50-Dollar Hackable "WebSurfer" 93
evilviper pointed us to a new hack on LinuxHacker. Last time it was the i-opener, but this time its the WebSurfer. It's 50 bucks and can be had at CompUSA. They show it booting Linux among other things. Has a wireless keyboard, a real (non win) modem, and a Cyrix CPU. Looks perfect for voiding warranties.
But this one has a slot (PCI or ISA). Ethernet! (Score:1)
Best way to get one (Score:1)
Maybe like this? (Score:1)
The "Book PC":
http://store.yahoo.com/directron/bookpc.html
A bit pricy, byt pretty tiny, and comes with the mobo.
You'd have to paint it black, tho.
pictures of anothers Internet Appliance thinggy (Score:1)
there's also some pictures at http://www.be.com/press/photos.html [be.com]
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BeDevId 15453 - Download BeOS R5 Lite [be.com] free!
Cost to CompUSA is only $25 (Score:1)
these suckers is.
Re:post anonymously, but they got your IP address. (Score:1)
Re:Redundent (Score:1)
Nobody recognizes hobbyists anymore == ture! (Score:1)
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great (Score:1)
Re:ingenuity mixed with hackability == ? (Score:1)
QNX Neutrino (Score:1)
Oh, me too. :-) It's just that up to now, QNX's OSes have been pretty-much anti-hobbyist, since there was a big pricetag in order to get "in." With the upcoming free release of Neutrino and QSSL's policy change that will make Neutrino development accessible, I think Neutrino is going to become a lot more interesting and useful.
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Companies should realize the value in this... (Score:1)
A guess that would kill the hack-value though.
Re:Theft? (Score:1)
If you mean, "Kinda like theiving", I will agree
if you agree that "If you sign up for 3 years of service at $20 per month when you could be getting it for free" is "Kinda like murder".
Popular Appliances (Score:1)
I find it amusing that the Web Surfer and I-Opener appeal to us only because they are hackable, yet the manufacturers never intended for anyone to modify them. Perhaps someone will realize that there is a niche market for cheap hackable devices for folks to modify and use as they please.
As a long time BeOS supporter I was dissapointed when Be shifted focus to internet appliances. They keep saying that internet appliances will be the Next Big Thing(tm). I haven't seen any evidence to support that just yet.
The value in these small devices comes from being able to use the device in a flexible way. Palms are quite limited compared to a desktop PC yet they are immensely popular because they are so versatile.
I see potential with lightweight, portable, and cheap PC-based machines: mp3 servers, x-terminals, low cost notebooks, even wearable computers. Nobody really wants to buy an appliance that only has one use unless it's dirt cheap or insanely faster/better/easier than the PC alternative.
Re:More ram? (Score:1)
Re:strings attached (Score:1)
Re:More ram? yes! (Score:1)
I have one bit no time to hack it until this coming weekend, one of the first upgrades will be RAM.
Also, you can overclock it to 266MhZ or so.
strings attached (Score:1)
hhmmm.....
5.4 Applications/Questionnaires. You agree to answer accurately, truthfully and completely all requests for information that we may send to you from time to time, whether such requests or responses are sent electronically or by any other method.
2.2 Webplayer Software License ...You may not attempt (or authorize any attempt) to defeat, obstruct or block any or all of the Webplayer Software functionality, or to decompile, reverse engineer or disassemble the Webplayer or the Webplayer Software.
neither of these clauses were in the materials i was initially given.... maybe the technical person i spoke to was overridden by the legal people..... additionally, IANAL; can someone translate the second clipping i set up? does "blocking" pertain to hacking the software and blocking certain services (which is what i would assume, given its context), or would that mean that you implicitly can't install another OS? (installing another OS would sort of "block" all functionality, but then again, installing another OS could also mean just not "turning on" the native OS, which wouldn't be much different than just not turning on the machine. i'm guessing that since there is no clause anywhere that says you have to use the hardware AND software TOGETHER, at the same time, that installing another OS on the hardware could be interpurted the same as simply not turning on the OS, which would be different than "blocking" functionality.
I doubt it... (Score:1)
I don't think the company will have a problem with this, because they have a price fro just the unit itself. ANd they probably considered this a few months back when all this hell went up about the I-opener. Its probably the reason the price is so low, generate sales from Linux Hack fans around the globe. It'd be stupid for them to retaliate after seeing it happen to another group. If anything they should step up production.
Link from company about WebSurfer Inc [websurfer.com]
Re:C'mon companies, get Torx, not Tux! (Score:1)
Apple did this with the early macs... T-15 Torx screws... two of them 8" inside the case. Nintendo has done this with every one of their toys with the exception of the game boy line.
All one needs is a drill or, my favorite, a drimel tool.
FEH! (Score:1)
I'd like to see an affordable Linux box whose power consumption and heat output were incredibly low. Maybe a solar-power Linux refrigerator?
Re:Caveat Emptor (Score:1)
I have watched those things sit in the store for over 6 months while not one of them sold. A couple of days ago, I see two young gentlemen walk in and each pick one up. The sign, still said $199. I check the cost in the system, it is $50. Well, I think we are finally dumping this junk, it is about time. An hour later, I have one left in the store. I now suspect an I-opener type hack and put one aside for myself. I will go to work tommorrow and buy my new MP3 player.
Re:Final word from CompUSA (Score:1)
Re:Big deal! (Score:1)
Re:ian (Score:1)
Boundless Technology WAS Re:ian (Score:1)
And for the last 3 days, the main web site that the box accesses has said
HTTP/1.1 Server Too Busy
Note: The keyboard the webserver product uses and the virgin player uses look exactly alike. So the keyboard is some kind of 'standard'
SWK-8695wt is the model number. Sejin Electron Inc. is the maker of the keyboard.
