re:am I just behind on the times? by Maquis_00 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, he wants a 100$ computer... If he's looking for it to be running Windows, he'd better bump that up a bit! :)

    2. Re:am I just behind on the times? by Drantin · · Score: 1

      The summary is referring to something Ballmer said earlier this year about there being a need for $100 PCs...

      --
      Actio personalis moritur cum persona. (Dead men don't sue)
    3. Re:am I just behind on the times? by peragrin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No It's a really bad joke on Ballmer.

      A few weeks ago Ballmer made the annoucement he wanted $100 PC's for the 3rd world countries. He of course wanted them to run windows.

      the joke is that the reason you can't have a $100 pc running windows, is because you need to spend $50 on just Windows. Hardware guys are already running at 1-3% profit per machine, Unlike say MSFT windows and office which are running at somewhere around 400% profit per license sold.

      What Ballmer fails to realize is that people will balance that equation out. Both sides should be no higher than 30% Guess who will suffer more?

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    4. Re:am I just behind on the times? by twiggy · · Score: 1

      Nevermind. Article makes no mention of Ballmer - title was just a reference to a past blathering by said Crazy Microsoft Guy(tm). Apologies.

      --
      http://www.babysmasher.com
      http://www.openingbands.com
    5. Re:am I just behind on the times? by jm92956n · · Score: 0, Redundant

      You misread the article: Ballmer hasn't endorsed this specific product, but he's endorsed the idea of an inexpensive, basic PC (running a variant of Windows, of course) for third world countries.

      Previous Slashdot article is: here.

      --
      An effective signature identifies a particular user amongst a base of thousands.
    6. Re:am I just behind on the times? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Steve Ballmer is not actually endorsing this, it's simply the response to his challenge towards PC manufacturers for a $100 computer. Much to his chagrin, they cut cost the easiest way they could, getting rid of microsoft licensing fees. As such, you'll see plenty of great OSS like firefox, open-office, etc.

      It's AMDs personal internet communicator (http://www.amdboard.com/pic.html) minus licensing bullshit (and a spiffy black case!). I just hope the specs are up to snuff.

    7. Re:am I just behind on the times? by jerometremblay · · Score: 1

      I agree with you that 400% is outrageous, but where do you get your 30% number?

    8. Re:am I just behind on the times? by gad_zuki! · · Score: 1

      >the joke is that the reason you can't have a $100 pc running windows, is because you need to spend $50 on just Windows.

      Not really. I mean, how much money has been dropped by MS just to get into markets? IE development, all the embrace/extend/extinguish stuff, etc.

      In other words, if it may be profitable in the future then today it means giving it away for free or nearly free.

      So lets look at China. There's an up and coming info market. Ballmer could very well subsidize Windows for next to nothing to put on these machines knowing full well a generation of kids (and current adults) will be using Windows. Learning windows. Getting used to windows. Being branded by windows. etc.

      Like you suggested, the returns on Office are so high MS can do whatever it wants.

    9. Re:am I just behind on the times? by grozzie2 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Hardware guys are already running at 1-3% profit per machine,

      This is what happens in a free market, with enough competitors properly funded to actually work in the market. The production quantities over it's lifetime on a pc chipset are HUGE, typical orders running in the 100K units range, and those orders will repeat. Early in thier run, new chips demand a premium, companies can quickly amortize the development costs off against the early run on a given chip. Once that's done, they can supply into the market with very slim margins, and still be profitable because the numbers get staggeringly huge. Since there are multiple vendors of a 'motherboard chipset', a large volume motherboard producer can, and will, have a bidding war between them to determine which chipset is used on a given motherboard design. You can bet your last dollar, Via, Intel, Nvidia and the rest will all get out the pencil sharpener when Asus comes looking for a quote. A design win with Asus will justify the entire chipset line.

      Back in the 80's, there was only one supplier of x86 processors into the pc marketplace. Processors were EXPENSIVE by today's standards. The mac with it's 68K processor was threatening to become a serious player, then the clones in x86 space started to show up. pricing in the x86 market started to reflect cost of production rather than 'what the market will bear'. The rest is history, and now we have single chip integrated systems, because they are ultimately cheaper to produce in quantity, even tho the engineering costs up front are staggering.

      On the software side of the equation, this type of competition has not happened, mostly because parts are not interchangeable. You can swap an ati video out of a machine and toss in an Nvidia. You cannot swap a windows program out, and swap in it's linux equivalent. Competetive pricing on software, based on 'cost of manufacture' rather than 'what the market will bear' will only happen when the predominant components can be interchanged. In the hardware world this is done by using common signalling on standard bus. In software, it's only going to happen if there is common and interchangeable api systems, and the common api ends up with the lions share of the market. From a software vendor point of view today, the only common api to work with is the Win32 api.

      It's in the hardware vendors best interest to undermine the cost of software. they have known this for years, but they are currently hostage to the Win32 api to sell hardware. Software vendors are in the same boat. The real solution to a free market, is to have an alternative vendor from which to purchase the Win32 api for deployment on new machines, or for both hardware and software vendors to settle on an alternative api. Neither of these are going to happen in the short term. If the Win32 api remains single vendor, single source, it's inevitable the market will migrate to an alternative, but, it may take 2 more generations (people generations, not those 18 month hardware generations). Any time you do a product in the design phase, a major consideration is the risk attached to single source components. In today's market, the risk/reward equations favour the single vendor Win32 solution. Eventually, the market will abandon the single source solution, but, that wont happen till the risk/reward equations come up in favour of the alternative.

    10. Re:am I just behind on the times? by flosofl · · Score: 1

      Article makes no mention of Ballmer

      Did you even read it?

      Granted, Balmer is not endorsing these, but the article does specifically mention him.

      From TFA

      "...response to last month's challenge by Microsoft's Steve Ballmer for the computer industry to build a $100 PC."

      --
      "This calls for a very special blend of psychology and extreme violence" - Vyvyan "The Young Ones"
    11. Re:am I just behind on the times? by Truth_Quark · · Score: 1
      So lets look at China. There's an up and coming info market. Ballmer could very well subsidize Windows for next to nothing to put on these machines knowing full well a generation of kids (and current adults) will be using Windows.

      China is more interesting than that because it has no IP laws. So you can't police pirating, there is nearly no money in software or music until a corporate sponsor is involved. This operating system was brought to you by Tsingtao Beer!

      Unless Steve reckons he's got the umph to change China's laws on this, the best he's going to get by dumping windows on them for free is stopping them working with Linux, which would provide Linux with another group of developers (developers!, developers!). Which is certainly worth the investment, or he'll have to keep up by increasing staffing levels of developers (developers!, developers!) by 20%.

      However, it's tricky to make any money in that market with intellectual property, because you don't own it.

    12. Re:am I just behind on the times? by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

      What IE development?! If the product was actually better designed, it wouldn't need 400 developers world wide to make patches all year round.

      Gaming is huge in asian countries, there is no way in hell a sub $100 PC will cut it. Video card alone is 2 to 3x that cost. This might be the only thing to save M$ cause linux gaming still has miles to climb.

    13. Re:am I just behind on the times? by yorkpaddy · · Score: 1

      I heard that Balmer or Gates said that was specifically the reason they made such a big push to get Win95 ported to the chineese language. He said something like "we weren't stupid, we knew they would be pirating it, we wanted that, it locks them in"

      --
      "brxref .k.p ,.by xprt. gbe.p.oycmaycbi yd. cby.nci.bj. ru yd. am.pcjab lgxlcj" don'
    14. Re:am I just behind on the times? by peragrin · · Score: 1

      If you open a small warehosue/ retail store, Your accountant will tell you will need to make a minimum average of 30% on all sales. It's just an average number.

      Places like Walmart and home depot use what is called loss leaders. selling some products at 5-10% that you see everyday, and then charge 60-70% on odd items.

      I work in a retail/warehouse business. it's really funny watching the big discount places charge lower than what I can buy some items for, and then charge 200-300% on others. Where as we go 30-40% across the board on most items, with loss leaders to stay competive with the home centers in the 5-10% range, and high end special order items we switch to 50-60% range. You can't run a business for free, nor can you screw all your customers all the time. Finding a balance is what makes you stay in business.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    15. Re:am I just behind on the times? by peragrin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree with your assesment.

      I guess it's lucky that Linux is begining to boom while the win32 api is about to be written out of exsitance by MSFT. Lognhorn is supposed to kill off the iwn32 api and replace it. My guess is that is why they bought Virtual PC, so that they could run windows inside of longhorn.

      Also hardware manufactors have been replacing hardware tasks with software ones inside windows for years. I think that is part of the reason for such buggy drivers, as they are trying to do to much in software and not enough in hardware. If the Hardware did the really hard work, of communications then the software would be more reliable.

      Of course the opposite is the MSFT way.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    16. Re:am I just behind on the times? by AndyL · · Score: 2, Insightful

      400% profit? Can you elaborate please?

      400% of what? The purchase price?

    17. Re:am I just behind on the times? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      MSFT have been trying to kill Win32 for years. That's what .NET is all about, and there were plenty of initiatives before that. They failed every single time: there's just too much damn software already using it out there.

    18. Re:am I just behind on the times? by peragrin · · Score: 1

      As Apple and Linux do.

      Every once in a while you have to destroy backwards compaitblity to move forward.

      Apple's new machines can't run OS 9 unless it is in compatiblity mode over OS X. Think similiar to WINE. It's my thought that is what MSFT is gonna use VPC for. Of course why a whole x86 chip emulation instead of just a set of libraries I will never know. maybe win32 just can't be ported and the real WINE is just a dream that can never be achieved.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    19. Re:am I just behind on the times? by paretooptimum · · Score: 1

      I don't want to seem pendantic but you can't have 400% profit. 100% is it.

      It's math, see...

    20. Re:am I just behind on the times? by xSauronx · · Score: 1
      400% of their cost to produce price. Im almost drunk right now, and between that and my normal lazyness; coupled with the fact I dont remember specifics, I cant remember when or where the article was, but it was on MS profit margins on its OS and Office software, but it was obscene. 200% at least as I recall, perhaps more.

      Gates like the company to have enough *CASH* to run the company for 2 years at a loss without any trouble(did i get that right?); thats an enourmous amount of money (up in the billions) and it doesn't come out of thin air

      Wish i could be more helpful; but i read /. at work mostly and dont bookmark alot of things there; though im at home at the moment, go figure.

      --
      By and large, language is a tool for concealing the truth. -- George Carlin
    21. Re:am I just behind on the times? by peragrin · · Score: 1

      I buy an item for $10(or it costs me $10 to produce)

      I sell it to you for $50. that means i made $40 on that one Item. That is 400% of profit.

      see it's math and you need to go back to school.

      Most of the time people can only get 30-50% on an item. Which means I must sell it for $13-$15 dollars. At $20 I hit a 100%

      This is really basic stuff.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    22. Re:am I just behind on the times? by amper · · Score: 1

      Hmm...that's pretty funny, because Apple seems to be doing just fine on less than 30%, and they have to cover *both* hardware and software development and manufacturing costs...

  12. Slashdot Insurance by OccidentalSlashy · · Score: 0

    AS VEGAS, November 18, 2004 -- SolarPC today announced the availability of a $100 PC called the SolarLite. It is a solid-state computer targeted at organizations that require the efficiency of a maintenance free Internet PC. The SolarLite was also created to offer an ecologically and economically viable method to provide information to billions of disadvantaged people around the world. In addition, it serves as a response to last month's challenge by Microsoft's Steve Ballmer for the computer industry to build a $100 PC.

    In conjunction with the SolarLite announcement, SolarPC circulated details regarding the Global Education Link (GEL) project, an initiative with the goal of giving away a million SolarLite computers to schools in poor countries around the world. The objective of the GEL project is to improve education in third world countries and thereby encourage self-sufficiency and promote world harmony.

