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Video Review of Hivision's $100 ARM-Based Android Laptop

Charbax writes "The Android laptops are coming. Thanks to cheap ARM-powered laptops made in China, and the latest, most optimized Android software, we can soon buy usable $100 laptops in all the supermarkets. In this video, I test the web browsing speed on the new Rockchip rk2808 ARM9-based PWS700CA laptop by Shenzhen-based Hivision Co Ltd. Web browsing on AJAX-heavy websites is surprisingly snappy, and could only be even faster if ARM11, ARM Cortex A8 or A9 processors were used and if it was configured with slightly more than 128MB RAM. How soon will Google release the $100 Google laptop?"

52 of 220 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Obligatory by future+assassin · · Score: 5, Funny

    But does it fit in a pocket http://hemoblaster.com/ipad.jpg

    --
    by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
  2. Other distros? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If I can put ubuntu on it I will be interested.

    1. Re:Other distros? by Sasayaki · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Other distros? Sure would be nice, but the fact that they're ARM means it probably won't be ready just yet. This, by the way, is fantastic news.

      The greatest thing about these laptops is, if they're as good as the article claims, the fact that they're ARM processors means that there won't be a version of Windows out for them for ages/ever.

      That means that Microsoft can't just use its market share to bury the Linux versions by heavily discounting the OS, while using their deals with retailers to make sure they only stock the Windows versions, all the while pressuring the laptop manufacturers to increase the specs on them so they can run Windows 7 instead of XP which they're selling for so cheap (to compete with 'free') they're not making any money off it.

      --
      Check out my sci-fi book "Lacuna" at http://goo.gl/MVxX8
    2. Re:Other distros? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe enlightenment. It runs well on my openmoko. I have run it on my eeepc as well. What I would like to see is a netbook with a keyboard and touchscreen, but no touchpad. Enlightenment works well with touch screens.

    3. Re:Other distros? by NemoinSpace · · Score: 2, Funny
      From my half-hearted attempts, it's easier to build up from a net install of Debian than to strip down a highly customized Ubuntu.

      The other argument you can consider is Debian doesn't do shit vs. Ubuntu keeps breaking shit.

      There, now I've pissed everybody off.

    4. Re:Other distros? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Smart Q5/Q7 come with Ubuntu installed, and they have a similar speed (ARM) CPU.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    5. Re:Other distros? by gigabites2 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, there's a minimal iso image for a net install and you can install a command-line-only system from the alternate install disk. Both use a modified version of the Debian ncurses installer. I've used it both options a few times and found them to be very useful for building a lightweight system from the ground up.

    6. Re:Other distros? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Enlightenment has finger dragging support in its scroll and list widgets. Even desktop installs of enlightenment behave that way.

    7. Re:Other distros? by Sark666 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And don't forget Ubuntu Netbook Remix

      http://www.canonical.com/projects/ubuntu/unr

    8. Re:Other distros? by TeknoHog · · Score: 2, Informative

      True, I have Gentoo running on both of my two ARMs (pun intended). But it's not really a distro issue anyway. The Linux kernel runs on more architectures than any other OS, and getting a distro to work is only a matter of time. And you can always install Linux from scratch.

      Notice the lack of the word "support" above. I'm not that interested in support, I'm more interested in whether something works. For example, there's some kind of support relationship between my laptop and Windows XP, but I find that Linux works much better.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  3. Re:Obligatory by jhoegl · · Score: 2, Funny

    You sir are wrong, how dare you make me look at an ass with a jackass in the pocket.

  4. 720p playback on a 800x480 screen?? by ashitaka · · Score: 2, Interesting

    From the article: "800×480 screen, 720p Video playback support"

    Someone care to enlighten me as to how you get a 720 progressive-scan image on a screen that is only 480 pixels high?

    --
    If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
    1. Re:720p playback on a 800x480 screen?? by TheKidWho · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Easy, through the VGA out port.

    2. Re:720p playback on a 800x480 screen?? by tchuladdiass · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sure. You can download a 720p video, and play it on the device. You don't have to pre-convert it to 800x480 (or 400x240, like I have to for my n810). That's all that spec means, is the source video can be 720p.

