Can REDFLY sell in an EeePC market?
palmsolo (aka Matthew Miller) writes "I was lucky enough to get a chance to evaluate an early beta of the REDFLY device and just posted some initial impressions at ZDNet. As a person who commutes on the train 2 hours every day and usually always has a Windows Mobile device in tow, this is actually a perfect device for me; real productivity is possible with text entry and enjoy surfing on a larger display. However, at $500 can this device really compete in the Asus EeePC market or will it die like the Palm Foleo?"
it costs more than the eee pc and has less funtionality. I'm thinking no. As someone who has a windows mobile phone provided by my employer let me just say that they suck. They are slow, buggy and make for a terrible phone and a nearly as bad pda. How they ever came to be more prevalent than palm - I don't know- the ease of using with exchange maybe? I really don't know because everyone I know who has one (my whole team of 9 people and many others in my department) hates it. The company provides them so we use them, but seriously - they are awful. So spending 500 bucks to get a little bit bigger screen and keyboard doesn't really sound like a great idea to me.
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?
...will the Asus EeePC fail in the laptop market and render the entire discussion irrelevant?
Well it's a 2 pound, fully functional computer with a bunch of standard features you'd find on a laptop so that's pretty cool. But why is it suddenly some sort of innovation to see who can squeeze by an almost normal computer with pathetic hardware? If they were able to put something comparable to even an AMD X2 processor into it, these things would be crazy popular! But I guess if you don't plan on bringing it everywhere and using it as a full business laptop, and just wanna do basic stuff on it then your expectations will probably be met. As for me, I want to carry around something faster than my PC but maybe that's just me lol. And before anyone says it, yes it's all because of battery life. I have severe battery-run-out-ophobia when it comes to mobile devices too but shouldn't the new inventions be really, really good batteries and efficient hardware not the slowest portable they can still force to run an OS?
Google's Super Secret Search Algorithm: SELECT @search_results FROM internet WHERE @search_results = 'good'
"I am Palm Foleo. I need TP for my bum hole."
If it can run Linux with Compiz, possibly. Here is an ASUS eee (eeePC) with Linux running Compiz http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=biRzKj3XxCY with graphics far more impressive than anything Vista can ever achieve, with or without Service Pack 1 (SP1). That VideoTube link shows an eee (eeepc) link running graphics super and more user friendly than Vista. OK, you can have the ASUS eee with the old-fashioned XP (i.e. yesterday's version), but then you have to Pay MORE THAN $100!!! Go figure what is the best choice for you...
Colin Cook (CTO of Celio, makers of Redfly) came to speak to our Information Technology guest lecture class at BYU, so I've seen this thing in action.
I asked them about computers like the EEE PC and there was a definite brief look of worry, then he claimed that people didn't want to carry around a whole extra computer, and that by being able to keep the PDA on your person, the Redfly would be more secure than a laptop which you might leave in a bag or briefcase. He also said that the target customer (Windows PDA users) wouldn't want to buy an EEE PC because it had Linux on it.
He also seemed to get slightly flustered when I informed him that you could buy EEE PCs with Windows on them.
I think that when they started working on this project, there was a need and a market for it, but now that it's almost ready their market has disappeared because functional affordable UMPCs are finally on the market. That said, it was kind of neat, but not $500 neat. Maybe PDA accessory neat($50-$100).
https://www.facebook.com/digitizeicm -- Show your support for the digitization of the Iron County Miner newspaper archiv
I have loaded my eeePC device with a Web Server and 2 databases and use if for development work on the road and keeping up with emails. I just don't see that a keyboard and screen that plug into a PDA are going to compete with that. This has way more functionality than my PDA and is a great cross between a laptop and PDA. Sorry Matthew it's no contest.
Plus are you going to sit on a train juggling a display, a keyboard, a mouse, and a PDA.
He who said 1,000,000 monkeys on 1,000,000 typewriters would eventually type the great novel, never saw an AOL chat room
Touch iPod has wireless, email, web browsing and soon VOIP. It also has a patch coming out to integrate it better with Exchange servers. Why would you need anything more than that? Need a phone too? Get the iPhone.
This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
Am I reading this right? Is this thing just a glorified keyboard and monitor? For $500? I could get a crappy laptop for that much.
One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
... and it might have a chance.
Lame idea. Lame implementation. Expensive. Glad I'm not an investor in their company.
Cellular carriers, you mean ATT - that little company that did not want people using 300 baud modems? That would explain everthing about the US market but iPhone. Even iPhone is understandable when you hear about multiple thousand dollar "data" bills.