    According to K-12 education specialist Dr. James Johnson, "The Global Education Link project has the potential to break down the barriers that prevent people in the developing world from getting a good education. The recent release of the FireFox Internet browser makes the timing of this announcement extremely auspicious. The open source FireFox browser provides a solid foundation for the development of non-proprietary educational software. It will facilitate the creation of thousands of educational programs that can be distributed to millions of students at no cost. This is a fantastic opportunity to leverage technology that will make the world a better place."

    "This is the twenty first century equivalent of teaching people how to fish," stated Gary Reynolds, spokesperson for SolarPC, "A standardized, well designed, easy to maintain, low cost PC is the key to unlocking the educational potential of the electronic age.

    The SolarLite is a fully featured, book sized (9" x 7" x 1.75") machine that weighs approximately three pounds. It features a rugged no-moving-parts design that includes a Compact Flash drive loaded with dozens of software programs, plus links to free development software and educational programs.

    The design and construction of the SolarLite is consistent with the goal of an environmentally friendly computer. It uses a lightweight, recyclable, aluminum case that has a 20-year warranty. Its VIA chipset based "long-life" motherboard is a "green" lead free product. Like all SolarPC computers, the SolarLite operates on 12 volt DC power and can be run from a solar panel, car battery, or human powered (with a bicycle-based generator). The cool and quiet SolarLite uses approximately 10 watts of energy, just a fraction of what a standard PC consumes.

    The minimum order quantity for the SolarLite is 100,000 units. Photos and details relating to the SolarLite and the Global Education Link project can be found at www.solarlite.org. SolarLite software is provided by DS Linux, one of the top ten Linux distributions in the world. Additional data about DS Linux is located at: www.dslos.com. More information regarding VIA Technologies can be viewed at: www.via.com.tw.

    --
    vicious, untreated political sewage...niche entertainment for the spiritually unattractive...worshipless pap
  13. Yeah, but.... by Ash+and+Flame · · Score: 1

    can it run Half-Life 2?

    --

    ----
    Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn
    1. Re:Yeah, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I doubt that it even runs pong.

    2. Re:Yeah, but.... by KenFury · · Score: 1

      The question should be can it run half-live 1

    3. Re:Yeah, but.... by dabigpaybackski · · Score: 1
      The question should be can it run half-live 1

      Meh. The people who comprise the target market are more likely to play soccer or do stuff with their families for fun. Of course, computers will probably change that given time. Look what they have done here (assuming you are in the U.S.)

      --
      "OH SHIT, THERE'S A HORSE IN THE HOSPITAL!"
  14. Chinese VIA: Not Funny at All by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition (SVTC) has been doing an annual survey of how environmentally friendly Chinese companies (including Taiwanese ones), Korean companies, Japanese companies, and American companies are. The Koreans and the Chinese failed to meet even the bare minimum passing grade on the survey.

    VIA may have produced a lead-free motherboard, but VIA abuses its workers and integrates lead into other products.

    Ballmer should wake up and license his new PC to American and Japanese companies, particularly those on the SVTC's list of recommended companies.

  15. I'll take 100,001 please by Charcharodon · · Score: 1

    Cool idea, but why the large minimum order requirements. I'm sure the community in the first world would love to have these little toys to play with. The 12 volt power supply would make this thing a shoe in for remote/mobile aps.

    1. Re:I'll take 100,001 please by whoever57 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Cool idea, but why the large minimum order requirements

      Perhaps becuase it is vapourware?

      Could it be that the product does not exist yet, but the "supplier" figured out that it could be manufactured cost-effectively if there were a guaranteed build quantity of 100k units?

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    2. Re:I'll take 100,001 please by nametaken · · Score: 2, Insightful


      If they can take orders at 100,000 units, then they can manufacture them. You're probably right that they're probably only sitting on prototypes right now, but we know they can do it. Either way, they're demoing them at Linux Expo in February.

    3. Re:I'll take 100,001 please by whoever57 · · Score: 1
      Either way, they're demoing them at Linux Expo in February.

      Demos are frequently not examples of final production units. It's pretty easy to knock up a demo without having everything in place to make the final product.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    4. Re:I'll take 100,001 please by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Hell, I could get 100,000 units built if I was paid in advance, it would just take some time for them to be delivered.

    5. Re:I'll take 100,001 please by nametaken · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't know if they take orders pay-in-advance. But maybe you should have tried it. :)

  16. No power supply... by toddestan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Assuming this is like their other PCs, a power supply is not included. So unless you already have your own 12V DC source handy, you're going to be spending more than $100.

    Still, a nice deal assuming it has decent specs.

    1. Re:No power supply... by Feyr · · Score: 1

      i can see such a pc replacing my current p150 router . i just hope it has a usb2/firewall plug for an external hd and it'd be heaven :)

    2. Re:No power supply... by Charcharodon · · Score: 2, Informative
      Actually that's easy. A 15 watt solar panel runs your about $100 these days. There is also the fact that nearly all automotive and RV type systems as well as the bulk of your small off the grid power supplies are all 12vdc. Developing a small portable and inexpensive power supply can be done quite easily for a relatively small amount of money. A few thousand dollars to out fit a school with the computers and a few more thousands for the power supply affordable by even 3rd world standards.

      Alot more affordable than the power hungry machines that are available these days at your local Best Buy.

      In the 1st world I can see alot of public computing applications being put to use with these machines. Especially for basic info services or free public web surfing.

    3. Re:No power supply... by syd2000 · · Score: 1

      > i just hope it has a usb2/firewall plug

      Surely you mean firewire?

    4. Re:No power supply... by FreemanPatrickHenry · · Score: 1

      So unless you already have your own 12V DC source handy, you're going to be spending more than $100.

      Your car, most likely, has a 12V DC source built in. You could probably hook this thing up to your vehicle.

      --
      I have discovered a truly marvelous .sig which, unfortunately, this space is too small to contain.
    5. Re:No power supply... by jxs2151 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      So unless you already have your own 12V DC source handy...

      Gel cell battery and a solar panel. Every self-respecting amateur radio operator under 60 (all ten of us) has these items. Seriously, I had a blast doing remote ops with a gel cell and flexible solar panel. Perhaps I could use them with a new computer.

    6. Re:No power supply... by Feyr · · Score: 1

      yes i do, firewire hehe.

      let that be a lesson, don't post 5 minutes after you wake up

    7. Re:No power supply... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not to mention the slave to power the bicycle.

      seriously, how did that image become so "official" in just one thread.

    8. Re:No power supply... by kndnice · · Score: 1

      "Like all SolarPC computers, the SolarLite operates on 12 volt DC power and can be run from a solar panel, car battery, or human powered (with a bicycle-based generator). " at least they offer viable suggestions.

  17. so what are the stats? by yourexhalekiss · · Score: 1

    so what are the stats? Would a piss-poor college student like me want to buy one, or is this *strictly* a third world thing?

  18. From the SolarLite page by mr.henry · · Score: 3, Funny
    Small, Silent, Sensible and Stylish

    WTF, stylish? It looks like a metal project box from radio shack.

    Check it out.

    1. Re:From the SolarLite page by logic+hack · · Score: 0

      Easy to mount in a home theatre type cabinet, while blending with the rest of the equipment giving a seemless sense of it being just another electronic appliance.
      Many people like unobtrusive equipment. For them, this unit _is_ stylish.

    2. Re:From the SolarLite page by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > WTF, stylish? It looks like a metal project box from radio shack.

      It looks more like a regular xbox.

  19. Re:Too bad by nso · · Score: 1

    A largescale redistributor would have no problem moving that amount of computers if it catches on.

  20. Re:Too bad by MeatBlast · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    That's probably for sellers (such as best buy).

  21. a new Information Era is coming by frovingslosh · · Score: 4, Funny

    Damn, at first I read this as ""a new Information Bra is coming". I kind of like my way better.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
    1. Re:a new Information Era is coming by Zorilla · · Score: 4, Funny

      You just stumbled upon a new paradigm of UI design.

      (o) Press here for more information

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    2. Re:a new Information Era is coming by pnatural · · Score: 1

      You just stumbled upon a new paradigm of UI design.

      Oh, but it's not new. Remember, the only intuitive interface is the nipple!

    3. Re:a new Information Era is coming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that, it's all learned. - Bruce Ediger

    4. Re:a new Information Era is coming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you mean -

      (oYo) Press here for more information.

  22. imagine... by stagl · · Score: 1, Redundant
    --

    R.I.P.
  23. Minimum order, 100,000? by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 0, Redundant

    What if you just want ONE?

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    1. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by Maquis_00 · · Score: 1

      You need at least 5 to actually have the power to boot. 15 to play pong. :)

    2. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 5, Insightful

      My point was, if it's $100, minimum order 100,000, then obviously $100 is not going to be the retail price of this machine. Once it goes through distribution and goes to retail outlets, it'll probably double in price.

      I also just see a box on their website's illustrations. I don't think $100 includes the cost of the monitor or the keyboard/mouse. So by the time you're done buying those "optional" items and can actually USE the computer, you're looking at maybe $400. Which is the cost of a low end Dell shitbox, which almost certainly has better specs. So I don't see that we've actually gained anything.

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    3. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by FLAGGR · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why would the reseller need to double the price? If they buy 100,000 units for 10,000,000 dollars, and sell each for 120$, than thats 2 million in profit. And I think the point of this is not to make money for the reseller, but to be used in schools/third world countries, where they can't afford "normal" pc's.

    4. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by codeguy007 · · Score: 1

      The markup on Personal Computers is more like 5%.

    5. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by asavage · · Score: 1

      Also you can often by hardware even below the 100,000 unit price as typically there is an even lower price for 1 Million or more units purchased.

    6. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by mcg1969 · · Score: 1

      You guys seem to be assuming that the cost to the distributor is $100. I see no indication of that at all. Maybe $100 is the intended retail price.

    7. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by westlake · · Score: 1
      I don't think $100 includes the cost of the monitor or the keyboard/mouse. So by the time you're done buying those "optional" items and can actually USE the computer, you're looking at maybe $400.

      You see this on Walmart.com.
      By the time you price a "complete" system, in-store pick-up, no free home delivery, whatever advantage Linux has disappears, and the Windows system will have brand name recognition (HP, eMachines.)

    8. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by MarkByers · · Score: 1

      By the time you price a "complete" system, in-store pick-up, no free home delivery, whatever advantage Linux has disappears

      How do the features that Linux offers 'disappear' just because some American company chooses to sell PCs with Windows pre-installed? Noone says you can't reformat the harddisk and install the OS of your choice[1]. Admittedly, the installation is the weak point on some Linux distributions.

      [1] Not yet anyway.

      --
      I'll probably be modded down for this...
    9. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

      ``$400. Which is the cost of a low end Dell shitbox, which almost certainly has better specs. So I don't see that we've actually gained anything.''

      Well, the SolarPC is small and silent and has low power requirements and probably a good life expectancy (no moving parts). Which one is the best pick depends completely on your priorities.

      For myself, I would go with the SolarPC any day.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    10. Re:Minimum order, 100,000? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this kind of tripe is why i read with "insightful" messages set to -2.

  24. Hmmm by ICECommander · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's the solution to America's obesity problem: Stop buying computers with power supplies, just make your kids pedal away.

    --
    All your Sybase are belong to us.
    1. Re:Hmmm by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      And you know ... that's not all that bad an idea. If I ever have kids you can bet there will be a row of bike generators in the basement.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    2. Re:Hmmm by twms2h · · Score: 1

      I know this was meant to be funny, but actually, I would like to have a computer that I could power by pedalling. Not only would that make me totally independant of power sources but also it would give me some needed exercise. (Of course that means that pedalling while using it must be possible.)

