The $45 Windows Laptop
YokimaSun writes "The search for a cheap laptop has brought us news from India of a $10 laptop (which later turned out to be a hundred dollars). Today PC Gaming News has details of a laptop which is selling for a measly 45 dollars, what do you get for that, you get a netbook running windows embedded compact 7, 128 megs of ram, a via8505 processor and a 7 inch screen capable of 800x480 pixels resolution." I'm still waiting for my under $50 Macbook.
"I'm still waiting for my under $50 Macbook."
What is the point of this kind of trolling in article summaries, really?
Professionals can now work on the go ... a boost with the 128 MB RAM memory
Exactly what professional can work with such little RAM?
I don't even think you could connect to a VM properly with that...
What do I know, I'm just an idiot, right?
Go on craigslist and pick up one for 0-50 dollars. It will be no speed demon, but should be plenty to run a light weight distro or XP.
The search for a cheap laptop has brought us news from India of a 10$ laptop which later turned out to be a hundred dollars, today PC Gaming News has details of a laptop which is selling for a measly 45 dollars, what do you get for that, you get a netbook running windows embedded compact 7, 128 megs of ram, a via8505 processor and a 7 inch screen capable of 800x480 pixels resolution.
Holy run-on sentence, Batman!
Netbook...800x480 pixels resolution.
I feel like I haven't horizontal scrolled in ages.
you can get Android phones/iPhone 3gs for $0. You have to pay for data, but at least you can make calls... and they come with more ram, more resolution, and a usable OS!
Great idea. Of course what Apple really needs is a MBP with 2 bits of RAM and a 10x5 screen. Texas Instruments will be quaking in their boots.
The VIA8505 SoC is a AWFUL chip. I have a tablet based one of these running Android and it SUCKS.
This is an eBay sale of a discontinued netbook.
As somebody pointed out, if you wanted a $50 netbook, they can look on Craigslist or eBay themselves.
Nothing new or interesting here,
myke
Mimetics Inc. Twitter
Someone should probably tell Intel; Their legal dept might be interested.
Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
... but isn't Windows 7 Embedded Compact the new name for what used to be called (much more appropriately) WinCE?
In other words, this is an almost-useless piece of junk that runs a nearly dead operating system that is being dropped by MS in its next version.
I bought something very similar in the UK for about £30 a couple of years ago. It was useless then, it'll be useless now.
I might be showing my age a little here, but I remember 640kb being enough for an OS, and windows 95 comfortably fit in 16mb of ram a few years later.
Provided that you are not running a resource-hungry OS, and your applications have been coded properly, this netbook should run just fine.
If you want more serious performance/power, you have to pay serious money. As always, you get what you pay for!
Cheap mobile devices like these (including cheap portable DVD players) save money by skimping on batteries and going with NiMH instead of Lithium Ion. I would be surprised if this netbook could run for two hours off of its batteries.
Better known as 318230.
2009?
What part of this is news?
I wonder how long until we would have a Linux distribution for this little gem. I'll bet that Linux runs faster....
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
I've got a "laptop" that's about 2 1/2 x 4 inches or so, runs Android, and doubles as a phone... Wait... It *IS* a phone!
If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
WonderMedia WMwhatever processors are INCREDIBLY slow. I have a tablet powered by a WM8650, which is the improved version of he WM8505 the article talks about, and you're always waiting on the CPU to slowly do its thing - both on Android and Debian. It also has 256 megs of RAM, which is about a fourth of what you need for proper general computing nowadays. And this one has even less.
The WM8505 might be ok for embedded stuff, but as a CPU for general computing, especially with such little RAM and *especially* if it's running Windows, it's really worse than nothing - at least with nothing you go do something else, instead of twiddling your fingers while you wait for the damn thing to display a webpage or something.
Interesting, and inbelievably cheap - not just becasue of the Windows license fee; no idea how much they pay for that. It's Windows CE so linking to the normal Win7 retail prices doesn't make sense.
OS: Windows CE. Never worked with that, no idea on the interface. Should include a browser, assume IE. But what version for WinCE?
Storage: not mentioned. Is this a "true" netbook as in can only do web browsing and web apps? Price could imply no local storage indeed, other than for the embedded OS. The ebay listing has no details at all. They are selling, shipping US only.
Install other OS? Well if no external storage, good luck with that.
Install applications? No mention about this. No external storage could be an issue there.
Form factor looks like the EEEPC 701 series, that's not too bad. It has a higher screen resolution. I like the overall idea. I'm still regularly using that EEEPC, almost exclusively for web browsing. It's sitting on the dining table, quick to grab, small enough to not be in the way too much, light enough to move around with one hand.
A few years ago, newegg listed several hundred types of netbooks. I bought one for $275 that has a 12 inch screen, full sized keyboard, and 1300x768 screen, and 64 bit CPU. It's fast enough to run things like LibreOffice no problem.