    3. Re:720p playback on a 800x480 screen?? by deniable · · Score: 4, Funny

      800 > 720, so turn it sideways. And now for the humor impaired...

    4. Re:720p playback on a 800x480 screen?? by sglewis100 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Rockchip processor is capable of 720p video, it's in a lot of the $120 to $160 Chinese MP4 players that you can get from various importers. It's not that the screen supports 1280x720, but rather than you can play your existing files without converting the video down. I recently picked up a Ramos T11TE with a 5" screen, also 800x480. It had 16g internal memory plus a micro SD slot, because it has a Telechips TCC8901 processor, which can handle 1080p versus the more common Rockchip. For $158, I load my MKVs right onto it. It came FAT-32 but supports NTFS (no ExFat), so I can load files over 4gb and play them back. Compared to my own pre-flight method of converting video to MP4/h.264 Simple profile to support my iPhone, this is a much better answer. It even has a mini HDMI port, so I can actually show 1080p if so inclined.

    5. Re:720p playback on a 800x480 screen?? by bazorg · · Score: 2, Funny
      While we are at it, someone care to enlighten me as to why everytime there is a discussion about blueray, cinema and HDTV Slashdot turns into a whinge party on how HD content all sucks, there is not enough HD content on TV, in the shops, and you'd have to be stupid to spend a penny upgrading your screen; but whenever people are talking about any new computer - or anything with a screen on it actually - there's always someone who wants to play HD films on it?

      same on gizmodo, engadget, ...

  5. Cheap Enough by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My $350 netbook is still expensive enough for me to be somewhat protective of it it. At $100, it becomes something that is tossed somewhat casually into a backpack, or if it's small enough, a coat pocket. I'd buy a couple.

    1. Re:Cheap Enough by Again · · Score: 2, Funny

      [...] Ideally something with a screen that works outside, so I can use it in the park.

      A park you say... I've heard rumors of this place. Please, tell me more.

  6. I'll believe it when I can buy it. by langelgjm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We've been hearing about ARM laptops/netbooks/smartbooks for over a year now. They were demoed at CES 2009, and promised to be delivered during 2009. Nothing came. They were demoed at CES 2010, and promised to be delivered during 2010.

    I can't wait to slap down $200 to $300 for an ultralight, long-battery life, ARM-based netbook running Linux. But until they make it out of video reviews and trade shows and into stores or online for purchase, what good are they?

    Lenovo Skylight is pretty much the first firm offering we've seen, but it ain't cheap. The Touchbook seems to be a Beagleboard in a nice case, and isn't being mass-produced like other netbooks. Now that the iPad is out (with an ARM-based processor) and MSI et al. have ARM offerings in the pipeline, with manufacturers finally grow some balls, realize they can offer a non-Intel machine and still use Intel on their other machines, and offer us some cheap ARM netbooks?

    --
    "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    1. Re:I'll believe it when I can buy it. by langelgjm · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Smart Q5 and Q7 are shipping. The Nokia 770, N800 and N810 all shipped. The iPad is shipping in a couple of months.

      None of those are netbooks. They're all tablet-format devices. As far as I can tell, the Touchbook is the only ARM-based netbook (in the sense of having a dedicated keyboard) that you can actually go and order right now (and it's actually backordered, so you can't in fact receive it anytime soon).

      Fine if you want a tablet - I don't. I want an ARM netbook.

      --
      "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    2. Re:I'll believe it when I can buy it. by rahvin112 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I thought everyone knew what happened in 2008. At the 2008 CES dozens of ARM "netbooks" running Linux were displayed and a big hit at the show. They were produced on ARM and Linux because Intel didn't have Atom yet so no cheap x86 processor with any horsepower, and Microsoft charged $89 for XP. The Linux netbook was heavily hyped at CES that year and MS took notice. They went to the netbook makers and asked what they needed to do to make sure every netbook came with windows. The Netbook makers said give us windows for $10 and we won't produce the Linux Netbooks. As a result MS priced windows for netbooks at $8 (ask for a windows refund on a netbook, they will offer $8, this has been documented). Intel at the same time produced the atom because they didn't want mass market ARM netbooks hitting the streets and eroding the x86 monopoly. They were able to produce it so quickly because all they did was basically die shrink the original pentium processor (didn't want it to be fast or it could erode regular notebook sales).