  25. In case it gets Slashdotted... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Press release text:


    SolarPC Announces the $100 Personal Computer
    Nov 20th, 01:04 UTC

    A Maintenance Free PC

    LAS VEGAS, November 18, 2004 -- SolarPC today announced the availability of a $100 PC called the SolarLite. It is a solid-state computer targeted at organizations that require the efficiency of a maintenance free Internet PC. The SolarLite was also created to offer an ecologically and economically viable method to provide information to billions of disadvantaged people around the world. In addition, it serves as a response to last month's challenge by Microsoft's Steve Ballmer for the computer industry to build a $100 PC.

    In conjunction with the SolarLite announcement, SolarPC circulated details regarding the Global Education Link (GEL) project, an initiative with the goal of giving away a million SolarLite computers to schools in poor countries around the world. The objective of the GEL project is to improve education in third world countries and thereby encourage self-sufficiency and promote world harmony.

    According to K-12 education specialist Dr. James Johnson, "The Global Education Link project has the potential to break down the barriers that prevent people in the developing world from getting a good education. The recent release of the FireFox Internet browser makes the timing of this announcement extremely auspicious. The open source FireFox browser provides a solid foundation for the development of non-proprietary educational software. It will facilitate the creation of thousands of educational programs that can be distributed to millions of students at no cost. This is a fantastic opportunity to leverage technology that will make the world a better place."

    "This is the twenty first century equivalent of teaching people how to fish," stated Gary Reynolds, spokesperson for SolarPC, "A standardized, well designed, easy to maintain, low cost PC is the key to unlocking the educational potential of the electronic age.

    The SolarLite is a fully featured, book sized (9" x 7" x 1.75") machine that weighs approximately three pounds. It features a rugged no-moving-parts design that includes a Compact Flash drive loaded with dozens of software programs, plus links to free development software and educational programs.

    The design and construction of the SolarLite is consistent with the goal of an environmentally friendly computer. It uses a lightweight, recyclable, aluminum case that has a 20-year warranty. Its VIA chipset based "long-life" motherboard is a "green" lead free product. Like all SolarPC computers, the SolarLite operates on 12 volt DC power and can be run from a solar panel, car battery, or human powered (with a bicycle-based generator). The cool and quiet SolarLite uses approximately 10 watts of energy, just a fraction of what a standard PC consumes.

    The minimum order quantity for the SolarLite is 100,000 units. Photos and details relating to the SolarLite and the Global Education Link project can be found at www.solarlite.org. SolarLite software is provided by DS Linux, one of the top ten Linux distributions in the world. Additional data about DS Linux is located at: www.dslos.com. More information regarding VIA Technologies can be viewed at: www.via.com.tw.


    The only info on the SolarPC Web site (probably in anticipation of a Slashdotting) is a photo of the box and the following:


    The SolarLite - Available December 2004

    Small, Silent, Sensible and Stylish

    SolarLite machines will be demonstrated at the
    Southern California Linux Expo
    February 12-13, 2005 at the Los Angeles Convention Center

    For more information email SolarLite at SolarPC dot com
    Copyright © 2002,2004 SolarPC All Rights Reserved


  26. Min order of 100k? by Haydn+Fenton · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Yeah, they sound great and everything, but what's with the 100k minimum order?

    It's not really a good "personal computer", if you need to buy 100,000 of them before you can use just one.
    It's also not really very cheap either, since you have to spend at least $10,000,000 before you can have a "$100" computer in your possesion.

    I breifly skimmed TFA... will companies like Dell, Tiny, Time etc. be able to buy and re-sell these, or not?

    Sometimes I really don't understand business techniques, surely they would make more money selling them individually than waiting for someone/company to buy 100,000?

    1. Re:Min order of 100k? by Grey_14 · · Score: 1

      No. They wouldnt, the manufacturing process means they make them in batches, batches of say, 100,000, if they make them one at a time, the manufacturing costs skyrocket, if they make 100,000 without a confirmed order, they stand to lose a LOT of money.

    2. Re:Min order of 100k? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd wager that never in your life have you or anyone you know had to buy >1k units of anything to use just one unit, so it's not any different here.

      A little less sarcastically...
      Volume purchases aren't for the average person. The whole point is for a company to buy and resell them at prices people would be willing to pay.

      The reason they are waiting for a company to buy 100,000 is probably because they don't actually have many (or any) units. Producing units in large volume is much cheaper for them compared to low volume. If they made that many units and couldn't end up selling them, they're hooped. If they made 10 (or whatever, low number) units at a time, they wouldn't be able to sell them for anywhere near 100$.

    3. Re:Min order of 100k? by discord5 · · Score: 1
      Sometimes I really don't understand business techniques, surely they would make more money selling them individually than waiting for someone/company to buy 100,000?

      The idea here is that they can cut the price down on 100.000 units in manufacturing and shipping. Imagine for a second that they need to make one. The cost to make it would be 70$. This is so high because they need to fire up ye olde machines to press the cases, print the boards, the people that do the manual stuff, etc. Now, shipping one unit to one person costs 40$.

      However, if they make 100.000. The cost to make it drops to 20$. All those machines are already running, the staff is already there. The shipping is in bulk container, so it probably costs 10.000$ to ship the lot.

      Oh yes, they could make 100.000 units and sell them seperatly as orders come in, but they run the risk of having 90.000 units in stock they can't get rid of, which makes it a very unlucrative business.

      So, yes, you're going to have to sell these in bulk as a manufacturer if you want to have some profit. And that's what motivates everyone who's doing business.

  27. Xbox? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't this $100 PC look a bit like an Xbox?

  28. Cheap PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do they come with a free monkey?

  29. Re:imagine... by La+Camiseta · · Score: 1

    Interesting, look at how small those systems are, they have to have huge extentions just to fit into a normal rack. I'd be willing to bet that you could probably fit a good two or three systems into the space that one rack would normally contain. This would be interesting for companies that use highly-parallelizable applications, like the motion-picture industry or the sciences, especially considering the low prices...

  30. Re:Chinese (ugh) VIA is NOT Environmentally Friend by shepd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    VIA may have produced a lead-free motherboard, but VIA abuses its workers and integrates lead into other products.

    So, rather than purchase products which would actually satisfy you when they are available, you will instead continue to shun the company and do without.

    If I were the company, and I made an effort to make you happy and then, you, rather than take the opportunity to show me that you are willing to support me when I offer what you want, rather continue to tell me I'm horrible, well, I'd take the impression of:

    (a) You're jerks.
    (b) There's no pleasing you.
    (c) May as well continue what we were doing because we won't be selling to anyone that cares about our increased "green" efforts, anyways.
    (d) Let's never try this waste of money again.

    --
    If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
  31. What about the monitor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do those energy figures include the display? It is not clear from the company's website.

    It'd be a bit silly to have a low power machine hooked up to a solar cell and still have to plug the power-hungry monitor into the wall outlet...

  32. We're SLASHING prices! by PainBreak · · Score: 1

    ...using assembly lines full of 8 year old Bangladeshi girls.

    1. Re:We're SLASHING prices! by discord5 · · Score: 1
      using assembly lines full of 8 year old Bangladeshi girls.

      They make those on assembly lines? I thought those were made the traditional way.

  33. What it really looks like by Animats · · Score: 4, Informative

    After some enhancement in Photoshop, here's what it really looks like. It resembles a very basic mini-ITX box. No connectors are visible.

    1. Re:What it really looks like by Gabrill · · Score: 1
      And I was going to mod this thread, too. Sigh . . .

      You did a very nice job on that enhancement, but modified pics should never be used as evidence without a very specific description of ALL the modifactions done. +1 informative -2 inconclusive evidence.

      --
      Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
    2. Re:What it really looks like by PetoskeyGuy · · Score: 1

      Speaking of Mini-ITX, VIA is introducing a new Mini-ITX board. It's got built-in compact flash slot and other features that suggest it could be the heart of the device they are coming out with. Then again a few other mini-itx boards could be too.

      Here's some links. Plenty of connectors visible.

      The EPIA MS
      Mini-ITX.Com Review

    3. Re:What it really looks like by Animats · · Score: 1
      It's a straight enhancement. Resize up by 50%, adjust levels, center in white space. Look at the original with your monitor brightness turned way up for comparison.

      The Solar Lite people need a new web site designer very, very badly. This isn't rocket science.

    4. Re:What it really looks like by Gabrill · · Score: 1
      I could pretty much duplicate your enhancements, except for the sharpness. Mine was either blurry or blocky for a 50% increase in size.

      So kudos for your response.

      It's really a pity that the original pic was blurred so much on the edges of the chassis. It looks way too doctored.

      --
      Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
  34. Don't think so by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
    Yeah, a new information age is coming...as long as the schools can afford the $10 million for the minimum order.

    Although I wonder what the margin is on this and if someone could buy an initial block of them and resell them at a SLIGHTLY higher price in smaller numbers. That might help some places that aren't able to afford it out.

    --
    Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    1. Re:Don't think so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's rather shocking that the Slashdot crowd has absoultely no concept of distribution, a very basic business concept. You aren't going to be buying 100,000 from SolarPC, you'll buy one from Best Buy, Walmart, etc. Whether or not $100 is distributor pricing or retail pricing remains to be seen.

  35. If I had a million dollars... by everdave · · Score: 1

    If I won the lotto, I would purchase 100k of these babies, and sell them for $125 plus shipping. bingo bango bongo!

    --
    Elliott Smith Tribute CD available now on Double D Records! Visit www.doubledrecords.com to order.
    1. Re:If I had a million dollars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you had a million dollars, you wouldn't be able to afford 100,000 of them.

      I suggest you go buy a 5 dollar calculator.

  36. Re:What will keep the moon floating? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and what would make you post your messages on the right page?

  37. Assuming decent performance and expansion by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This could be the ultimate Automotive PC. You need some USB, and some firewire would be ideal but is not required. A GPS hung off the USB bus would be excellent, and you could connect a camera to the system the same way. I realize that linux navigation is not yet here but when it is I want to be ready.

    If that screen is available in a touch version for less than three hundred dollars, and the system has enough processing power to, say, play a fullscreen MPEG4 video, then I'll buy at least one, and probably two. (If I can buy the screen and the overlay for three hundred bucks, same thing.) I can't imagine them omitting USB which means I can get wireless ethernet at suitable rates for my purposes.

    One of the largest problems in automotive computing is handling the power in the vehicle. With a computer that runs on twelve volts DC, all you need is a simple regulated power supply with some filtering in order to protect the machine and provide it with adequate power. You can of course buy the stuff off the shelf for not too much money. It's also a serious benefit that it's so small, as it will fit well up under the dash where it will be difficult to steal :)

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    1. Re:Assuming decent performance and expansion by snaphu · · Score: 1

      Why yes, they are available for less than $300 (http://solarpc.com/tpanel.html)

    2. Re:Assuming decent performance and expansion by cshake · · Score: 1

      Try a nice little PC-104 based system - with a soldering iron and some cheap radioshack stuff I've made one run off a 7.2v rc car battery - CF card HD and all. They are a bit more expensive though, and 500mhz isn't what you're looking for (though its quite enough for a mp3/video player). Need more capabilities? Add another component to the stack!

    3. Re:Assuming decent performance and expansion by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I've thought about a biscuit PC but PC/104 doesn't seem to come in powerful enough versions. Perhaps someone will come up with a multi-layer Pentium M or something, but then it will be ungodly expensive. I want something as cheap as possible to put into the car.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  38. Garbage. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The company that "makes" these is nothing more than a Navada sales company. There is nothing "revolutionary" about this product, it's a miniITX. BFD. This is not a computer company, and as usual, Slashdot got sucked into a free Slavertisment.

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    1. Re:Garbage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. /. is so anxious to pimp this stuff that they don't even take the time to consider the fact that $100 even in the Philippines is too expensive for 99% of the population (5,500 Pesos is what most large families live on for 3 months in most of the Ph). I think the glaring omision is any mention of the specs or the fact that connecting this to something will cost money. I don't see a lot of PAL TVs in the impoverished areas of the world I've been to.