Now? The only netbooks I see listed have tiny 1024x600 resolution, are 10 inch with reduced size keyboards, and have less memory. To get a machine comparable to the one I bought, I need to look at laptops, and the cheapest ones with those specs seem to be about $500.
So I have to pay almost twice the price now for the same kind of machine. It seems like most mfgs stopped making good netbooks for some reason. No, a tablet isn't a replacement for my netbook - it doesn't have a keyboard and probably won't run my x64 based Linux distro.
What happened?
Not only did they get the company wrong, it's not even x86 architecture. VIA 8505 is ARM-based. This isn't even including the fact that it runs Windows CE (aka Windows Embedded Compact), so standard Win32 programs wouldn't run on it, even if compiled for ARM.
$45 laptop that runs windows? Check craigslist...
http://www.theonion.com/video/ford-unveils-new-car-for-cashstrapped-buyers-the-1,14381/
I could probably find someone throwing out computers with specs like that and get it for $0.
I saw this same (or very similar) model on sale at the local CVS. One reason it's so cheap is that it doesn't run "Windows" in any meaningful sense. It runs an embedded-system OS that is called Windows, but isn't compatible with any existing Windows software. (Look for much more of this kind of confusion with the upcoming WinRT for ARM.) Furthermore, since this netbook doesn't have an x86 processor, it can't run the real version of Windows.
I never would have read this if it said, "$45 dollar Windows Netbook".
I don't frankly care if something is 0.68 inches or 0.71 inches thick. Nor wether it has 1400 resolution which I won't be using anyway. What I do care about is an optical drive, plenty of USB slots and an ethernet port so I don't have to rely on shit Wifi reception when in an office or at home and can use a high speed cable instead.
Oh , but it doesn't have that.
Ultrabooks in general and Mac laptops specifically are nothing more than vanity machines for people with more money than sense.
Mod me down apple fanboys, I care not and I have karma to burn.
Buy a Raspberry PI, better OS, less clutter.
I bought one for $275 that has a 12 inch screen, full sized keyboard, and 1300x768 screen, and 64 bit CPU.
That's a laptop.
The only netbooks I see listed have tiny 1024x600 resolution, are 10 inch with reduced size keyboards
I thought one of the defining characteristics of a netbook was a smaller screen. But most of these newer 10" laptops appear to support 64-bit instructions.
AND must have macular degeneration
Every time you call tech support, a little kitten dies.
Did you time travel from a point in the past where /. editors did read the submissions?
We all did. We traveled at 1 Day/Day. We haven't figured out how to go at any other speed, that's all.
If you're going to make a distinction between two product classes, you're going to need to tell us how you define the difference so that the debate doesn't collapse. As a first approximation, I define a laptop as a computer with a built-in keyboard suitable for touch typing and a screen that folds down to cover the keyboard when not in use, and I define a netbook as a laptop with a small screen.
From the pc-gaming page:
"...this Sylvania netbook lets you work on multiple applications simultaneously, without any tailbacks."
What the heck is a "tailback"?
and utter crap. ARM class CPU is locked to windows CE. the specs if I recall are a 350mhz cpu, 128 mb of ram, 4-8 Gb storage, USB 1.1, and a useless 800x480 display. Utterly worthless. I tried researching instructions for installing linux, not easy. All for trash grade hardware. If you did want a slick arm based netbook try: https://www.genesi-usa.com/
a friend got a "netbook" with the same hardware, windows CE 6.0. a "Tec T-book". All software outdated, very few of it (wordpad, calculator and that's all), no apparent way to install software - you can browse web archives for old PDA software meant to run on resolutions below 320x240, but what to do with it?
then, the CPU is too slow for smooth playback of SD divx. you can probably play mp3, but on a lame version of windows media player, I prefer a winamp clone. Internet Explorer on it is like browsing with a 486 under windows 3.1. There's was a youtube app! but it was broken, hard-wired to how youtube was a few years ago, it couldn't load or display anything.
it's a total rip off and my friend had paid 79 euros for this. but interestingly, it has better connectivity that a macbook air : three USB, two audio jacks, SD and ethernet! purportedly you can install Android 1.x on it. too bad my buddy got it stolen, I would have tried to do it, and install busybox or something. it can be interesting for a machine only used to ssh in other machines.
now the best about it : it's incredibly light, solid state and fanless. its keyboard and LCD are standard quality - because they are no factories making terrible versions of them. so the display, helped by its small size looked excellent. So, it was both the worst computer ever and had something to it! I noticed a remotely similar computer : Efila MX smartbook, it's 189 euros but has 10", 800MHz ARM cortex, 3G modem, 512MB memory, 16GB flash, good keyboard. It looks awesome and thin, but you lose the ethernet port which is a tragedy.