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=216934&cid=17629948
Do not, I repeat, DO NOT REQUIRE a smartphone to use said sub-laptop. You are missing the point entirely. The EEE pc doesn't require you to have a pricey smart phone, nor a potentially pricey data plan to use. It has this wonderful concept of not requiring it at all. That's what bewlidered me on the ill-fated Foleo. Why spend so many dollars that is a parasitic device where you can just get a laptop already?
These convergence devices bug me to a certain point. I turned off my wireless data plan and opted for a plain-jane phone when I realized I never used it enough to justify its cost. So with the few poeple like me that are cheapskates when it comes to a cell phone, you lost a customer if your 'top requires it. What if I just want to use existing free wifi spots or just go offline to whip up some notes or play games?
Let's not add a needless layer of complication to the equation. Pricing it to $100 less than a real laptop is just asking for failure. So if you sell off your cell phone, do you sell off the redfly as well?
What's this?! Folio II?!
I usually always mostly kinda for the most part often more or less totally believe and completely guarantee that I am entirely certain of the definite possibility that >.
Thanks for sharing. I did not know Xubuntu did that or that it would give accelerated graphics support. Xandros on it's own is great for most people but this video shows what is on the way. Windows mobile won't be able to hold a candle to the next generation of Linux devices.
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=216934&cid=17629948
Right there is enough for me to not even consider it. I bought a laptop with a Geforce 8400, 2 GB or ram, and a dual core processor for $600. Why the hell would I spend $500 on a crippled machine like Redfly?
I'm not sure if it'd compete well or not, but posting it on slashdot surely doesn't hurt.
I'd rather just have software that lets me do the same thing on my laptop. Why would I want to carry yet another device? I love my Motorola Q but if I wanted to use it in this manner I'd figure out a way to use it with my laptop, which I have to carry with me on business anyways.
Not that that's a bad thing. I don't see why you can't attach it to anything that's a USB master, say a Linux smartphone, or use it as a dumb terminal for a desktop system.
Nothing for 6-digit uids?
I made out better forking over $500 for an EEE PC, a 2 gig ram upgrade, 16gig SD drive, and USB drive enclosure.
The USB enclosure made nice with my spare DVD drive and let me put XP on my EEE which lets me do work things and have fun with Doom and Quake when I'm waiting at the car shop while my car gets its regular maintenance done.
If you don't have a spare copy of XP like I did then you'd have to fork out another $200 for it. Still.. thats a whole PC for something the size of this dumb terminal (It doesn't appear to be a complete system to me.)
If anything it'd be nice for exiting mobile device users but only if the price was like $100-200 I feel.. I wouldn't fork over $300-500 for it.
~~ Behold the flying cow with a rail gun! ~~
Im my eyes like something from out of 1993. Old and ugly, with a rather poor operating system. It has ZERO chance in the market place.
Beauty is in the beholder of the eye.
If they had an advertising budget to shout like Apple does AND Microsoft coordinated market activities with them, then I'd say they have a 50/50 chance.
I may be the only one who has dealt with Microsoft when they promise a vendor big things in order to get a Microsoft-reliant product to market, then mysteriously all of the promises evaporate.
What makes matters worse, is Microsoft's OEM OS business will screw new device makers every time. You bet Microsoft will choose the probable volume of the EEPC versus this device developer. New device makers have to go to the OEM's to get their design produced anyway.
Today's lesson: choosing Microsoft products for your start-up company's new-fangled device is baaaad business. If you have success with another OS first, revisit a Microsoft configuration.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
I can see the appeal of the EEE PC, because it's small, cheap, and PC compatible. You can even load Windows on there if you're so motivated. From design to application, it's a mini-laptop.
Redfly is small-ish, but it's not cheap, and it runs Windows Mobile. That makes it a bastard PDA, and the industry has proven time and time again that PDAs suck, and PDA phones are just bulky overpriced phones with crap features. No love.
At $500, it's within kicking distance of many cheap full-featured laptops from ECS and Acer, even Dell! If you really want to be a road warrior and get some work done on the bus, you don't want an oversized Blackberry, you want a real laptop! With a real keyboard, real apps and 100% compatibility with your existing software investment and infrastructure. The hardware is peanuts these days, it's all about the software.
-Billco, Fnarg.com
http://www.openmoko.com/
http://wiki.openmoko.org/
Cheaper, open from top to bottom, and you can do anything on it that a 400 mhz ARM linux computer can do.
As a bonus, super high dpi screen (480x640, 2.8"), GPS, full bluetooth (not that watered-down, headset-only crap most phones come with), 802.11 g, two accelerometers for potential phone-as-magic-wand fun, and of course it's not locked to any carrier and you get a linux terminal.