    2. Re:Garbage. by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
      Slavertisment

      Is that a slave advertisment? If so, does it relate to this comment?

    3. Re:Garbage. by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      And that is pretty much all that Dell is so what is your point? I hate to tell you, but it doesn't matter how good your product is unless you have good salesmen behind it.

    4. Re:Garbage. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1

      NICE troll.

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
  39. That is not the website you're looking for... by xigxag · · Score: 2, Informative

    Not that it's much fancier, but their main website is at SolarPC.com.

    --
    There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    1. Re:That is not the website you're looking for... by HalliS · · Score: 5, Interesting

      And it seems that they've already imagined a beowolf cluster of their products: solarpc.com/beowulf.html

      --


      My other UID is 1337
    2. Re:That is not the website you're looking for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Insightful?

  40. $100 is a lot of money... by writermike · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sure, maybe not to lower-middle-income residents of wealthy nations, but where these things might be needed and better suited, a VILLAGE might not be able to afford $100.00.

    I very much appreciate the exercise, that of making the cheapest possible PC, but we really need next-to-nothing PCs if they're supposed to liberate as we expect. Otherwise, it's just more throwaway stuff for what the poorest nations would call the "well-to-do."

    --
    If Nalgene water bottles are outlawed, only outlaws will have Nalgene water bottles.
    1. Re:$100 is a lot of money... by damiam · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The village doesn't have to afford it. If a first-world charity or aid agency has $1000 to spend on computers (which is quite plausible), they can buy ten of these instead of two standard $500 desktops.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    2. Re:$100 is a lot of money... by Gabrill · · Score: 1

      And the villagers would stare at them in awe for all of 10 minutes until they realized that there are no displays, keyboards, or power supplies. Not to mention the mouse, 5.1 surround system, copy of Quake3Arena (for Linux, of course) and last but not least: internet service.

      --
      Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
    3. Re:$100 is a lot of money... by damiam · · Score: 1

      True, but you can add all that stuff and still come in under the cost of the alternatives. At least it's possible to buy a solar power supply for these; good luck finding a socket in a remote village to power your Alienware box.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    4. Re:$100 is a lot of money... by Gabrill · · Score: 1

      Actaully I was being facetious, but I'm sure a (relatively) cheap gasonline powered generator would do just fine for short periods of time. Otherwise, it'll have to wait untill the economic superpowers NEED the less urbanized portions of the world for their untapped labor resources. I'd say in about 50-100 years.

      --
      Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
    5. Re:$100 is a lot of money... by hyphz · · Score: 1

      Except for one thing...

      If you read the press release, you have to buy them in units of 100,000!

      That $100 isn't a unit price. It's a bulk discount price.

    6. Re:$100 is a lot of money... by damiam · · Score: 1

      So? A distributor buys them and resells them at $115. It's still much cheaper than anything else (except maybe modded Gamecubes).

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
  41. Yawn. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can buy a Pentium for $15 down at my local thrift store. $50 if you want a monitor, speaker, keyboard and mouse thrown in.

  42. Here are more specs on these computers.... by xxdinkxx · · Score: 5, Informative

    I am really surprised that so far no one has used google yet to get any more information. A quick 1 minute search revealed. http://www.solarpc.com/about.html http://www.solarpc.com/ there did not appear to be any google cache available for this site. What we are talking about here is 500-600 mhz for the 10 watts model and ~20 watts models are around 1 ghz. They readily admit that they are not the fastest in the market... but they are quiet and the 10 watts model has no fan at all. They are also using the C3 processor. there is also a faq on the site as well. happy slashdotting.

    1. Re:Here are more specs on these computers.... by bm17 · · Score: 1

      To put this in perspective, the Xbox has a 733 MHx P3. It should do alright with Linux. I wouldn't want to run Windows XP on it.

    2. Re:Here are more specs on these computers.... by PetoskeyGuy · · Score: 1
      I am really surprised that so far no one has used google yet to get any more information.

      Google wasn't needed. At the bottom of the page it already mentioned SolarPC.com.
      For more information email SolarLite at SolarPC dot com
      Copyright © 2002,2004 SolarPC All Rights Reserved
    3. Re:Here are more specs on these computers.... by Ash+and+Flame · · Score: 1

      I emailed SolarPC. Here's the response:

      Current evaluation units are based on the V10000 PLE boards.

      Production units will be based on mini-itx format with the CN400 chipset.
      The CPU will probably run 700Mhz with an overclocking option.

      They will include these I/O panel features:

      Keyboard, Mouse
      Ethernet, USBx2
      VGA, Audio out, Phone out, Line In,
      TV Out (RCA jack only)
      Compact Flash (IDE)
      Power Switch, Power LED

      Evaluation units will be available sometime later this month. Information will be forwarded to you at that time.

      Thank you for your interest.

      --

      ----
      Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn
  43. Minimum of 100,000 by pHatidic · · Score: 1

    anyone want to get together and split an order?

  44. I want one. by eluusive · · Score: 1

    I want one, this is cheap enough and uses little enough power to do exactly what I want. Right now i have a Celeron 400 as my server/router. Now i can get rid of that :) I'm not ordering 1 million dollars worth of these things though.. Hopefully someday i can buy just one.

    1. Re:I want one. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With your maths ability, it's a good job too!

  45. Didn't Wal Mart have a $200 for sale last year? by scott9676 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They have an XP based one on their web site for about $270. It's a Celeron 2.4 Ghz with 128 megs of ram and a 40 gig hard drive, but no monitor. The $200 one they used to have ran Lindows (whatever they are calling now). If you take $270, subtract $60 for XP Home OEM, subtract $20 for a 20 gig drive, and $40 for a power supply, that gets the price down to $150. I'm not sure how much Lindows costs, but if it was $20, then the price is $130 and starting to get really close to the $100 cost of this one, and you can just buy 1. To me, a $100 computer sounds like a perfect Citrix or Web client.

  46. The Specs are here by sorcium · · Score: 0

    (paste in your browser) http://www.solarpc.com/about.html

    1. Re:The Specs are here by One+of+the+abnormals · · Score: 0

      That's actually the SolarPC, not the SolarLite

      --

      2b || !2b =?
  47. Thinkgeek by kaleco · · Score: 1
    Think Geek should sell these to bypass the minimum order barrier and make the $100 PC available to us :

    I'd actually pay $150 (about £100) for one of these, if Think Geek needs a profit...

    --
    Prosperity is only an instrument to be used, not a deity to be worshipped. Calvin Coolidge
    1. Re:Thinkgeek by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      Actually, $150 is about £80 these days.

  48. GrokLaw's overview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saw a good reveiew at Groklaw a couple of days ago.

  49. 100K min. order? I call SHENANIGANS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I call shenanigans!
    There are no companies that are going to order 100,000 of these things at a wack from someone unknown manufacture. Even a company that could do it, like a WalMart or a CompUSA wouldn't. They'd try a couple thousand, and then maybe order them 10k at a time once per week.

    1. Re:100K min. order? I call SHENANIGANS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about a bunch of us slashfreaks start a fund and raise a million dollars ? We can call their bluff, and we'll write the contract so that when they don't deliver, we end up owning the company !

      I'll kick in $300 but I get my 3 boxes if they do come through. Only $999,700.00 left to raise -- pony up, fellas !

  50. a metal project box from radio shack by Visaris · · Score: 4, Funny

    WTF, stylish? It looks like a metal project box from radio shack.

    How is that not stylish?

    --

    I am a viral sig. Please help me spread.
    1. Re:a metal project box from radio shack by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      Yes what wrong with looking like a Project Box from RadioShack?? Hmmm Hot Friday special for 2008 PBox computer 80$ with a $30 MIR or Free with a new approved RSAP account

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
  51. Well.. by Adam+Avangelist · · Score: 1

    The day after thanksgiving in the USA, is a source of great deals. Yesterday at my local bestbuy, there were 200 dollar emachine computers with monitors (after rebates). That ship with Windows XP Home Edition and have 2.66 GHZ Celeron D processors, and 512 mb ddr sdram, with an 80 gig hard drive and a 17 inch monitor. This deal is too hard to topple, seeing that Windows XP alone cost 200 dollars, last time I checked.

  52. Cool! by eneville · · Score: 1

    Damn this sounds cool. I gotta get one of these.

    I suppose on those cloudy days I could get on the stationary cycle. Just of of interest, how much does it cost with the tredmill, bicycle and stationary rower?

    I think us IT professionals have a bad rap when it comes to gym work, this cannot be true otherwise the idea of a bicycle powered computer would never have survided off the drawing board.

  53. I know how I'll power mine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm allready starting to work on my squirrel powered generator. I'll make sure to post pics and info when I'm done.

  54. Flash Drive - Live CD Support by eigerface · · Score: 0
    I believe that flash-drive pc's work well with live CD-based linux disrtibutions. "Puppy" linux is my personal favorite.

    Keep the OS image on one 64 Mb flash drive, load it into RAM, use a second flash-drive or USB stick for data...voila a low cost portable PC with no moving parts.

    I'd buy one.

  55. "green"? Phhbt by SuperBanana · · Score: 1

    "green" lead free

    Folks- "green" is hardly how one would describe most of the OTHER heavy metals in motherboards...like in the capacitors alone. Nevermind the chemicals used in making all the various components...

  56. $100 PC already in stores by narfbot · · Score: 1

    My local frys electronics is now advertising a $100 machine. Though granted it is reduced from $200 because of after-thanksgiving sales and it probably has no monitor like most people expect. It does comes with linspire. The price may go back up, but chances are such that it may drop back down to $100 again. The way I see it, $100 PC has already been for some time.

    1. Re:$100 PC already in stores by geekoid · · Score: 1

      that computer has been 200 bucks for a long time.
      I Bought one for work(software development), and it has ran fine for 2 months. WIth one littl feature...IF I hit the ctrl key and an arrow kew at the same time, the arrow keys control the display positioning. so each arrow rotate the screen 90 ot 180 degrees. wierd.
      Oh, I also upgraded the ram from 128 to 640. Thats Megs, not K, thank you very much.

      I doubt it will maintain the 100 dollar price for long.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  57. I for one welcome... by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1
    ...our new $100 underlords. ;-)

    It will be a delicious irony if Ballmer's sweaty Wal-Mart-style browbeating on pricing leads to an exodus from Windows.

  58. 'frugal install' of DSL by timothy · · Score: 2, Informative

    Damn Small Linux has a special "Frugal" mode which is intended to minimize the problem you point out with write limits. I don't know much about it, but my impression is that it does things like spool writes for as long as practical in order to reduce their total number. That, and continuing improvements to flash memory, should help quite a bit.

    DSL is not nearly as full featured as bells-n-whistles live distros like Knoppix / Mepis, but dang it's pretty neat for 50MB :)

    timothy

    --
    jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
  59. Re:Imagine... by Sinus0idal · · Score: 4, Informative

    I know it was a troll, but their website does actually cover that eventuality... http://solarpc.com/beowulf.html

  60. How much memory? by iamsure · · Score: 1

    It says it uses solid-state CF.. so how much memory does it have?

    I dont see it in the article, nor on their main site. They DO mention having lots of apps installed, so I presume its not zero..

  61. can't say damn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DSL is Damn Small Linux, right? Great distro btw for its intended purpose. But nowhere on the site and on the write up, can we see the word damn. I'll be darned.

  62. Re:Imagine... by samekt · · Score: 1

    They did. Go to http://solarpc.com/ and scroll down.

  63. Mod parent up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Good Post.

  64. This is good by Performaman · · Score: 0

    Damnsmall is a great distro, and I'm glad to see that it's getting more exposure. Now I have two questions:
    1: Will they change the name "Damnsmall" in an attempt to make it "nicer?"
    2: Will they donate any money to the Damnsmall project?