Goodbye.
And the price will come down another $10-20...
"...selling for a measly 45 dollars, what do you get for that, you get a netbook running windows embedded compact 7, 128 megs of ram, a via8505 processor and a 7 inch screen capable of 800x480 pixels resolution." I'm still waiting for my under $50 Macbook.
You're still waiting for a $50 Macbook? I'm still waiting for anyone to actually call that $45 mess a functional computer. 128 megs of RAM would hardly run the (very necessary) anti-virus software for Windows.
I saw this computer yesterday, at the MIT Flea.
Except it was purple, was running Android, and the guy selling it wanted $200!
Alibaba is filled with cheap tablets and they're actually not that bad, many boasting 1.2GHZ ARM processors, 512-1024MB RAM, 4+GB storage. They don't run Windows but they run Android 4.0 or Ubuntu at 800x400. Buy a $10 leather case and keyboard and you essentially have a laptop with a 4 hour battery life.
Nobody would consider this heap a laptop.
It looks like they took the guts of a 7" tablet, moved the touchscreen to a touchpad, added a crap keyboard and Win7 Embedded(lol), and sold it for as little as physically possible.
128MB ram is abysmal. You can't get anything done with that, and even my Firefox routinely goes above that by almost double when working with a lot of sites at once, or streaming video, or using any sort of complex web app.
Good luck with that, bros. I'm not getting one.
If the only way you can accept an assertion is by faith, then you are conceding that it can't be taken on its own merits
From the horse's mouth (for those checking the wrong end...):
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsembedded/en-us/evaluate/windows-embedded-compact-7.aspx
MS Summary:
"Windows Embedded Compact is the evolution of Windows Embedded CE. Compact is a componentized, real-time operating system used to create a wide range of small footprint enterprise and consumer devices.
Windows Embedded Compact 7 uses the familiar tools OEMs already know to help create the next generation of devices with attractive, intuitive user experiences. Compact continues the history of embedded innovation started with the first release of CE, providing new technology to OEMs for building devices that stand apart from the competition.
Silverlight for Windows Embedded, a UI framework included with Compact, combines the flexibility of declarative UIs with the performance of native code. Silverlight for Windows Embedded is based on Silverlight v3.0 and allows developers and designers to create and update device UIs using Microsoft Expression Blend.
Compact also includes an updated Internet Explorer, built on the same core as IE in Microsoft Windows Phone 7 and includes support for Flash 10.1, panning and zooming, multi-touch, and viewing bookmarks using thumbnails.
When you choose Windows Embedded Compact, you’re getting the high performance and highly reliable platform OEMs have selected for over 15 years to bring devices to market quickly and efficiently."
And they claim it will run on X86 in addtion to the traditional CE ARM and MIPS platforms (even thought I saw a reference to Virtual PC, but have not found it again - might try the x86 version in Virtual Box, though).
It does look like a cool update to what is running on my old Windows Mobile 6.1/6.5 smartphones.
FWIW/YMMV
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Although you correctly point out that the MacBook Air is 5% thinner, you left off that it is 20% more expensive. The cost per inch to save those 0.03 inches is more than $6,500.
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This discontinued notebook is not only from Sylvania, makers of CFLs that last a fraction of their claimed lifetime, it's got shark fresh hangers, without any tailbacks! I haven't found these features on lappies at twice the price!
I love how this turned into an Apple/Microsoft flame war instead of an "oh, actually a $45 laptop could help the disproportionately poor have a chance at higher paying jobs." But no, instead we have to talk about how Apple is the best thing since sliced bread, or how Apple is so expensive or how Microsoft is just awful, it'd be better if it ran Linux. Hate to tell you kids, most computers run Windows and if a poor family can afford a Windows machine it gives them a fighting chance in the workplace in a world that is growing more dependent on computers and less on manual labor. Kudos to the makers (and to Microsoft) for making such an achievement, that 10 years ago would be unthinkable.
A netbook, like you state, is small but it's also limited in what it can do compared to laptops/notebooks
Limited in what way? A netbook's Atom CPU is comparable in speed to a similarly clocked Pentium 4, and in fact, early Atoms used P4 chipsets. It's "limited" in the sense that I wouldn't recommend a P4 for high-definition video editing or for playing recent PC games.
But unlike (say) an iPad with a keyboard, an x86 netbook is not "limited" as to what kind of applications one can run. I've got Xubuntu on my Inspiron mini 1012, and if I want to add applications from a third-party PPA, I can. If I want to sudo apt-get install build-essential libsdl-image1.2-dev and compile an application from source, I can. If I want to sudo apt-get install fceux and run free NES games, I can. And if I want to compile a 6502 assembler and PNG to NES image converter from source and make and test homemade NES games on a netbook, I can and I do.
