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Low-Cost Board Runs Linux, Google Apps

An anonymous reader writes to mention that hardware hacking enthusiasts can now get their hands on the guts of the Everex TC2502 Linux PC for just $60 (USD). The compact x86-compatible "gOS Dev Board" offers a lightweight Linux-based OS designed for use with Google Apps. " Along with a Firefox browser supporting the Google toolbar, gOS includes local productivity applications, such as OpenOffice.org. However, its main goal is "coherently packaging Google Apps to give users the idea that they can use Google as their main environment," explained Paul Kim, of Everex. "

15 of 152 comments (clear)

  1. That's a smoking deal by stoolpigeon · · Score: 3, Informative

    Throw that bad boy in a nice case with some ram and a decent hard drive, and it's not a bad deal. You could probably put together a machine with maxed out ram, decent storage and a much more attractive case for the same amount if not less than you'd pay for the Walmart version. And while the processor isn't a powerhouse, I'm sure any distro could do allright on there. Gentoo might not be the best choice, but otherwise... (Just kidding there. While the gentoo crowds seem to have calmed - it really was a joke.)

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    1. Re:That's a smoking deal by houstonbofh · · Score: 4, Informative

      The form factor is to big to fit in the really small cases (mini-atx) and too small to expand in a big case. Besides, motherboard CPU combos at about this price with more performance are not uncommon. http://www.directron.com/nf61sm7comb58.html Nothing really special about this but the Google tag.

    2. Re:That's a smoking deal by TopSpin · · Score: 5, Informative

      http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813135057

      $9 more, NVidia graphics processor, Athlon 3200+, same 0-MB of RAM...

      You'll need a heat sink. Avoid installing >1 DIMM. Does that qualify as 'close'?

      --
      Lurking at the bottom of the gravity well, getting old
  2. The Artist Formerly Known as "Thin Client" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "a lightweight...OS designed for use with [web apps]"

    aka: Thin Client

    Coming soon to a handset near you! Oh, wait...

  3. I don't get it by LaughingCoder · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What exactly is the BIG DEAL? I would still need to buy a disk drive ($50), some RAM ($30), a box/supply ($30), a monitor ($100), a keyboard and mouse ($20), and perhaps some speakers ($15) ... the motherboard and CPU are no longer the major expense in putting together a PC. Heck, newegg has the Celeron D315 (2.26GHz) for $38, and an MSI barebones system (box, 300W power supply, motherboard) for $70. Add in another $100 for HD/RAM/KB/Mouse an you have a pretty decent system for $208.

    --
    The more you regulate a company, the worse its products become.
    1. Re:I don't get it by DragonWriter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The $60 you can spend buying this overstock holdover from 2004 can get your a better motherboard + CPU.


      Most of the alternatives people have posted that are similar in price have some advantages and some disadvantages. None seem to be clearly and unquestionably "better" in every way, just different and in the same general ballpark. So perhaps its not outstanding, just another low-cost option that's well supported in Linux. Which, unsurprisingly enough, is somewhat interesting to a substantial part of the Slashdot crowd.

      It's just a slow-ass VIA-based Mini-ITX motherboad.


      Micro-ATX, actually.

      The fact that Walmart is selling something based on it should already be a warning sign.


      I suppose that we should be suspicious of Linux, too, then...
    2. Re:I don't get it by mrand · · Score: 3, Interesting

      know I've got a 20-pin PC Power & Cooling PSU just itching to get back in the game, and some old DDR2 RAM as well. They're crying out, I tells ya!

      What do you mean old DDR2? How can it be old when DDR2 wasn't introduced but four years ago!? I don't own ANY DDR2 memory (or DDR3), much less any old DDR2.

      Now, I do have 128 or 256 MB of EDO DRAM, a 700 MB SCSI hard drive (cost me around $1k in 1992), and a real AT-style keyboard (with big connector) that I wouldn't mind putting back into service... or we could go back further in the closet and gut the AT-compatible by tossing the 10 MHz 286 motherboard, and use its 70 MB hard drive from ~1987. I think I'll pass on trying to make use of the TRS-80/Tandy 16b with its full-height 12 MB hard drive. Some things are just not worth it, even to a nerd.

            Marc
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      -- PGP keyID: 0x4C95994D
  4. Wow by teknopurge · · Score: 4, Funny

    From the article:

    "..but with the lightweight Enlightenment window manager instead of heavy Gnome/KDE desktops. "

    I never thought I would live to see the day.....

  5. "dev board" ? by MrTrick · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is just a motherboard, with a C7 processor already attached to it. No memory, no non-volatile storage...