    --

    I have gas, but my car uses petrol.
  65. CPU? by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1

    What's a Nehemiah? Is this something like a modern version of AMD's Elan?

    --
    Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    1. Re:CPU? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      VIA C3 Core; the next step after C3-2 if I remember correctly; somewhere between 500MHz and 1.2GHz last time I checked.

    2. Re:CPU? by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      It's one of via's low power chips, perfect for embedded applications. They're based on Cyrix's work, before they got eaten by AMD.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

  66. Technical Discussion by JANYAtty. · · Score: 1

    So they are going with a no moving parts design.

    sounds good to me, give every user a 64 or 32 meg usb drive for $10 apeice...

    This of course precludes the far cheaper use of cdrw as a storage medium at under a $1 apiece with far larger storage capacity..

    and no HD??? they are using a CF card? well, more power to them, but those things tend to have finite w/rw cycles. (like 100,000- still you might not want it for a memory swap use...) What are we talking about 256Mb CF card? I dont picture them going bigger then a 512mb cf card, becouse of the price point....

    I hope in the US market version, we will be able to open a slot and swap in our 4gb cf hard drive...

    and of course it needs its own computer memory- 64mb? 128?

    They show it with a small lcd in the homepage of the .org site. Doesnt even look like a 15 incher.. Does this imply a 640*480 maximum resolution???

    It does seem like it would be a good platform for commercial/POS use. Cheap, small, runs an lcd. hopefully it supports the lcd as a touchscreen.

    Probably its a unitized mobo, with hardwired cpu attached. as for the memory...??? and of course integral video, and audio.

    a 640*480 video display suggests a max of 2mb of video memory, probably allocated out of the general computer memory. not very impressive.

    Conclusion- This also seems like it would be a nice car pc. Still I want it to play a dvd, onto a nice size 15 or 17 inch screen. hopefully that level of hardware will be available in a slightly up rated version.

    --
    I dont do meaning of life questions.
  67. ghetto website by Nanoda · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yeah - they have to turn off stylesheets when it gets too cloudy.

  68. Good for big retailers... by Infonaut · · Score: 1
    but not necessarily good for those Third World folks who will supposedly be receiving these. No matter how you slice it, middlemen (probably two or three layers' worth) will be involved in getting these machines to people outside the Developed World, thereby jacking up the price per unit to well beyond $100.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:Good for big retailers... by AndyL · · Score: 1

      They could concievably be bought and distributed by a non-profit organisation.

      I'm not saying that's likely, but it could happen.

    2. Re:Good for big retailers... by Infonaut · · Score: 1
      They could concievably be bought and distributed by a non-profit organisation.

      They're the sort of middlemen I was referring to. Look at most big nonprofits these days and check out their overhead.

      --
      Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  69. Again Slashdot is behind the times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This was announced 3 or 4 days ago. Slashdot is out of touch lately.

  70. Might make a good Skype box. by Guspaz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We already have SkypeOut, and SkypeIn is coming soon, and Siemens has those Skype compatible phones (Alternatively there are USB devices for using any phone with Skype)

    Combining SkypeOut and SkypeIn means that Skype may finally be viable for completely replacing a traditional phoneline (In eastern Canada we have "naked DSL" with no extra costs, and cable internet doesn't require it either).

    I envision taking one of these 100$ PCs and using it as a Skype gateway; SkypeIn and SkypeOut provide incoming and outgoing POTS service, the 100$ PC runs skype, and the phones (Which are wireless, so the base stations can be where the PC is) provide the final link.

    Now, the only problem is that SkypeOut charges for local calls, which are normally free (for a monthly fee) here. If you make a lot of local calls, even at the very affordable SkypeOut rates it might become expensive.

    1. Re:Might make a good Skype box. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The DSL linux operating system includes a downloadable Skype client package.

      You need some kind of line in / audio out that is integrated into your computer system in order to use it, though.

    2. Re:Might make a good Skype box. by Guspaz · · Score: 1

      Their prices seem significantly higher than SkypeOut.

    3. Re:Might make a good Skype box. by Guspaz · · Score: 1

      Do you even need audio in/out to use Skype if you're using a USB adapter to connect a phone to Skype?

      Also, while details are light, I'm sure the SolarLite has audio in/out...

  71. great... by holzp · · Score: 0

    human powered (with a bicycle-based generator)....

    If he was powering the webserver, we just slashdotted that poor guy to death.

  72. I hope they're selling at SCALE by MsGeek · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This would be a truly bitchen little file server/print server. If the system boots from a read-only CF, but uses an external USB2 drive as the shareable space and home for the print queue, it would be splendid.

    You really don't need that much horsepower to serve files/print queues. Hell, a 486 can do that without breaking a sweat.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  73. A good car MP3 player? by usurper_ii · · Score: 1

    I don't know about as a home computer, but since it already runs on 12 volts, this could make an excellent car MP3 player. Someone said something about it being more than 100.00 dollars with a monitor, but 100.00 bucks and little LCD monitor to browse your MP3 list...and I'll buy one for each vehicle I own. :) I went to the web page but there wasn't much information. How much storage space do these things have again?

    Usurper_ii

    1. Re:A good car MP3 player? by pcmanjon · · Score: 1

      " I don't know about as a home computer, but since it already runs on 12 volts, this could make an excellent car MP3 player. Someone said something about it being more than 100.00 dollars with a monitor, but 100.00 bucks and little LCD monitor to browse your MP3 list...and I'll buy one for each vehicle I own. :) I went to the web page but there wasn't much information. How much storage space do these things have again?"

      They have 120 megs storage space. DSL takes up 70 megs of the 120 megs.

      That leaves a couple megs for a few MP3's.

  74. You're right. by StarKruzr · · Score: 4, Funny

    How silly of me.

    What's the capitol of Africa again?

    --

    +++ATH0
    1. Re:You're right. by asscroft · · Score: 0, Troll

      A this is a real fucking post you stupid ass lameness filter. It happens to consist of one god dammned mother fucking letter. Ok? Is that so fucking hard for you to comprehend. THe answer to his question is A. Just A. I shouldn't have to word it in a complete sentence to post it. ANd for that matter, it doesn't take 20 fucking secongs to post A. It takes about 1 second to type. See, I'll show you. Ready....; Go.A.Done. .001 seconds. So fucking let me post this already because now the rant to avoid the lameness filter will overshadow the fucking joke, which, I'll admit was lame, but not lame in the way you suspected.

      --
      because I have been enjoined by this Holy Office to abandon the false opinion which maintains that the Sun is the centre
    2. Re:You're right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to relax a little. Seriously.

    3. Re:You're right. by corbettw · · Score: 5, Funny

      What's the capitol of Africa again?

      Africa City, of course. Jeez, you don't get out much, do you?

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    4. Re:You're right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a lot of decaffeinated brands on the market that are just as tasty as the real thing.

    5. Re:You're right. by asscroft · · Score: 1

      sorry about that....

      --
      because I have been enjoined by this Holy Office to abandon the false opinion which maintains that the Sun is the centre
    6. Re:You're right. by TLSPRWR · · Score: 1

      The bass player of my band answered "Brazil." Poor guy.

    7. Re:You're right. by CharlesF · · Score: 3, Funny

      From the Simpsons family trip to Africa:

      Flight Attendant: Please prepare for our landing in Tanzania... I'm sorry, it is now called "New Zanzibar." Excuse me. It is now called "Pepsi presents New Zanzibar."

      --
      Do not read this sig!
    8. Re:You're right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>What's the capitol of Africa again?
      >
      >Africa City, of course. Jeez, you don't get out much, do you?

      Oh geeze... Haven't laughed that much in a while.

      Thanks, man. :-)

    9. Re:You're right. by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1

      Why? No need to appologise. The lameness filter is, well, lame. As is the 20 second rule.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
  75. Hamsters by orlyonok · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Just a word Hamsters lots of them, the best and one of the cheapest power sources available, just imagine a couple of hamsters in their exercise wheels powering your new 100$ computer.

    --
    And I have prayed unto You, O Lord U**X in the time of the Will of Linux.
  76. I just had a flashback by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    To the opener.

    It shouldn't be long before someone hacks this and installs whatever OS they choose on it.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    1. Re:I just had a flashback by DarthWiggle · · Score: 1

      Hey, I wonder if Linu... aw hell...

  77. Solar PC website by jangobongo · · Score: 2, Informative
    From what I can see, this $100 PC won't include anything beyond the computer itself. You'll need to provide your own monitor and power source (or purchase one from them).

    The SolarPC website also lists their specs for their other computers along with the price so maybe you can deduce from there what the $100 model might contain.

    This quote from the home page is interesting, too:
    • "A no cost license to manufacture SolarPC designs is available for educational and charitable groups participating in the Global Education Link project. Please contact SolarPC for additional information."
    FWIW, a review was posted touting their computer as a great war driving machine.
    --

    Sig cancelled due to lack of interest
  78. that's cool-Universal School Fund. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " this will give kids whoo dont's have much money a chance to have a computer and learn. It also allows schools to buy computer cheaply w/ software already installed. I think SolarPC is doing a great thing here and should continue on with more ideas like this."

    And we can fund it all using USF

  79. The Xbox by uodeltasig · · Score: 1

    The thing is that Microsoft has already created the $149.00 PC and it will run linux without any modification, they just need to drop the price again and he'll be set.

    --
    Hey look no pointless curley braces or semicolons... just like Python
  80. Re:Chinese (ugh) VIA is NOT Environmentally Friend by mikael · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you really want environmentally friendly computers, why can't more be done to improve reuseability. From experience working in locations where it isn't easy to get laptops and PC's repaired, the following would be useful:

    1. Laptops in which the screens have a video-in socket. This would allow the screen of a functioning laptop to allow the use of a laptop with a broken backlight/display.

    2. Having LCD backlights which could be replaced without having to take apart the entire display.
    (I personally had this experience with a laptop repair shop - the PC was completely dead because the invertor had fried; the technician told me nothing could be done. Unplugging the invertor and using an external monitor allowed the PC to start up normally).

    3. Have the motherboard of a PC in it's own slot - replacing a motherboard wouldn't require dissassembling the entire system. Many users seem happy to throw out a perfectly usable power-supply, cooling fans, chassis and frame, network, audio and video cards just because the motherboard has fried.

    4. With new video cards coming out every six months, and the availabilty of chipsets in the MXM form factor for laptops, would it be possible to design desktop video cards so that the memory chips, and GPU could be inserted/removed individually, rather than having to buy a completely new chip but with exactly the same circuit board.

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  81. so what are the stats?-Third world experience. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Would a piss-poor college student like me want to buy one, or is this *strictly* a third world thing?"

    What's the difference?

  82. a new Information Era is coming-Wierd Science. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The very latest in headware.

  83. Re:Imagine... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But what the website does _not_ say is that in Soviet Russia, the bicycle pedals YOU.

  84. What it really looks like-Bigger than a breadbox. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I much prefer a Netgear sized computer. Cheap, and durable, with just an inexpensive wall-wart PSU.

    Bluetooth networking for all external devices.

  85. Attack of the Geek Fat! by Photar · · Score: 0

    Attack of the Geek Fat!

    --
    He who knows not and knows he knows not is a wise man. He who knows not and knows not he knows not is a fool.
    1. Re:Attack of the Geek Fat! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure beats sticking to the "Geek Salad" diet!!!

      Oh, get over it, someone had to type it!

  86. Now if only... by ahdeoz · · Score: 1

    we can get someone to put the lead back in (do any boards use lead anymore?) and take out all that phoney baloney eco-crap we could have a $50 computer that runs on a battery.

    1. Re:Now if only... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My MB has U235 in it instead of lead.

      It's tough to overclock without a core meltdown and those U.N Atomic Energy Agency types keep dropping in on me unexpectedly.

      If this keeps up I'm going to annouce a moratorium on new MB production if someone will give me one of them Quad-CPU AMD64 boxes and enough food to feed the army I mean the poor impovrished people of my nation.