Downsides: about one month still until release (now you can only get the Neo1973 with no accelerometers or wi-fi), only GPRS for mobile internet (no EDGE or 3G), software still in alpha-beta until later this year.
BTW: is someone on the slashdot coding staff aware of the bug where preview resets your subject line to that of the parent? This is on Firefox 2.0.0.12 on Windows 2000 if it matters.
Palm made the often fatal mistake of resting on their laurels because they were the top dog. This is a bad idea in business in general, but a particular bad idea if Microsoft is after your market. For whatever else you want to say about Microsoft, they are highly tenacious. If they believe there is a market they can compete in, they just keep trying. Many companies will roll out an unsuccessful product and go "Oh well, guess we can't compete," and pack up and leave that market alone. MS doesn't do that, they ask "What do we need to fix?" and then try again, and again, and again.
So sure, when Windows CE first came out, I can see how Palm thought it was laughable because it was. The problem comes from assuming that is all MS will ever put out. Well, no. With each version they learned more about what they needed to do. Pretty soon CE had surpassed PalmOS and Palm was scrambling to catch up.
In business in general you can't just sit stagnant and assume nobody will surpass you, but when MS enters the market that is particularly true. They have numerous times released a product that was quite poor in its first version, only to continue to refine it to the point that it surpasses it's competition.
If I get this thing right, all it does is redisplay what's on your Smartphone, it doesn't even have its own OS. For $500, they could build it with a license for Windows CE and it would actually work without the smartphone... or better yet, they could include the phone hardware and it would be a smartphone. However, this was tried already, to some degree, with the Handheld PC Pro devices way back in the history of Windows CE - check out the IBM Workpad z50 for an example. Those retailed for around $500 as well, but at least they included Windows CE so that you could use them to actually do some work. Unfortunately, they never took off... which is where I think this device is headed as well.
though slamming plans without user consent only results in bills with multiple hundred dollar charges, it's a common fraud. The provider changes your plan based on your usage to maximize their profits. Given their access to records and other tools you don't have, this is a rip off even when they call and ask in advance. The iPhone offers more services and more chances of doing that.
The "unlimited" EDGE plan was created in response to a lot of bad press about huge bills. That's a good change but it hardly amounts to a good deal per byte. The plan slam to accompany the service would be to call the customer and tell them they could save money by not using the all you can eat plan. Such calls should be regarded with great scepticism - no company would really call customers to tell them to buy less of their services.
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=216934&cid=17629948
Huh? I can run Eclipse on the iPod Touch? And compile and run my own Java programs, as I damn see fit? Including such stuff as developping a servlet and running it in a web container?
A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
Hmm.. the Nokia n800 and the EEPC have much more features than the REDFLY.
Plus they cost less.
Both the Nokia and the EEPC are great at finding wireless access points and
cracking them! Gotta love airoscript.
Reduce, reuse, cycle
People expect full versions of applications or at least the same level of functionality.
Eeepc gives you just that, full blown Linux applications (or Windows if you have to install it).
Powerful PDA's need to run Linux or Windows these days or at least have ports of popular Linux apps.
What about an old laptop + PdaNET Software (June Fabrics)? Verizon Treo 700w data plan: $54 a month. Treo 700w cradle from Ebay: $15. June Fabrics PDANet: $35 + tax. Old XP Laptop = $300 more or less.
This is the solution I use on the train. Works just fine.
People who by crap like Windows Mobile will probably buy this crap, too.
For everybody else, there are better choices.
The thing about Palm Foleo, above all else, is that Palm is dying. They've been dying by inches since 2002 or so... When they still had over 3/4 of the handheld market share (and when people still cared about PDAs) they were on top of the world. After that they did pretty good with the Treo - which, IMO, could have given them a solid future - except they were too slow about following up on that success. It turned out that other hardware manufacturers were also capable of producing hardware with similar capabilities in the same form-factor... And Palm's OS, which was wonderful back in 1998, wonderful because Palm bucked the trend of trying to put as much CPU power into a palmtop as possible and instead put in just as much as they could reasonably do and still have a device that was nice to carry around - was seriously showing its age at a time when people's desire for the portable device to also be able to do things like play media and manage photos was now quite reasonable from a hardware standpoint...
