ARM and Dual-Atom Processors in New Portables
chrb writes to tell us that Dell's new Latitude Z has finally been delivered as promised, complete with ARM processor. Codenamed BlackTop, the device runs a modified version of Suse Linux, and is capable of near-instant bootup. Dell's research has apparently found that some early users spend 70% of their time in the Linux environment." Relatedly snydeq writes "Colombian computer maker Haleron has designed a netbook that combines Atom processors in an effort to provide the performance of a standard laptop at a price more affordable to Latin Americans. The Swordfish Net N102 includes two Atom N270 processors running at 1.6GHz. Haleron worked for six months to modify Intel's 945 chipset to run the two processors. The processors divide the workload, much like a dual-core processor does, the company said. The netbook, which begs the question, when does a netbook stop being a netbook, comes with Windows XP Home Edition. 'We found that it works best on the Windows XP operating system. Both Windows Vista and the new Windows 7 performed below Windows XP in the load sharing department,' the company said."
A quick look at that Dell link shows me the Latitude has a Core 2 processor, not an atom?
No trackpoint mouse.
Only two mouse buttons.
No mouse buttons reachable with your hands on the keyboard.
I'll keep my Thinkpad.
Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
"Begs the question" has a specific meaning related to circular arguments. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Begging_the_question Here the combination of two Atom processes raised a question as to what constitutes a netbook. No begging involved.
If you'd read the NYT article, you would know it's because it can run for days under the ARM Linux instant-on OS.
I'd like one of these with a full-size keyboard and no Intel chip. I'd certainly pay a good penny for it, too, if it had a decent hard drive and battery life measured in days. The wireless charging is gimmicky though, and I'd prefer a normal charger (I'm sure that's a good part of the cost, in addition to the Apple-like attention to shine.)
Sorry, couldn't resist.
Also what's "Arm"?
Arm is Core's antagonist. Lighter, cheaper to build, but a bit less powerful.
WYSIWIG, but what you see might not be what you need
Wrong notebook. TFS talks about two notebooks. The first has one Intel and one ARM processor and only uses one of them at a time. The other has two Atom processors, using both simultaneously.
The GP wondered why someone would go through the trouble of creating a dual-socket netbook when Intel offers a processor that already offers two cores, needs less energy and wouldn't have required them to hack dual-socket support into the chipset. That's a justified question.
As for your ARM-only netbook: Those should surface within the next few months. If they don't, a homebrew project involving an old laptop and a Beagle Board will.
USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
Or wait until Pegatron or one of the half dozen other companies currently producing ARM laptops brings their product to market over the next few months...
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