    According to TFA, it "comes with gOS", but gOS doesn't sit anywhere on this 'dev board', it has to be installed onto a regular hard drive just like a normal computer.

    Bad article. It's not a dev board, it's an entirely normal mobo. The ONLY thing about it that is even remotely special is that there are linux drivers for all its components.

    If it were a dev board I'd want at least some attached flash storage, and some interesting pin headers.

    1. Re:"dev board" ? by jmorris42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > This is just a motherboard, with a C7 processor...

      Ya, that was my problem with the piece too, no reason for it to be on linuxdevices since it is just another Via Mobo+CPU deal, this time blown up to the MicroATX form factor instead of the Mini-ITX VIA normally prefers. $60 for Mobo and CPU is OK I guess but not especially newsworthy.

      "Devel" board to me implies something to develop for an embedded 'target'. What is the target system this board aims at? A PC running an x86 Linux isn't embedded computing. It isn't new, interesting or different. Linux on x86 is now mainstream. A decade ago a commercial outfit pushing Linux systems would have been newsworthy.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
  6. Enlightenment is lightweight nowadays? by jfim · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The gOS distribution [...] is based on the just-released Ubuntu 7.10 ("Gutsy Gibbon") distro, but with the lightweight Enlightenment window manager instead of heavy Gnome/KDE desktops.
    Enlightenment is lightweight nowadays? Is it because Enlightenment improved or because Gnome/KDE got bigger? I remember it being quite unstable/slow a decade ago, but how have things changed in E?
  7. Hahaha Dev Board... whatever... by andreyw · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Apparently the only thing you need to peddle low-performing VIA-based crap these days is just to call it a "Dev Board". Hardware hack? What hardware hack? This is a basic run-off-the-mill PC motherboard. With a sloooowwww C7. If you're not hardware-modding your existing motherboards (via SMBus devices, or something else...) you are NOT MODIFYING THIS ONE EITHER.

    "This is not a "low-cost board running Linux"... this is "a run-of-the-mill PC that can run Linux". And you're kidding yourself if you think that you cannot buy the same motherboard cheaper by going around these wily marketeers. What joke... and a slashvertisement. Buy Everex! Google in Everyone's Home!

    Let's see what it DOESN'T have... This is like, seriously, 2004 tech here...
    1) No gigabit.
    2) Questionable AGP chipset
    3) See 2 - No PCIe, given this is AGP.
    4) VGA? At least not CGA...
    5) Lots of legacy I/O ports no one cares about.

    If you think you cannot by a BETTER motherboard for $60 is... well... I want some of whatever it is that you're smoking.

  8. micro-atx is (yawn) boring by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 3, Interesting

    teh new hotness(tm) is mini-itx or even smaller.

    I called the local walmart to see if they had that cheapie pc in stock. they didn't. I didn't want to wait and I wanted to see what all this low-power VIA stuff was about.

    so I got a true mini-ITX system which is using the same c7 cpu: http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2010/1890660635_273662e3c9_o.jpg

    note, it DOES RUN HOT. I am not kidding. I bought it as a fanless system to run myth-tv back-end on. it does - and it captures 2 HD streams ok over 10/100 VIA ethernet. but the heatsink runs VERY hot to the touch. no way could I even use a cover on that system for more than 15 minutes before it overheats.

    if you plan to use that c7 cpu in something 'real', you better have good cooling.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  9. Re:Cheap Cluster? by vrmlguy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The cheapest way to play with a Beowulf cluster is to set one up a cluster of virtual machines, using Xen or VMware. I'm more familar with the VMware products, so I'll describe them. You don't want VMware Player, since it is optimized to provide good graphics for playing games and the like. Instead you want VMware Server, which only supports standard VGA but is optimized to run lots of VMs in the background. Both of these are free, btw. Once you have your hypervisor set up, install several identical single-core VMs. Try for twice as many VMs as you have real processor cores. You almost certainly want to do this on a 2-way or 4-way processor, to get plenty of multiprocessing. You don't want to set up multi-core VMs, because they tend to perform much worse than virtual single-cores. "Attach" everything to a virtual switch than isn't connected to the outside world. Now you can experiment with all sorts of Beowulf configurations. Only when you get something that you like (say, for ray tracing) should you consider translating it into real hardware.

    --
    Nothing for 6-digit uids?
  10. Where's one that takes a 12V supply? by rhyre417 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The ATX-style powersupply is a pain to add in.

    I want an inexpensive board like this that takes a 12V supply, or
    a PC hd connector like the FPGA boards out there from http://www.digilentinc.com/

    It would be easier to put these in autos or stack them up for
    robotics projects that way.

    - Ralph