Alienware Chooses Airgo chipsets for new laptops 33
Julios Lanza writes "Alienware has chosen chipsets made by Airgo Networks to power two game-focused laptops. Alienware's 17-inch Aurora m9700 and 19-inch Aurora mALX notebooks are equipped with the Airgo's Gen3 True MIMO (multiple input, multiple output). Airgo's chips are designed to connect a computer with Wi-Fi systems at speeds fast enough to make high-performance gaming possible, Airgo executives said."
Rebranded Linksys. (Score:2, Informative)
Ergh, they're just linksys chipsets with three antennas.
Anyway, next I headed over to Airgo's webiste [airgomimo.org] to have a look. Zouch! Follow any lin
Re:Rebranded Linksys. (Score:1)
.
Re:Rebranded Linksys. (Score:2)
Exaggeration? Flash on the front page means one thing. Bad Management. No competent manager, doing their job, would allow such a thing to occur. Throwing up flash betrays a level of fecklessness, a simple inability, unwillingness, or ignorance in management's ability to get the job done. Competently.
So remember, the next time you buy an
Re:Rebranded Linksys. (Score:1)
I mean, you don't see me changing the oil on my car, do you?
Re:Rebranded Linksys. (Score:1)
Um, WRONG. (Score:3, Insightful)
Linksys does not make their own silicon. Neither, I believe, does Cisco. (As evidenced by one of the major reasons for Lucent spinning off their microelectronics business as Agere - Despite being a Cisco competitor, Lucent was selling a lot of silicon to Cisco and Agere stood to sell even more as a non-competitor of Cisco.)
Airgo (along with Broadcom and many other companies) are SUPPLIERS of Linksys. Note that this does not make Linksys "rebranded Airgo", as Linksys just buys the IC
So... (Score:2, Interesting)
Or, in other words, "alienware" have already become normal Dell machines, only with garish colors and a higher price tag.
Re:So... (Score:2)
Re:So... (Score:2)
You might as well day that Macs are just Dells with white cases since they both have Intel CPUs and that would actually be more relevent.
Re:So... (Score:2)
Personally in that regard I'd prefer the Dell. The Intel PRO/Wireless silicon is designed for rock-solid performance within the 802.11g standard, not a bunch of flashy compatibility-breaking extensions that will rarely work as advertised. Their chipsets also (unlike Airgo's) work extremely well under Linux.
Re:So... (Score:1)
Mea culpa. I read that Dell has taken a board position with Airgo and jumped to conclusions.
Also, I completely agree about the chipset of choice; reliability and compatibility trumps extra flash any day of the week.
Re:So... (Score:2)
That's amazing! ... ? (Score:4, Insightful)
If I want a serious gaming rig it'll be a desktop where I can upgrade parts without paying a serious fortune or having to mail my rig back to Dell for upgrades.
Laptops are for work. Work involves travel. Lighter is better. Screw having a 250W laptop capable of playing Oblivion at 2560x1280 at 60fps if I can't lug it around to some random meeting half way around the world.
Oh, this is written on a Fujitsu Lifebook. A laptop that gets 7 hours of battery life, runs both linux and windows, weighs about 4 lbs and fits easily in my knapsack. I like my Insprion Dell laptop [630m] but compared to the lifebook it's a monster. Weighs nearly 8lbs and while it fits in my bag as well it's a bit more cumbersome to lug around.
Tom
Your obviously not the intended market. (Score:3, Interesting)
LAN parties are fun, whats not fun is lugging the stuff you need. Getting "portables" to that same level of performance i
Re:Your obviously not the intended market. (Score:3, Informative)
Seriously. You may be rolling in the dough but for me I have to justify the cost. My laptop (my dell == personal, fujitsu == work) is meant to go with me when I do contract work. I use it to earn money and hence the purchase. If all I wanted to do was gaming I'd buy a PSP [and I did] and bring that over. It can do Wifi gaming, is much lighter and cheaper.
That and a 15lbs laptop is stupid. That's really heavy to carry around (I suggest you put that, your adapter and a few boo
Re:Your obviously not the intended market. (Score:2)
Re:Your obviously not the intended market. (Score:1, Troll)
2. Grow some muscles. Carrying a 50lbs computer from a taxi or car to the table is not exactly labour intensive.
3. LAN parties are dorky anyways. Usually sausagefests and in desperate need of face-to-face interaction.
When I go out to a friends place I'd rather play a console where instead of being buried behind a monitor you're able to see their face and the reaction as you head shot them in Halo 2
Tom
Re:Your obviously not the intended market. (Score:2)
2. Grow some muscles. Carrying a 50lbs computer from a taxi or car to the table is not exactly labour intensive.
3. LAN parties are dorky anyways. Usually sausagefests and in desperate need of face-to-face interaction.
When I go out to a friends place I'd rather play a console where instead of being buried behind a monitor you're able to see their face and the reaction as you head shot them in Halo 2
1) Still not as easily or sa
Re:Your obviously not the intended market. (Score:2)
Re:Your obviously not the intended market. (Score:2)
I got mine for apartment living, but the case is small, light, and even has "cool" windows cut into it (with Blue LEDs on the exhaust fan
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82 E16811144109 [newegg.com]
Oh, and it also has a handle for easy carrying. Yeah, you still need a monitor and keyboard/mouse to go with it
Re:Your obviously not the intended market. (Score:2)
"Mobile desktops" are generally meant to be that, larger notebook systems designed to be lugged around but not used away from a power source for very long. From having used both extensively, I by far prefer them to the shuttle+lcd combo.
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Re:New Site Suggestion (Score:2)
Personally I got a non-descript Titan 550 case for my 2P setup. It may be one of the fastest workstations on the planet but it sure doesn't look like it
Tom
High performance gaming? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:High performance gaming? (Score:1)
But really, you need MIMO in a laptop for gaming performance how? To see who can download the next map pack the fastest?
As a laptop gamer, I'd be more concerned with the tiny keyboard with mushy springs. And location of the trackpad so it doesn't get in my way while playing...
Even more important, LCD performance.
Premature garbage (Score:4, Informative)
Airgo's "True MIMO" is a pre-standard interpretation of the future 802.11blah (TGnSync vs. WWiSE) and will most likely not be compatible with the final 802.11n.
The MIMO concept itself offers to double the throughput at the expense of increasing bandwidth from 20 to 40MHz as well as spreading multipath garbage on the spectrum. If you've had fun with congestion on 802.11b/g channels, this 802.11n will really make your day.
Ok, so it might have marginally better spectral efficiency per Mbps but really, what we want to see is true beamforming dynamic-arrays that will properly 'point' the RF where it's supposed to go in real-time.
Meanwhile one of these 'gaming' laptops will just screwup the spectrum and slowdown existing b/g channels.
Re:Premature garbage (Score:2)
Actually, to Airgo's credit, this is exactly what they do. Effectively, they form seperate beams for each possible path between units, and send different data on each. When connected to a "vanilla" B/G unit, they fall back to steering all of the power along the path with the least loss.
OK, yeah, the
Alienware is not designing laptops. (Score:3, Interesting)
slashdot choose to call press release "news" (Score:2)
Re:slashdot choose to call press release "news" (Score:2)
"film at 11. (no pun intended)."
None taken.
Is this necessary? (Score:1)
Please don't call them laptops (Score:2)
One thing you might find is that most or all marketing lite
Good choice - the Linksys SRX400 also has Airgo (Score:1)
The other ones would not even CONNECT in test scenario 4.
Upon reading that report, I bought SRX400 equipment just yesterday and set it up in my house.
Guess what: Where I previously had only marginal connectivity (ro