  87. Re:Chinese (ugh) VIA is NOT Environmentally Friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly! I've been thinking about this for years. Apparantly those companies don't want you to upgrade anything easily. They want you to throw away your old laptop and spend more money on a new one. This is exactly why I can't stand Apple, eMachines, and all those other barely upgradable brands. In today's world people just want the best deal and cheap prices... Nobody gives a shit about the environment anymore. Since I put together my own PC's, I can actually go out and pick up components that will last me more than 3 years! I started to encourage people that I know to go out to the mom and pop shops and get their computers from there. (More people should do this!) If Apple, HP, eMachines, etc. will start to notice that people want good quality products and they care about upgradability, maybe only then they will change their crappy designs. But I just know this is never going to happen... It's a proven fact, people are cheap selfish bastards. There are in fact people that would rather save $100 on their shitty iCrap then save a rainforest! Fuck society... Fuck capitalism... and fuck those fat selfish corporate pricks!

  88. right on time by mr.+marbles · · Score: 1

    Looks like this will be a good christmas after all.

  89. Re:No power supply... SPHERAL SOLAR by MickLinux · · Score: 2, Informative

    No power supply, but you can use a standard $10-$35 power supply, I'm sure, depending on what the requirements are.

    However, this looks like an excellent opportunity to use Spheral Solar's latest products, which

    !!! Are out now, and for sale !!!

    www.spheralsolar.com

    I'm hyped about it.

    --
    Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
  90. Santa Clause by Yartrebo · · Score: 1

    And while we're at it, I'm going to ask Santa Clause install Ralph Nader as president of my country and replace all the coal power plants by zero-impact fusion power plants and make the world all better.

    To think that you can provide 10 watts of solar power (okay, I read the article, and despite solar being in the name, solar cells not included), a power supply unit to provide backup power should you go out of the sun for a few minutes, and the actual unit itself, no less do it for quite a bit under $100 since a good chunk will go to the retailer. And to do it with untested technology no less. If only NASA could send bleeding edge tech to space for even twice this much cost.

    Maybe next year I'll ask jolly old St. Nicholas for a flying pig.

    Sarcasm aside, I would try to provide cheap desktops before providing a cheap laptop. Anything laptop is 2-3x the cost of a comparable desktop, and repairs and theft are much bigger issues. All three of these will be concerns for units targetted for poor people.

    1. Re:Santa Clause by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a desktop.

      The solar powered thing is a schtick, most people who have use for it will have another way of getting power -- flaky mains, or a gas powered generator. What you really need is a battery to run it for a short time, to even out the rough spots.

  91. Damn Small Linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm i checked out their site and it sure doesn't seem to be a real distro. Its a hacked together distro that is only 50MB. Most likely not the best for peoples first linux experience.

    1. Re:Damn Small Linux? by pecosdave · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's a real distro, it came with my Linux Format magazine/DVD. Not bad, it's based on Knoppix and meant to be small enough to boot from a business card CD, I would say it would be more usefull on a jump drive. It has XMMS, some simple text programs, a couple of video games, some terminals and the Links web browser. It's good enough for basic work without ever having to write to the host system hard drive.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  92. Re:Chinese (ugh) VIA is NOT Environmentally Friend by bmajik · · Score: 3, Insightful

    VIA abuses its workers?

    Let me ask you something. How badly are they abused? Are their fingers being cut off? Are they having firey bamboo chutes shoved into exit-only orifaces? Are they "made" to work long hours? what constitutes worker abuse, exactly?

    Look at this way. Presumably, these people work an abusive VIA factory because for them, currently, _that is the best thing going_.

    Yeah, its upsetting that a 10 year old girl might work 14 hrs a day in a factory somewhere. ... until you consider that if that factory closed down, she might work 4 hours a day as a child prostitute instead.

    I think its better for the child to keep on working for nike as opposed to polishing 30 year old men. How about you ?

    --
    My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
  93. Way to go! by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

    I've been looking into building systems like these myself. I am currently using a VIA EPIA VE5000, and I like it a lot. Silent, low power consumption, and fast enough for me.

    I'm not going to beat SolarPC in price, though. The board alone cost me 84 euros, and I would need to add a case, power supply and flash drive to that. Perhaps I should import rather than build them...

    --
    Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
  94. Truly a PC? by Denix · · Score: 1

    Without a harddrive and such a limited applicability, can this really be the $100 PC? I guess it really depends on your idea of PC.

    It's an interesting contraption, but I wouldn't consider it a mainstream usable PC.

    --
    "Simple words such as 'better' or 'faster' are best used by simpletons. Life [...] is more complicated." - TMC
    1. Re:Truly a PC? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try downloading a copy of Damn Small Linux and boot it into your computer's RAM (128MB or more) without ever touching your hard drive.

      It's probably more usable than than anything running that POS crippled operating system that Ballmer is pushing.

      Lets see:

      2 Web browsers, word processor, spreadsheet, games, IM clients, p2p file transfers, media player, remote desktop access, graphics editor, SQL database server, web server, ftp server & client, ssh server & client, Internet telephony, C Compiler, Perl & Lua scripting, E-Mail client, CD burning software, printing support and a click-and-run interface to download and install new software.

      in under 50MB of disk/RAM/flash space.

      I'd call that usable.

      But then again, what do I know?

  95. And it runs... by erc · · Score: 1

    DSL! DSL is an awesome distro :) I run it here on older desktops and laptops that don't have the memory or disk space to run Mandrake. It's very small and easily customizable. Perfect! I'm glad DSL is finally getting the attention it deserves :)

    --
    -- Ed Carp, N7EKG erc@pobox.com PGP KeyID: 0x0BD32C9B What I'm up to: http://intuitives.mine.nu
  96. vapourware by rasz · · Score: 1

    That is exactly what I think
    Even XBOX is more expensive than this, and XBOX is sld at a loss (last time it was $40 on every unit)

    1. Re:vapourware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The XBox contains a CPU from Intel, not VIA. It has a quite powerful GPU from NVidia, a real harddrive, a DVD drive and the power supply is of course included. It is not a particulary low end computer, just a little old by now.

      So it is quite reasonable that this unit costs less than the XBox. The production cost is probably less than half that of the XBox'.

  97. Skype by rasz · · Score: 1

    Yes, but we dont have the credit card that Skype would accept. Skype sux.

    1. Re:Skype by Guspaz · · Score: 1

      Skype supports MoneyBookers, who in turn support credit cards, domestic (UK) and international bank transfers, and even CHEQUES. In other words, if all else fails you can mail a cheque.

      Sorry sir, but you have no excuses. You are in fact the one who "sux" for whining about something you didn't bother looking in to.

    2. Re:Skype by rasz · · Score: 1

      SAkype suspended my account for trying to PAY them some MONEY ...
      My friend was trying to pay them with 3 CCs, all failed. If you dont know what am I talking about then go to Skype forum to look how Skype sux monkey balls. They got great product, but CC handling is nonexistnt.

  98. Sounds suspiciously like a calculator ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Calculator alert! No moving parts, long lasting, runs linux ... calculator!

  99. Re:Chinese (ugh) VIA is NOT Environmentally Friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not only that but in general VIA chipsets suck.

    Hmmm, the more I think about it, the more I realize many Chinese products suck horribly. I recently purchased an Iwill motherboard. The single most expensive mistake I've ever made.

  100. Re:Imagine... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish there was "Stupid" moderation. Especially since I have mod points right now.

  101. one question.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, what's powering the monitor?

  102. Redneck power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My question is does it have battery terminals on the back so all the rednecks can hook it to their car charger?

  103. Post is wrong by 2 orders of magnitude. by haggar · · Score: 4, Informative

    Typical flash today is good for a million writes per cell.

    You wish. It's more like 10.000. 1.000.000 is the figure for EEPROM, but there the access time is quite a bit longer.

    The second problem with Flash: the access is not on the "cell" level (I guess you meant each bit or addressable word), but by sector in the best case scenario. Sectored Flash RAM is a bit more expensive, and sectors tend to be large: 64 KBytes for an 8 Mbit (! MByte) Flash RAM, for example.

    --
    Sigged!
    1. Re:Post is wrong by 2 orders of magnitude. by sholden · · Score: 1

      SLC flash will give you 100,000 writes...

    2. Re:Post is wrong by 2 orders of magnitude. by Jeremi · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Even if you only can get 10,000 writes out of a flash chip, it still isn't necessarily a problem -- just split your drives into mostly-read-only drives (that hold your OS and your apps, and get written too only rarely) and personal-data-storage drives (which get written to often, but which you replace every few years anyway). Design your computer with two or three flash slots, and just leave the "OS/app flash" in all the time.


      (This assumes that you can read from the flash chips as much as you want, without wearing them out... hopefully that is the case)

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    3. Re:Post is wrong by 2 orders of magnitude. by haggar · · Score: 1

      You make it sound like your personal data was uninportant - who cares if you get soft errors on that.

      I would say that your personal data is more important than the OS + app data, because that can be easily recovered, while your own work can not, or at least not so easily.

      --
      Sigged!
    4. Re:Post is wrong by 2 orders of magnitude. by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      You make it sound like your personal data was uninportant - who cares if you get soft errors on that.


      It's not unimportant -- it's just that you would be constantly writing it to new cards anyway. The situation wouldn't be that much different than how it was with floppy disks (or even how it is now with hard drives). As long as your data has been moved to a new flash card every year or two, the old card can become a read-only backup before the card wears out.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    5. Re:Post is wrong by 2 orders of magnitude. by jejones · · Score: 2, Informative

      Typical flash today is good for a million writes per cell.

      You wish. It's more like 10.000. 1.000.000 is the figure for EEPROM, but there the access time is quite a bit longer.


      Googling for flash mtbf turns up this site, which claims 1e6 program/erase cycles and 1e6 hours MTBF, and this site, which claims 5e6 program/erase cycles and 1.8e6 hour MTBF for their 1 GB flash disc, 1.0e6 hour MTBF for their 6 GB flash disc. Others claim MTBF figures such as 5e5 and 8e5 hours.

    6. Re:Post is wrong by 2 orders of magnitude. by haggar · · Score: 1

      You have to look at how those figures are measured: they need to level the writes, and the Flahs must be well sectored. It also requres some additional Flash for rendundancy and some logic for error detection.

      In short, those drives are expenisve, while I thought we were talking about storage for a US $100 computer.

      --
      Sigged!
    7. Re:Post is wrong by 2 orders of magnitude. by haggar · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to argue with you on this. Perhaps it can be implemented in some way or the other, so that you back up your own data more frequently.

      However, I just realized that there is a solution already existing, which is not very expensive at all, and offers unlimited (or 10^8 writes at least, depending on the type of memory) writes at close to SRAM access times! It's called FRAM (or ferromagnetic RAM). An FRAM drive - now that's something I would love to see in all my computers.

      --
      Sigged!
    8. Re:Post is wrong by 2 orders of magnitude. by arodland · · Score: 1

      Don't use FRAM in your computer. The manual says you need to change it every 6 months or 12,000 miles.

  104. 100,000 will barely be enough for Slashdot alone! by D4C5CE · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The site claims they'll be available next month (minimum order 100,000 units)

    This the level that many retailers buy at. You're looking at Walmart, Target, Circuit City, Best Buy, etc., numbers.

    But first of all, just put it on ThinkGeek instead - with Slashdot's user base close to the 7-digits, and certainly more than one out of ten ready to pre-order at a month's wait or so, the "kick-off quantity" could easily be reached by buyers from this site alone: a Slashdot effect in development funding...

    And as the production lines just keep running, every first-world sale at $150 could subsidize a $50 half-price unit for countries that could otherwise hardly afford one even at $100.