Now, I don't think Foleo was based on Palm OS - but the thing is Palm's just not on very solid footing right now. They aren't Apple, they can't do something crazy like that and expect people to lap it up. I think that anybody trying to sell low-capability sub-notebooks is going for a bit of a hard sell - but the idea behind the product is sound... Sometimes you just need to do your work on something a little bit smaller - something just a bit easier to lug around - and even if you can fit all the technology of a full laptop into that form factor, you can't squeeze the screen, for instance - you need a certain physical size for usability - and if the screen's too small then the software has to be designed to account for that. But still they're trying to sell something people don't think they need - so it helps a lot if it's being sold by a company that's not already in its death throes...
Bow-ties are cool.
This will be different than a Jornada 820 because...?
Vi havas e-poston.
Do I have this right?
Redfly is not actually a full-fledged subnotebook computer, but rather a portable dumb terminal that you can use to run software that resides on the PDA/mobile phone in your pocket?
And it's only compatible with a small set of Windows Mobile devices?
And the only color it's available in is burgundy?
And it will cost $500 when it comes to market -- more than the Asus EeePC, which IS a full-fledged subnotebook?
Does this thing have ANY positives at all?
The device is too small to be a laptop and too large to be an ultramobile. The functionality is limited, yet the price is not all that low. And the biggest failing, the device doesn't even look sexy. 1996 called, they want their palmtop back.
I am extremely impressed that people can find funding to start projects like this. I am jealous that I have not been able to come up with more than a quarter of the money necessary for any of my projects.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
how about a non-microsoft patent agreement OS on a laptop? EEEpc = Embrace, Extend, Extingush PC? After all, it runs Xandros which made some agreement with Microsoft over patents, which was once Corel Linux which got dumped after a mysterious Microsoft share purchase.
the bullshit never ends, and slashdot moves AC posts to auto -1, probably from the shadow chair thrower which likely has control over Slashdot and other sites.
Thanks :)
If Chaos Theory has taught us anything, it's that we must kill all the butterflies.
There used to be the clamshell zaurus, if only they'd done proper PIM software and released them in the west, a real linux computer with VGA touchscreen, could easily have been improved to 800x480 over time, hardware keyboard, swivel-screen clamshell design to hide keyboard and use touch screen only, and all in a package similar in size to the nintendo DS!
Unless your boss or daddy is buying it for you ... $300 - 400 is the sweet spot. At $500 you're almost talkin' real money - or at least enough to make you think twice. Which means fewer adopters initially. I've played with an eePC - very nice ... if the kybd was 10-15% bigger I'd have one. There will be many sub-notebooks in the future to bridge the crackberry / laptop gap
Its not the years, its the mileage
But does it have less space than a Nomad?
At least it has wireless!
My Zaurus does more than this thing, and I got it for $100 off of eBay. My Libretto from 9 years ago does more than this thing. All of this time has passed, and this is where we are? Seriously?
If anyone wants to compete with the EEE or other laptops like it, I think the clue is to get a better screen resolution. I myself still use a Sony C1ve which has 1024x480 resolution. Nearly all websites look fine on this resolution. Vertical scrolling will nearly always be necessary. But I personally really don't like horizontal scrolling when browsing.
The old c1ve (with just a Transmeta Crusoe processor of 600mhz) still does everything I want including watching Divx.
---
Sharp Zaurus C series. Running Debian.
Pocket sized, keyboard, decent screen, real OS.
Palm was just being a typical business... If you read about Jeff Hawkins and the other initial inventors of the Palm Pilot, it's pretty apparent that the design innovation followed them around with the invention of the first couple of palm pilots. They got bored with the direction that USRobotics and then 3com took the device, so they spun off to form Handspring so they'd have the freedom to add what was missing (expansion modules, speed). And then they got reabsorbed by 3Com, spun off as Palm, and finally got bored and left to do other things in AI and augmented memory and stuff.
I guess some of the interesting tidbits was that they originally designed the Palm Pilot to compete with a pad a paper instead of a portable PC. Jeff would actually go around with a block of wood carved up into a dummy palm pilot and would whip it out and pretend to use it for what he wanted while he was designing the interface for a real one. This contributed to a lot of the usability apparent in the design. That's also part of the reason that color was never that big a deal for them... it wasn't strictly a priority for its success as a information-gathering PDA, and most of the color LCDs at the time were too power hungry and they favored long battery life more.
To be fair, 3Com / Palm contributed a lot of technical improvements on their watch... such as adding the color displays (probably part of the reason Handspring merged, since they were still doing greyscale displays at the time) and bluetooth and wifi. I'd say their major failing was that they simply couldn't get the OS port to Linux fully working.
Anyway, links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Hawkins
http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/1999/10/32010
Over the years, I've used a: Handspring Visor, Palm Edge Visorphone, Palm Tungsten, Palm TX