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Meet the 5-Watt, Tiny, fit–PC

ThinSkin writes "Meet the fit-PC, a tiny 4.7 x 4.5 x 1.5-inch PC that only draws 5-watts, consuming in a day less power than a traditional PC consumes in one hour. By today's standards, the fit-PC has very little horsepower, which makes it apt for web browsing and light applications; today's games need not apply. Loyd Case over at ExtremeTech reviews the fit-PC and puts it through its paces, noting that performance is not this PC's strength, but rather its small size and price tag of $285."

6 of 310 comments (clear)

  1. No point in this. Get a laptop! by linuxguy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My core 2 Duo based laptop with 2 GBs of RAM eats 18 watts with *screen turned on*!

    Laptops are really really cheap these days. I bought an Acer laptop for a family member, brand new from CompUSA, last month for $350 (It has an Intel CPU I forget which one). It will probably run circles around this thing and costs about the same (once you include the $40 shipping cost on fit PC) and consumes little additional power.

    What is the point of this fit PC again?

  2. Fantastic for solar setups by inflex · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This would be great for a lot of situations where you're using solar power to manage devices and want a WWW frontend or such. Could run this on a 10W ($100) panel without too much trouble.

  3. Re:Compare it with... by RalphBNumbers · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Actually, the iPhone or the iPod Touch might be a closer comparison imho. The 5watt PC is a good deal less powerful (in both senses of the word) than the mac mini.

    Of course, I know which one I'd take, if given the choice. For my money, getting a 5w computer is kinda pointless when I'm expected to hook it up to a desktop LCD which could easily use more than 10 times that much power.

    Just for giggles, here's a point by point comparison:
    5 watt PC vs iPhone/iPod Touch
    $285 and up vs $299 and up
    AMD Geode LX800 CPU @ 500 MHz vs ARM @ ~620Mhz
    256 MB DDR (non expandable) vs 128MB? (non expandable)
    40 GB 2.5" Hard disk vs 4,8 or 16 GB flash drive
    Dual 100 Mbps Ethernet vs 802.11b/g, plus GSM/EDGE on iPhone
    SXGA controller, 640x480 to 1920x1440 vs 320x480 built in multi-touch display and 480i or 576i video out
    Two USB 2.0 high speed ports vs iPod dock port
    Speaker and microphone interface vs Speaker and microphone built i on iPhone, plus headphone/mic jack
    RS-232 serial port via RJ11 connector vs none
    Single 5V supply, 3-5 watt, fanless vs battery operated, fanless?
    120 x 116 x 40 mm, 450 gram vs 115 x 61 x 11.6mm 135g iPhone or 110 x 61.8 x 8mm 120g iPod

    --
    "The worst tyrannies were the ones where a governance required its own logic on every embedded node." - Vernor Vinge
  4. Re:Compare it with... by Trinn · · Score: 3, Interesting

    one glitch there, the iPhone ARM core is at 400MHz not 620, though it does still perform quite well

  5. Re:Compare it with... by 644bd346996 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Mac Mini: 1.83 Ghz Core 2 Duo
    Tiny-PC: 500Mhz Geode

    Looks like about an eighth the processor and a quarter the RAM, for more than a third of the price.

  6. Not $285; try $325. Go VIA instead... by SuperBanana · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Another lovely company that tricks you with outrageous shipping costs to artificially drop the "price" of the computer. Also, check out the super friendly support and warranty policies.

    Do yourselves a favor and get a VIA-based mini-itx board for that kind of money.

    Seems you can get a VB7001G (1.5Ghz) for about $130; add in $30 for 512MB of ram (2x the fitPC), and however much you feel like spending on a compactflash card, USB memory key, or smaller laptop drive. Say, $50 for a 60GB drive (more than the fitPC's 40). $40 for a picoPSU; $30 for a AC adapter. Buy a crap case for $30 if you don't have one you can use already. Install a gigabit NIC for under $20 (dunno if there are any cheap dual-interface gigabit NICs.) That's under $310, and quite a bit more bang for the buck. It probably won't be 5w, but it'll be well under 20w given that board seems to use about 10w.

    If you want to go even cheaper, intel is fighting back against via, like with the D201GLY. It's $70, 1.3ghz celeron, DDR2 ram...