      So you ask what killed the Arm Netbook? The answer is the WinTel duopoly got involved and killed it to prevent it from eroding the X86 Windows monopoly. MS and Intel work VERY hard to make sure ARM/Linux Netbooks aren't produced in volume or at prices that will hurt them. Cash incentives, marketing help and all sorts of bad behavior is going on to prevent this market from developing because they KNOW everyone wants a $100 cheap little web tablet/netbook that doesn't weigh much and gets great battery life and that the first one to market will set sales records. Hell the half-assed netbook that has crappy performance set sales records because of price, weight and battery life. The first person to hit good performance, under $200 and with at least 8 hours of battery is going to sell hundreds of millions of them. MS and Intel will do almost anything to make sure that it's not an ARM netbook (MS because the only OS they have that runs on ARM is windowsCE and Mobile, which are both very dated and very crappy compared to Android or Moblin) that's the first one to that goal.

      Mark my words, you won't see mass market ARM netbooks produced unless a large government gets involved in an Anti-Trust action against both MS and Intel at the same time.

    3. Re:I'll believe it when I can buy it. by dbIII · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I can't wait to slap down $200 to $300 for an ultralight, long-battery life, ARM-based netbook running Linux

      Nintendo DSi once somebody cracks it :)
      DS Linux works on the DS but the low memory and WEP WiFi limits what you can do with it.

    4. Re:I'll believe it when I can buy it. by hairyfeet · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Put Firefox and Abiword on it and you have a cheap browser in a box that can also take notes in class. If I could score them so I can sell them for $175 and make $40 profit on them I could flip these things like flapjacks at the local college. I could just sit on a bench with a sign that said "surf and take notes for up to 8 hours at a time-$175" and I would have them lined around the block!

      That said, we have heard about these "cheap ARM netbooks" how many times on /. now? hell I've lost count. Most likely this will either never come out or will have some crazy $400-$500 price that will make them worthless. If it ain't able to run windows it had BETTER be under $200!

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    5. Re:I'll believe it when I can buy it. by clarkn0va · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The masses must first have the chance to accept. GP is stating that OEMs have so far humoured Intel and MS to the point that most consumers don't really get the choice. Why is it that (last time I checked), the only laptop sold on dell.ca without Windows installed was pink? Why can I buy an Acer Revo with an Atom 330 and Windows, or the much slower Atom 270 with Linux? The OEMs have yet to offer, at least in Canada, equivalent hardware configs to the non-MS crowd, and I tend to believe the GP that this is exactly the way the gorilla wants it.

      --
      I am literally 3000 tokens away from the chaotic crossbow --Stephen
    6. Re:I'll believe it when I can buy it. by westlake · · Score: 3, Insightful

      At the 2008 CES dozens of ARM "netbooks" running Linux were displayed and a big hit at the show. They were produced on ARM and Linux because Intel didn't have Atom yet so no cheap x86 processor with any horsepower, and Microsoft charged $89 for XP.

      $89 as the wholesale price - the OEM price - for XP?

      Quoted for purchases of 10,000 units? 100,000? A million? To put this in perspective, the brand-name Win 7 netbook has already broken the $300 price point. HP Mini 210-1010NR 10.1-Inch Black Netbook

      So you ask what killed the Arm Netbook?

      Sales.

      No one in big box retail fought longer and harder to make a go of Linux than WalMart.

      Nothing came of it.

      Walmart.com currently lists 111 laptops, 48 desktops, all Windows, and all but a bare handful running Win 7 Home Premium.

      What I find most surprising - and significant - is the disappearance of the netbook from WalMart's retail shelves.

      Down to a lone Dell Nickelodeon branded laptop for kids.

      It could just be that WalMart's customers are finding other products more compelling: Kodak Zi8 Aqua Pocket 1080p Video Camera $180.

    7. Re:I'll believe it when I can buy it. by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > As a result MS priced windows for netbooks at $8..