There has to be a better term for a machine on which one can reasonably run a compiler (such as my netbook) vs. a machine on which one can't (such as the CE netbook described in the article).
have been on DealXtreme for like 2-3 years now, only at the 75-110 dollar price range (depending on exact model, 7 vs 10 inch screen and a few other things, like Windows CE 5 versus Android, which was a recent addition).
Point is the processor and memory in them is a *JOKE* and for about as much as one of these costs you can get a table that would spank it in every way other than 'has a keyboard and 3 usb ports'. And since they're USB 1.1, basically any tablet would beat them on IO speed.
Can I have your stuff?
You'll never get it.
Windows tax is absurd at ANY level.
Bunch of blowhards shouting at the media, hoping to get venture attention.
I signed up for a $100 Indian tablet or whatever. Never heard any more. Live and learn.
Help eliminate traffic tickets
And to think, all this time I've been running Windows CE 6 on my via8505 tablet.
Anyone wanna help me upgrade?
I've been happy with my Efika MX. Ubuntu support tends to trail behind the leading edge, but once I put Debian on it and a few hand tweaks I was much happier with it.
Out of the box it has basic openGL support. Nothing amazing, and I couldn't get GLX up, had to use this other thing called EGL. but after cut and paste from some blog articles I had a rotating triangle. Next I just add a few lines of code and have the next great 3D RPG or something I'm sure.
(I have the nettop too, it's nice. but I don't think genesi is selling it anymore)
Sure, if a similar spec laptop sells for $20, the Apple version will be $50
"I'm still waiting for my under $50 Macbook."
They cost that already, but Apple adds $1250 for the "trés chic" Apple logo in the cover.
So now they use the factory lines they set up in 2008 to produce a device that might be mass market compatible instead of a device geared towards Linux hackers.
Given the drop in memory prices and the estimated volume, it's no wonder they can sell it at one third the price even factoring in the added cost of a Windows CE license.
This device is basically running a newer version of Windows CE, which is an entirely different and incompatible product...
All this device will do, is annoy users when they buy it and find they can't install their apps intended for regular x86 windows on it.
This device would have been MUCH better off running android or linux... Users would have no expectation of windows compatibility, would have far more software available and it would reduce the price further too.
http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
I'm still waiting for a new 2D release of Duke or Keen.
Doubt that will even happen though.
When they have their fire sale and they're $20, I might find a use for a couple if I can run Puppy on it.
My last three systems cost me...
November 2009 - $249 - new Acer laptop, single core, upgraded to T4300 ($42 at the time), upgraded to 4GB memory ($50 at the time) use every day, Ubuntu 12.04
October 2010 - $280 - used Dell Inspiron 570, Athlon X4 630, 6GB memory, upgraded PSU ($60) and video card (HD5770 $99), just retired it to kid duty
March 2012 - $90 - used Powerbook G3 "Pismo", 768MB memory, 40GB HDD, bought it to make the Apple fanboys in my wife's clientele happy (SLOW but it works)
Why pay more? My $280 2-year old Dell beats my kid's computers, modern ones, an i3-540 ($580 spent December 2011) and an A6-3620 ($620 spent March 2012), hands down, even without the video card in it, and for less than half the cost.
My wife wanted to upgrade her computer, she already has an i7-950 on X58 with an HD6870 video card. I don't see the point, her work is bottlenecked by the server connection to her main client. She can do everything else lightning fast and her computer responds faster than she can type or click, it's just that connection at that company that prohibits her from working faster. More speed on her end won't help!
I doubt this will be a "real" computer and more like a large smartphone like the current tablets are. I mean that you will not have complete control of the device and limited hardware and software functionality. I say this because microsoft will not sell their OS for less then this total cost.
Three years ago I purchase a netbook and immediately install Linux. I didnt both installing the attached windows OS in order to get my refund on the windows tax. I like the computer and advised a friend to buy one who was considering the same. However, after my friend purchased the computer and installed windows... he asked how to change the background. After a little searching, I found that windows wanted $50 or similar in order to upgrade the included OS just to change the desktop background. I felt this was outrageous. I knew windows was a weak operating system, but I didnt reallize they were further crippling their operating system in order to sell it with a cheap computer.
I dont know what embedded 7 really is... but I suspect it is entirely less then a real operating system and I also think this will be entirely less then a real computer. I think it will be similar in experience to a cell phone without the convenience of size and function of a phone.
How could this even be possible, the last I checked, Microsoft was not offering any windows version under 100$, and with this, you get the pc as well???
I imagine the price of the windows is not incorporated into the price tag, ey?
read, you'll spend so much time working to get linux running, you're better off with a rasberry PI, or other cheap low end ARM/MIPS device with proven linux support. It wouldn't be worth anything if they gave them away for free.
edit: hardware specs are comparable to a motorola razr v3 or similar p2k OS moto phones.