  105. Re:Chinese (ugh) VIA is NOT Environmentally Friend by AndyL · · Score: 1

    If the 10 year old girl's parents were being paid a decent wage she wouldn't have to be a line worker or a prostitute.

  106. 1 Gig? by Nit+Picker · · Score: 1

    Is that with one gig or capable of holding one gig?

  107. What's wrong with the Nintendo DS? by Sai+Babu · · Score: 1

    Surely it's $100 or less in 100k quantities.
    It has a user interface and wireless and uses power efficiently.
    ARM9 and ARM7 should be plenty of power for education and FUN too.

    1. Re:What's wrong with the Nintendo DS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the problem with the Nintendo DS is just that it's so damn gay.

    2. Re:What's wrong with the Nintendo DS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dude, where's ur cultural sensitivity

  108. Re:Imagine... no radiation by pbhj · · Score: 1

    "Where there is much light there is also much shadow. -- Goethe"

    The above was the quote I got for this story ... sort of appropriate as solarpc displays (according to the site, see touchscreen section) emit no radiation! Even black holes can't do that!!

  109. who or what is Solar PC? by westlake · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I can't find any hard information about the company. Who are these people, do they have the financial backing and manufacturing capacity to build 100,000 units of anything? Is $100 their wholesale or retail target price, and do they have a realistic chance of hitting the mark?

    Slashdot has been quick to dismiss Windows XP Starter Edition as a competitor, localized and with a lot of help for first time users. Screenshots of SE suggest a very clean and attractive GUI.

    Microsoft is well known and accepted at street level in the third world, something an eastern buyer has to consider when commiting to a million-dollar purchase. I am not convinced that Linux is the right marketing decision for the SolarPC, however big the PR win in the western Linux press, where nothing is at risk.

  110. Yeah but.... by vwjeff · · Score: 1

    does it run Windows?

    *Ducks*

    *Picks up grenade and throws back*

    *Runs for cover*

  111. $200...NOT $100 by Danathar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I remember back in the 80's a quote by a former Commodore computer exec.. "Computers for the masses, not the classes".

    The price point that seemed to be "special" for the consumer (at least back then) was $200 bucks. We have to remember though that at that time when you bought a C64/Vic20 it did not come with ANY storage (sounds a lot like the unit above!) and hardly any apps (a couple of cartridges I think). And for display you hooked it up to a TV.

    Why can't that model work now? Are we SO used to having SVGA (or better) and Hard disks that an embedded computer (which is what the C64 and Vic20 was) can't make it?

    Over 25 MILLION C64's were produced. The person that can tap that same market again (el cheapo PC) can make $$$$

    http://http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commodore_64

  112. Fat computer nerd? Need to lose weight? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, get rid of all the computers in your house except one of these driven by a bike. Let's see how long those hacking sessions last now at the tune of some 20mph peddling :P Shed those pounds in no time.

  113. 'damn small' vs 'demi sized' by denniscpearce · · Score: 1

    everyone knows that this has always been 'damn small linux' except that article uses the linking text of "www.dslos.com" though it really goes to "www.damnsmalllinux.org". dslos.com is a working url, which is the same as the normal site except it says 'demi sized linux' in the title bar and elsewhere instead of 'damn small linux'.
    i thought maybe this 'demi sized' version of the name has been the clean version for a while, but a google search brings up nothing.
    i guess its not that bad but does this suggest that MS wanted the os to present itself in a 'cleaner' fashion, without the word "damn"?
    also why does the article point to the damn small version rather the the demi sized. maybe they just recently set up the domain or something and the dns hadnt fully moved over at time of publishing? although a whois on dslos.com shows it was registered on nov 4.
    (although note on that the whois.sc info on the site it shows 'desktop sized linux' as the title bar... i guess they arnt even sure what they want the clean version to be. wierd.)

    1. Re:'damn small' vs 'demi sized' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the damn name is going to damn the damn company. The creator of DSL wont budge

      a good product down the drain because of arogant owner. remember CP/M? lol

    2. Re:'damn small' vs 'demi sized' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that Damn Small Linux is a side project of the owner, more of a volunteer effort and less of a commercial product and as a GPL project is freely distributable both in Price ($0.00 US) and in license restrictions.

      Anyone who visits the website and reads the FAQ should know this.

  114. what are the specs? by cout · · Score: 1

    I wonder which cpu and how much memory these things are going to have. Their other mini-itx boxes start at $189 and have no memory, no HD, no flash, and use the cheapest ITX MB that via makes (the EPIA 5000):

    http://www.solarpc.com/compare.html
    http://205. 147.44.194/catalog/index.php?cPath=21

    So I wonder what they are going to do to cut their prices by $89 and still add RAM and flash memory? I wonder what their costs in producing PCs are currently? Maybe they are going to just make a marginal profit just to get their name out (and surely a lab full of solarlite's would go well with a nice $10K solarpc server).

    1. Re:what are the specs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was wondering how they can meet 10W. P4 consumes ~100W, P4M is ~40W, Duron is ~60W, celeron is ~60W transmeta is ~ 7W !!!

      even if they use transmeta, how are they going to power the flash and north/south bridges with only 3 damn watts?

      amazing feat indeed.

    2. Re:what are the specs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its VIA C3 @ 500Mhz, TDP ~ 5W !!

  115. Education doesn't require computers... by evilviper · · Score: 1
    This could change education all around the globe...

    I'm getting sick and tired of hearing this stupid crap over and over again.

    No matter how many computers you have, you aren't going to magically get any smarter. Your education system isn't going to suck any less. etc.

    Fact is, the more money you are spending on computers, the more likely it is you are taking money away from the programs that actually educate students.

    Just look at TVs and VCRs in every classroom. They also held the promise of revolutionizing the education system, but they really just gather dust year-round, and only get pulled-out when the teacher feels like wasting time with a movie, rather than teaching.

    Now, this isn't a rant against new technology. Frankly, if TVs were better used, they would make a vast improvement in the education system. Why the hell is it that everyone is still forced to spend weeks reading plays from Shakespeare, rather than watching them in a couple days?

    But I digress. Computers, like TVs before them, are getting used 99% of the time for entertainment purposes, and for practically nothing educational. Meanwhile, the idea that you must have computers to have educated students is sucking money from the places it can have real positive benefits.
    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  116. My IBM PC300 PL can do this by gelfling · · Score: 1

    My old PC300 PL which has a value of 100-200 bucks today can run W2K SP4 perfectly well. It has 288MB RAM a 40GB drive and a P2-450. Stock audio/video and for laughs I've replaced the free onboard NIC with a RealTek NIC that cost $0 after rebate.

    My even older PC750 with an AMD K62-400, 112MB RAM and 4GB and a 6GB drive, an AWE64 soundcard from the trash, stock video and another net zero cost NIC do a serviceable job for low end use.

  117. Nehemiah? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What an "interesting" choice of names for the processor used.. http://solarpc.com/compare.html

    I wonder if the name has any significance aside from them thinking "Oh cool, lets name it Nehemiah, oooh yeah sounds 1334! Nehemiah it is!"

    "Nehemiah, meaning comforted by Jehovah, was the son of Hachaliah of Judah. He was among the Jews of the exile to Babylon. After the Babylonian empire fell to the Persians, Nehemiah found himself as the royal cup-bearer in the palace of the Persian king Artaxerxes. That trusted and responsible position made possible Nehemiah's role in Bible History - being made the civil governor of Jerusalem, along with Ezra the priest.."

    Draw your own inferences..

  118. Serial by norkakn · · Score: 1

    If it has at least one serial port I'll probably buy one. I only know PPC assembly, so I'd love to see a hundred dollar small factor PPC system, but whatever, I'll either learn x86 or just do it in C if I could build stuff for 100$+periferals. You can get a 16x4 alpha/numeric LCD for $25, and the interface is pretty easy. I'd probably want an FPGA just to simplify the interface, so that's an extra 15$. But total, that's less than 150 to build whatever coo thing you could want and have it be car mountable. This could be awesome for robotics as well.

  119. Look back at an old WinAMP skin... by Lethyos · · Score: 1

    I think this is what you were looking for. ;)

    --
    Why bother.
  120. Wow!! 20 years later, back to $100 by RhettLivingston · · Score: 1

    My first computer was a Radio Shack CoCo II. I believe it ran about $149 in 1983 when I got it. I was a Computer Engineering student at the time and did my last 3 years worth of undergrad work using that computer. Without enhancement, it was only able to drive a 32x16 character screen, but with a little assembly language and a couple extra memory chips, I was able to build a more reasonable screen mode using the "high res" graphics mode.

    It's likely that you could make the same computer today for less than $20. And the challenge of dealing with something that low end would be a lot more educational than this $100 dream machine. It is the high expectations that we create that keep many out of the computer age. If they entered it where we entered, they'd find the going far easier.

  121. Re:Chinese (ugh) VIA is NOT Environmentally Friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Capitalism is hardly to blame for this. If you're so certain about the possibility of forming a business which would produce more upgradeable, reusable, and environmentally friendlier PCs to the consumer and you could successfully demonstrate that it would in fact lower their total cost of ownership, I'm sure the bigger companies would notice the trend you started and try to get in.

    Since you don't seem to have contributed to this effort yourself, rather than fuck society or fuck capitalism, I'd like to say fuck you.

  122. (offtopic) RETARDED MODs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (offtopic) Yeah... maybe that is INFORMATIVE for that DUMBASS...

    But is it INFORMATIVE for the REST OF US???? CAN TWO BRAIN CELLS SYNAPSE RIGHT THERE IN YOUR HEAD???

    I resisted to believe /. was full of morons...

    1. Re:(offtopic) RETARDED MODs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be new here.

    2. Re:(offtopic) RETARDED MODs by JackTinSD · · Score: 1

      Synapse 'sinaps: 1. Noun. The junction between two neurons (axon-to-dendrite) or between a neuron and a muscle. Using a noun as a verb? Grammatical faux-pas.

  123. Re:"green"? Phhbt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most computer PCBs are green in color so I fail to see your point. Unless SolarPC uses that ugly red color that ATI seems to be fond of.

    Most of the green colored substances that I can think of would make for a very poor capacitor.

    I checked my blood today and GASP! it contained chemicals too! Deoxyribonucleaic Acid, dissolved poisonous Carbon Dioxide Gas, and trace amounts of ethanol.

    Those evil computer companies are trying to kill me!

    They must be stopped!

  124. The threshold level is in the applications by Linuxathome · · Score: 1

    My personal opinion is that the device will not have widespread use until specific applications are developed (and are mature). For example, it definitely has a niche in the automobile industry (think portable mp3 player, dvd player, navigation, browser, etc.), in watercrafts (sailing navigation, fish finding, luxury boating etc.), in the medical industry (bedside browser, communication device, all-in-one), but for it to be a good seller in these markets, developers have to have a crack at it to make the software better than what one can find in the regular PC market. Because they're so inexpensive, it wouldn't hurt for the manufacturer to give the device to key developers in each niche market. That way, it'll get the snowball rolling -- more apps mean more users that in turn mean more consumers to buy the products.

  125. Third world 100,000? by epseps · · Score: 1

    I've been to a few places in the Third World and they are often hindered by government tariffs on electronics, (helpful hint: use your old laptop to help pay for your next trip to Ecuador by selling it in Ecuador) bad roads, and that unique third world IT marketing teqnique that can be best described as "get old hardware, fill it up with pirated software".

    But the roads and tarriffs will likely add alot of cost to these computers before the mystery of how they actually purchase old Compaq's can be cracked.

    On a positive note; at least the power consumption is low. Many big cities in third world contries have 8 + hour blackouts daily and this means computers must be run on diesel generators. Internet cafe's in Port Au Prince are really odd that you have to type e-mails by candlelight.

    I hope the plan succeeds.