      The lowest pricing I have ever heard from anyone halfway reliable is $15 but that isn't the whole story. If they ship Windows they also get to ship the bundleware which means they probably actually make a profit.

      > So you ask what killed the Arm Netbook?

      You forgot two other major players in killing the netbook. The OEMs and the retailers. So sit right down and I'll tell 'yall the rest of the story.

      Netbooks were originally imagined as inexpensive, small and oriented towards a network centric view of the world. EVERYONE wanted that idea dead. The original eeePC was supposed to start at $200, remember? Lets imagine someone hitting that target now, not a black friday dump, $200 MSRP for a useful netbook in the original definition, i.e. no need to run Photoshop (how did this become the one everyone whines about? ....anyway). What retailer wants to put that on the shelf beside units that can make them twice the money before considering the better odds of followon sales with a traditional laptop/modern netbook? Software, service contracts, crapware removal services, accessories, all are better sales opportunities with a notebook/modern netbook running Windows. The OEMs realized they were risking cannibalization of a huge chunk of their more profitable lines. Then Microsoft came unto the OEMs, who were already afraid and said, "So lemme help you guys out of this mess. Ship XP at little or no upcharge and customers will demand the upsized specs to run it well." So the 7 and 9 inch displays vanished along with the slow Celerons and by the time ASUS had their supply chain issues sorted out demand for anything that would have hit their original $200 target had gone away. The industry was saved.

      Let me now pronounce unto you what will be. Because Apple announced the iPad there will be a flurry of tablets, all intended to compete with it so price will be high, HD video will be the one spec on all of em (1080p so as to beat Apple) and they will all fail, Apple included. When that happens the interest in ARM and Android (beyond the smartphone space) will end with it. ARM+Linux and/or Android on inexpensive ARM netbooks will never really be tried. Today's product won't ever be seen in qualtity outside Asia any more than the dozen ARM/Mips units announced in the past or the dozens to be announced in the future will be. Last year I believed some Chinese OEM with no ties to the existing Intel/Microsoft/Notebook ecosystem existed and one of them would eventually get the idea to make an end run around the Walmart/BestBuy roadblock and distribute through non-traditional channels. Now I have studied the matter more and realized that won't likely happen.

      The problem is the $100 disposable netbook would represent a fundamental upheaval in the computing ecosystem. It could be done in a way to benefit the consumer but all the incentives are against it. There is zero upside for any of the established players though, nothing but pain and downsizing. It will happen eventually but they intend to put that day off as long as possible. What we will probably end up with is subsidized locked down crap eventually marginalizing traditional computing to the point computing as a mind lever is relegated to expensive specialty stuff while most stuff is glorified TV with carefully approved interraction. All government approved, child safe and perfectly non offensive. Do we really want to hasten that world or do we join Intel/Microsoft/Dell/BestBuy is pushing that nightmare off in the hope we can find a better solution?

      Or we fight like hell right now for the better more open future that is possible but won't happen if evolution takes its dismal course. If we can get a standard bootloader on those ARM netbooks so we can offer the OEMs the choice of expensive internal OS development and ongoing security patching vs offloading most of that to the community we have a shot at enough of the next generation of cheap hardwa

      --
      Democrat delenda est
  7. Android really fit for Netbooks? by data2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ok, so Android is pretty resource saving. It is pretty impressive that it can display 720p videos.
    But now to the problem. Android is optimised for a touch screen. So, just to give an example, as also shown in the video in the article: When scrolling while browsing, you have to grab the page and "throw" it upwards. Also, there are buttons for zooming in and out.

    So it will be interesting to see how some other minimal linuxes would fare.

    But anyway, for that price, it is probably still worth it.

    1. Re:Android really fit for Netbooks? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ok, so Android is pretty resource saving. It is pretty impressive that it can display 720p videos.

      No it isn't. Well, it's impressive that something that small can play H.264 (hell, I'm old enough that I still think it's impressive that it can store and play full-motion videos at any resolution), but it has nothing to do with Android. Pretty much all ARM SoCs come with a dedicated coprocessor for video decoding. It's all offloaded here (which has the nice side effect that you can play back videos without stealing CPU cycles from other tasks), so it will work with any OS that has drivers.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  8. Interesting, but not the iPad-killer by hlh_nospam · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Quite an interesting device. I might even want one myself, but only if it gets support for YouTube. I didn't see any mention of how much storage it comes with, but I would hope that it at least comes with a couple of USB ports and an SD card slot -- and isn't hampered by the limitations of built-in storage like the G1. I would also hope that it would support PDF (which might make it a reasonable e-book reader).

    The demo showed the virtual keyboard, which I thought was a bit of a waste, especially since it was not clear that the display was touch-sensitive.

    As for the hope that a company like WalMart would pick this up and sell it for $100 or less, I don't think that will happen. Most of the folks that shop at WalMart are not techies, and in its present form, this is a netbook only a techie would put up with. It's certainly not the iPad-killer, even though I personally would not buy an iPad (or Kindle, or any other platform that allows the vendor to "repossess" content).

    1. Re:Interesting, but not the iPad-killer by jpmorgan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The iPad needs to be released, and be wildly successful, before we start talking about 'iPad-killers.'

    2. Re:Interesting, but not the iPad-killer by westlake · · Score: 3, Informative

      As for the hope that a company like WalMart would pick this up and sell it for $100 or less

      WalMart needs product to fill 2500 stores.

      Hivision's site doesn't quote a retail price. It doesn't quote a wholesale price.

      Their English language contacts use Hotmail and Skype. The company has been around for about ten years. Mostly they seem to make digital photo frames and Win CE netbooks.

    3. Re:Interesting, but not the iPad-killer by Thud457 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I thought the iPad was the iPad-killer.

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  9. Sure, the web browsing may be snappy... by Dragoniz3r · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... but that doesn't change the fact that most websites suck when viewed on an 800x480 screen.

    1. Re:Sure, the web browsing may be snappy... by dada21 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have 3 Android devices and all of them do a fairly good job of rendering websites for "Mobile" display. In fact, I am currently working on porting my Wordpress sites to a mobile friendly auto-switching theme bases on visits from mobile devices.

      Just because it's laptop shaped doesn't mean it will display websites like a full PC would. It'll display mobile versions, which are still perfect for that resolution.

      I just want Cyanogen to make a mod for this sucker.

  10. Milestone by sonicmerlin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've always felt that $100 was the magic barrier for turning a netbook into an impulse buy, and that if the barrier was ever reached it would truly become a mass market phenomenon. What I want to see now is an attempt to make the screens a little larger and obviously specs a little faster over time, all while maintaining that same price point.

    1. Re:Milestone by socz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      i got a netbook recently for use in court and i am so impressed with it, I am LOOKING for other reasons to use it. The battery life is OUTSTANDING! It lasted all day all the while playing video and audio. Seriously, it can't get much better than this unless it has a touch screen! (and non stop inet acces). But if android comes along with a $100 price point, I'm in! Just for the "yeah i'll check it out" factor. But my samsung netbook is kickin ass right now.

      --
      My abilities are only limited by my imagination
    2. Re:Milestone by brusk · · Score: 2

      I've been wanting to switch to a digital pick system, but the devices are either to fragile to drop from 20' up in a lift or too expensive to buy.

      Just use a damned kleenex. They easily survive a 20' fall, and they're much more sanitary than a digital pick system.

      --
      .sig withheld by request
  11. Laptop vs Cellphone Costs by Foo2rama · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ok can someone please explain why a cell phone with less power then this laptop costs around 300 bucks and that apparently still does not cover the mfg costs of the device hence the locked in contracts to recoup phone costs? Yet this laptop with an arm proc and a larger screen and more moving parts can be sold at 100??? The iPhone costs $179 to mfg.. Pre $138... g1 $140

    --


    ---In a time of Chimpanzees I was a Monkey.
    1. Re:Laptop vs Cellphone Costs by deniable · · Score: 2, Informative

      Quick guess, cheaper but bigger and heavier components. Same reason desktops are relatively cheaper than laptops.

    2. Re:Laptop vs Cellphone Costs by dada21 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Licensing for 3G and 2G and other cell phone chip hardware is expensive.