  126. Re:Wow!! 20 years later, back to $100 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My first real computer (The $99.95 Timex Sinclair 1000 doesn't count) was also a COCO-2 but I am pretty sure that the price was over $200.00

    Of course, I got the super-duper EXTENDED BASIC model and later upgraded to 64K of RAM, of which only 32K could be accessed at one time.

    With a little work, you could probably dust off your old COCO-2, grab an OS-9 floppy disk, compile in a network interface and SLIP connection and actually surf the web with this thing.

    However, the target market here is not Computer Engineering students, it is computing and networking for general purpose use by people who have never used computers before.

    In other words, something more along the lines of introducing computers to grandpa & grandma or younger school age kids.

    I'm sure that the best and brightest will learn and explore the inner workings of their computer's software and hardware just like yourself, but it would be unfair to exclude everyone else in the name of creating an educational challenge just to use the darn thing.

  127. don't forget by oliverthered · · Score: 1

    You can use battery backed up sdram for home and do a backup onto your flash device to reduce the number of writes.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  128. Cool, by oliverthered · · Score: 1

    in car mp3 player here we come.
    I think the 10what vesion should be good enough to play mp3s.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    1. Re:Cool, by cpghost · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think the 10what vesion should be good enough to play mp3s.

      It is! I've used to play mp3s (with mpg123) on an old Pentium 200 MHz running FreeBSD (with X and all), and the load average didn't even exceed 0.20 or so. Even while running 'make buildworld' did mpg123 perform very well! Considering that my Soekris net4801 runs at 266 MHz and uses approx. 5 Watts, I'm pretty sure that the 10 Watt version will do just fine.

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  129. I still don't see what is so special.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Sure 100 bucks is cheap.....but these days you can go online and buy a complete used system for 100 bucks...thats with at least 64 mb ram...10 gig hdd and fairly decent video card and more.
    If you want to save the enviroment the best way is to recycle used computers.

    Look at this place for example...most everything they sell is used.. computer geeks

  130. I dunno where you're getting this by BattyMan · · Score: 2, Informative

    but I guess it doesn't really contribute much to your statement anyway....

    Back in the 80's, there was only one supplier of x86 processors into the pc marketplace.

    That's just plain wrong.

    The neatest of several 8086 chips was the NEC V20/30, which not only was a drop-in replacement for the 8088/86, but had a switch in its flags which, when set, would make it act like an 8085 (or maybe it was a Z80, I forget which). With a little software (called UniDOS) which provided a special CP/M BIOS, this could run practically ALL the legacy CP/M software (which was abundant in 1983) without modifications, on a PC. NEC built a PC clone with a 16-bit data bus which could have used the 8086, but with their V30 this not only ran DoS at about twice the speed of an IBM-PC, it would also blaze through CP/M software at seemingly demonic speed. Jerry Pournelle usta rave about this rig, because it allowed him to keep his favorite CP/M text editor while upgraging to the new PC technology.

    I digress. AMD had a technology exchange agreement with Intel (in the late 70's, supposed to last 25 years) to share x86 IP. (Among other exchanges,) AMD got the 8086/88 and Intel got the small masks for the 2732A (that's a 32 Kbit UVEPROM, organized as 4KBytes at 350 & 250 nS) which were half the size of theirs. AMD consistently dieshrank, outyielded, outperformed, and outpriced Intel on the 8085, 8086/88, 80186/88, 80286, and 80386. (I used to have price lists to prove this stuff, before the SO made me reduce the size of my "legacy hardware library".) I remember buying cheap 12MHz 80286 motherboards (at $179 when most were over $200) that came equipped with 10MHz Intel 80286 CPUs and crashed when these overheated. I replaced the CPUs with AMD 80286LP-12s which co$t le$$ than the 10MHz Intel 80286s and ran frosty cool, but at $40 they killed the low price of the deal. AMD sold 40MHz 80386 chips while Intel abandoned it at 32MHz and introduced the 80486, early versions of which (at 25MHz) could not keep up with the 40MHz AMD 80386 (and, of course, co$t much more). Several other pretty recognizable guys like Cyrix, IBM, and TI also built the 80386 & 80486. I remember buying a Cyrix 80387 that was half the price of Intel's and outperformed it, partly because it worked beside an AMD 80386-40.

    Intel determined (unilaterally) that the 8086-family technology exchange agreement did not extend to the 80486, and refused to give the masks to AMD, AMD sued and won. With the "Pentium", Intel abandoned the 8086 series part numbers (critical to the court decision) so they did not have to give it to AMD, and it took AMD many moons to reverse engineer it. 120MHz AMD 80486s (Intel never made them past 100MHz) outperformed the original 50MHz Pentuims, but the 100MHz Pentium, coupled with the new WinBloze 95(tm)(r)(C) "Operating System" did away with the 486. When Intel introduced the MMX extensions, they refused to completely document them, and this gave AMD additional RE headaches. Coupled with billion$ in mass media advertizing, Intel became the name-brand CPU, even though AMD's have generally been as good or better, and always cheaper.

    Processors were EXPENSIVE by today's standards.

    You coulda fooled me. As I mentioned above, I bought AMD 80286-12s for $44, when Intel's sold for about $60 (top speed of the day was 20 MHz at $100). What does a P4 co$t? A motherboard with CPU and without RAM co$t about $200, is that really much more than we're paying now? Enough RAM to run it co$t $50, to really load it up co$t $100-$200, that hasn't changed, though of course the size and speed have done dramatic things. It's the iron that was expen$ive. Hard di$k$ used to co$t $250! Now they're more like $125.

    To be sure, AMD does exert considerable price pressure on Intel. Without them, you would see expensive CPUs.

    Your statement makes more sense in the context of complete systems.

    For a year or two, IBM enjoyed a monopoly on the PC. They got $1

    --
    Exceeding the recommended torque is not recommended.
  131. ThinkNIC again? by NoDoZ · · Score: 2, Informative

    Anone remember the thinknic? it was cheap, low power, ran linux..

    It was a few years ago, and it booted off the CD-ROM, and had like 4m of flash for bookmarks/emails etc. pretty basic machine, but essentially the same idea of these things. The ThinkNICs didn't last very long before the company went out of biz, why would this one do any better?

  132. "Gym Work" is an exaggeration by BattyMan · · Score: 2, Informative

    Get on an excercise bike serious enough to have an electronic load and a power readout, and see how trivial 50 watts really really is.

    A bicycle racer makes about 3/4 horsepower (to go 28 MPH).

    One horsepower is IMU something like 785 Watts. Translation of this to SI units is left as an excercise for the reader.

    I found 300 Watts to be a semi-sustainable pace, four years after buying a car and parking my bikes. It would have been quite easy when I was riding 10-15 miles a day (at around 20 MPH).

    The above discussion about massive banks of slaves on generator bikes was ridiculous. Two decently-nourished slaves could easily power a w1K3d game system.

    --
    Exceeding the recommended torque is not recommended.
  133. I'm pretty sure it takes a LOT more than 20W by BattyMan · · Score: 1

    to run an XboX.

    Powering the thing is a _serious_ issue in the third world, where electricity is either unavailable or relatively expensive, and $1 is a day's income - IF you have a job which pays money, which most do not.

    I can't imagine what the people in the farming villages would do with a computer anyway, without an Internet connection, which is out of the question. Outside of a city, land lines are nonexistant. A satellite link is about the only connection, and co$t$ $80/month, which would be a significant fraction of the income of a village. Someone else mentioned that it would take an entire village to come up with $100, and that's not an exaggeration. What these villages could _really_ use might be: 1. Power Line Modems (for the ones which _have_ power) and 2. Wireless ethernet, with directional antennas capable of links of several miles. OH - and, solar power, definately.

    Maybe in town, where DSL is available and jobs are more common, a DSL connection might be affordable if shared between a dozen households. Maybe. The rich kids paying $.60/hr in parlors to play multiplayer FPS won't be interested in this box.

    School kids might use these (in town & out, without Internet), but they won't touch 'em without WinBloze, especially when their teachers issue and expect Word documents. Forget the co$t of M$, they pay $3 for a bootleg, and the Emperor is fine with that. Ballmer wants a $100 _PC_ to insure Imperial penetration into these markets, (especially the schools,) before that horrible GPL software, on some cheaper platform, can get a foothold.

    The BIG question is not "Will it run Linux?", but "Will it run LoseXP?"

    --
    Exceeding the recommended torque is not recommended.
  134. the real plan. by DeathByDuke · · Score: 0

    $100 with Linux. $250 with Windows.

  135. Now, usually, I don't do this but uh.... by sanityspeech · · Score: 1

    If you think paying $100 for a "Lead-Free" PC is a good idea, then you might be unfamiliar with the "Tin Whiskers Alert" issued by the University of Maryland.

    For what it's worth, an Independence Day weekend article posted "here" provides a preview of what can be expected due to the proliferation of such hardware.

    Bottom line, THERE IS NO FREE LUNCH!!!

  136. What about a... by Mythrix · · Score: 1

    ...dancemat keyboard?

  137. Car Computer by Barryke · · Score: 1

    Hmmm.. !
    It sounds to me as the perfect computer to build in my car.

    From the article:
    - Book sized (9" x 7" x 1.75") machine that weighs approximately three pounds.
    - It features a rugged no-moving-parts design that includes a Compact Flash drive.
    - Operates on 12 volt DC power and can be run from a car battery.
    - The article states its quiet.

    The SolarLite uses 10 watts of energy, does that compromise my car battery performance - or is it insignificant?

    --
    Hivemind harvest in progress..
  138. Re:Chinese (ugh) VIA is NOT Environmentally Friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And if Wal-Mart wasn't always looking for the lowest prices every day, maybe her parents would be paid a decent wage.

  139. Re:100,000 will barely be enough for Slashdot alon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1 in 10 ? 1 in 10 ? Not nearly. First of all, many of those million UIDs are abandoned accounts, where the user has disappeared or had to start another one. Huge swaths of the UID space have been taken up by people attempting to get a particular UID by bumping the count up to there. Then there are attempts like ClitArmy1 through ClitArmy1000 which are 1000 script controlled accounts created for the purpose of posting Old Ike into a story thousands of times.

    Second of all, not 1 in 10 geeks would buy this.

    Some, however, might buy more than one.

  140. For accuracy, slow down when you type. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AMD sold 40MHz 80386 chips while Intel abandoned it at 32MHz and introduced the 80486, early versions of which (at 25MHz) could not keep up with the 40MHz AMD 80386

    That's 33MHz, but an excellent overview otherwise.

    gewg_

  141. This is a great eco dev product by bob+in+ny · · Score: 0

    I like the sound of this product a lot. Many economic development initiatives -- the distribution of pharmaceuticals in third world countries for example -- are based on retail store designs that have no point-of-sale check/customer-member management system. This sounds like exactly the right kind of product for that kind of application -- which could be critical in improving delivery of health care throughout Africa through existing initiatives.

  142. But LOOK at its specs! by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1

    It's made of SOY BEANS! How can you beat that?

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
  143. Well actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    less could be appropiate in this case due to the cycling...

  144. Faulty Logic by thegnu · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure one failed attempt at something = impossibility. Things that might be different about this PC:

    1.- Linux has gotten better by leaps and bounds.
    2.- Flash memory is cheaper, and this machine probably has more.
    3.- Dude, it can run off solar. Or a car battery. Or your bicycle. Which makes it perfect for people on farms, people camping, and, well, people.
    4.- It costs 100 dollars.
    5.- The market is different.
    6.- The marketer is different.

    I can go on, but I won't. It's a different situation.

    --
    Please stop stalking me, bro.
  145. Solar at SCALE 3x by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As the post these units will be demoed at the Southern California Linux Expo (SCALE 3x) If you're interested in coming use the promo code "NEWSP" for a discount.

  146. Ballmer doesn't deserve credit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This guy only does the talking, not the ability necessary to make $100PC work (without removing Windoze). Last time I checked, Windoze costs more than $100USD per licence.