      Also, you have to add additional interfaces (SIM card interface, internal antenna, etc) that increase the cost of delivery and design.

    3. Re:Laptop vs Cellphone Costs by BikeHelmet · · Score: 2, Insightful

      $179?

      Much of that R&D, I bet?

  12. Re:A comment by dannycim · · Score: 2, Funny

    It's running Android, not windows, so it's got plenty of memory.

  13. If your gona piss everyone off, do it right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Im installing Windows Vista on mine

  14. "...most websites suck..." by John+Hasler · · Score: 2

    You got that right.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  15. Will it bring another wave of newbies? by lpaul55 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    My prediction: when the $100 barrier is broken and laptops are in the supermarkets, the impact of this on the internet will be comparable to that of AOL.

    --
    ... now back to the bit mines.
  16. Not a $100 laptop by fm6 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    TFA uses a simplistic economic fallacy to argue that the price will be around $100:

    The price has not yet been announced officially... But you can understand that if Hivision was able to sell those types of laptops for $98 to distributors more than a year ago (when I filmed my popular video from IFA 2008), then surely the mass manufacturing price has not gone up since then. My expectation is that if a giant consumer electronics reseller such as Walmart or Best Buy approaches Hivision today to order huge quantities of this laptop, it could be sold below $100 to end users.

    He's assuming that any given tech drops in price by a huge percentage every year. If that were true, IBM would still be making 8088-based PCs and selling them for a few bucks. (Take the $2K 1981 price and divide by 2 about 15 times.) Instead, you can't buy a new 8088-based system for any price — it's not worth Intel's while to even manufacture the chip, never mind somebody else to build a system around it.

    There's always a certain minimum cost to any manufacturing process. Scaling up reduces costs, and so does Moore's law, but only to a point. You'll always have to pay for materials, factory space, workers, shipping, marketing, etc. Some of these things are cheaper outside the U.S., but again, only to a point.

    I'm not sure what the minimum cost for manufacturing a computer is, but I very much doubt that it's much below $100. When manufacturers reach that minimum, they can't keep cutting prices, no matter how much the electronics improve, bang-for-buck-wise. So instead, they find a good price point, and provide the best product they know how to for that price. The result: low end products don't get cheaper, they get better.

    I couldn't begin to guess how much these new ARM laptops will sell for. It will have to be a lot less than the competing Atom-based systems, or else no one will buy them. But I doubt if the retail price will ever go below $200, not if they're sold by anybody who's in it for the money.

    Of course, even a $200 laptop would be damned popular. And a couple years after they come out, you'll be able to buy used ones on eBay for a pittance.

    1. Re:Not a $100 laptop by Charbax · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Surely if Google designs a perfect one and launches manufacturing of 10 million units, they can make them at $60 a piece and sell them on google.com/laptop for less than $100 also subsidized further by Google's online ads. The biggest cost of the laptop is the screen, using Pixel Qi the battery life can be upwards more than 20 hours even with a small cheap Laptop battery.

  17. where can i buy it? by farble1670 · · Score: 2, Informative

    TFA is only speculating at the price. really, let's see this article when there's a link where this device can be purchased.

  18. Zoom by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The iPhone has far lower resolution that that and some folks seem to like it for browsing..

    It has lower actual resolution, but you are really viewing websites at more like 1024x768 or so scaled down, then zooming in on portions. But even in the zoomed out view, I can read pretty much everything on the Slashdot homepage.

    Without touch controls on the screen zooming is way too annoying on a laptop.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Zoom by Charbax · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you can read the full Slashdot homepage on 480x320 3.5" iphone screen, then surely you could read it too zoomed on a 800x480 7" screen (4x the size and 2.5x the resolution compared to the iphone). Though surely a 8.9" 1024x600 resolution screen would be nicer and would fit in the same form factor and maybe only add $20 to the cost of this device.

  19. Re:A comment by randallman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think Windows Vista/7 has really warped peoples notion of useful memory size. There are many uses for a device like this that don't require gigabytes of RAM. The applications that run on a Nokia N800/N810 with 128Mb of RAM are a testament to that. I would certainly have a use for a sub-notebook sized device with the power and power consumption of my N800.