Previous reports on this box mumbled something about a 'linux clone' OS. Other mumbling-64 meg of DRAM is on the inside. It has a (unsupported) USB port.
Prediction: This will go the way of the FreePC people. After some time they will give up, and anyone who has the unit will be able to keep it.
Also note: The box it came in was from Boundless Technology. Perhaps IAN had something to do with it.
More ram? (Score:1)
Another use I can think for them would be home automation controlers. They would be really nice in the home entertaiment center controling the lights using x10 or directly threw the paralle port using a few transistors and relays.
Any ways nice little boxes.
One last thought, with those little 180Mhz processors do they have enough power to decompress MP3's?
Re:Please correct your grammar errors, CmdrTaco. (Score:1)
Some people just have far too much thyme^H^H^H^Hime on their hands.
In any case, you asked for some attention to be "payed" to basic grammar; obviously, you've forgotten that the correct word is "paid".
"He who criticizes hypocritically" is synonymous with "he who loses much face".
Cheers,
meisenst
Re:C'mon companies, get Torx, not Tux! (Score:1)
Re:Attractive-looking embedded PCs (Score:1)
You know you have a point. This is almost exatly the box I would want (and built using off the shelf components), as far as I'm concerned there are only three problems with the thing. 1) No 5 1/4" external bay (so I couldn't hook up a CD or DVD-rom drive). 2) Internal IDE connector Disabled (it would make life just a little easier if I didn't have to supply an old ISA IDE card). 3) No Network card (I use a cable modem, and I'd rather not use up the PCI slot with a network card).
With a slightly differant case, and an internal IDE card and modem this could be the worlds best DVD player (assuming of course there was commercial grade DVD software for linux). It'd do full internet (not just web surfing), DVD play back, MP3 play back, and general computing, all for about $400 (you'd have to include the price for a cheep hard drive and a DVD-rom/decoder board). All in all I can't see why they just didn't go that route instead of trying to immitated the failed web TV.
Remember that where ever you go, whatever you do, the penquin is watching.
Potential MP3 Player??? (Score:1)
Re:why go to all that trouble? (Score:1)
Just thought you should know.
Re:figures... (Score:1)
TangoChaz
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Re:strings attached (Score:1)
If that catches on with webmasters, it could solve a lot of problems!
Don't like the download agreement? Don't like the age limits? Don't like the licencing agreement? Just Change It!
I guess this would be Open Source Contracts...
TangoChaz
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Re:ian (Score:1)
Re:No, it's not theft (Score:1)
By the way... this one sucks compared to I-Opener. A) No cool little screen B) What about us that don't use the landline for connectivity (DSL, Cable Modems, etc). I think this one is a waste. Hey, if I Opener goes under financially, would we still be bound to the TOS?
Re:Wrong -- do some fact checking (Score:1)
Well.. the revolution may have been happening..but as of last Friday it's pretty much been put down.
why go to all that trouble? (Score:1)
Cool but.. (Score:1)
Want a websurfer? Try Ebay! (Score:1)
But be prepared, you're bidding against morons willing to pay hundreds of bucks for this thing...
OoO
i-opener vs. this thingy (Score:1)
New doohickey seem like need some ugly monitor, but have infrared keyboard, which is nice, but not nice enough.
I suggest:
Hey, how about rackmounting these new doohickeys? then these things would actually have a bit of muscle! And yes, before you ask, building frankenfreak computers is my hobby.
Re:No, it's not theft (Score:1)
http://www.world-of-nintendo.com/nintendo/contr
Don't criticise someone who is attempting to use free software for not using enough free software.
More info from CompUSA (Score:1)
"The Websurfer systems selling for $49.99 (sku 271198) require a 2-year commitment by the customer to the Earthlink ISP."
You can buy them for $199.99, which is still pretty darn good, without getting any service contract. They ring up at that price at the register, and we have to go through about 8 steps to get the lower price - they're supposed to be stored in a "location NOT available to the customer", and the contract has to be signed, credit card verified, etc. I try to avoid selling them.
Re:But this one has a slot (PCI or ISA). Ethernet! (Score:1)
Re:ian (Score:1)
Consider the fact that they require you to surf the web for at least ten hours per month. They also require you to supply them with any information that they request at any time (section 5.4 of the user agreement). With about 99.99684% accuracy, I can guarantee that they will be tracking your websurfing habbits and then selling that information to any corporation with cash.
Using this little dohickey would be equivalent to running Doubleclick's web-tracking software right on your own machine -- it's one big cookie that you pay $50 a year to use, and they won't let you hack it either (section 2.2 of the user agreement).
In the words of Monty Python: "Run away! Run away! Run away!"- ----------------------
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Re:C'mon companies, get Torx, not Tux! (Score:1)
Re:The PC isn't dead. (Score:1)
Re:Companies should realize the value in this... (Score:1)
Re:Companies should realize the value in this... (Score:1)
Um, hello? They don't have to design it.. it already exists. Both the Websurfer and the i-Opener (and a dozen other web appliances, I'm sure) already fit the bill. All they have to do is sell the same machine with two contracts: one for $50-$100, but with a 2 year internet contract and one for $200-$300, with no contract at all. They just have to sell the machines they _already_ have, with no modifications. This would get them in good graces with the geek crowd as well as being a alternate revenue stream. It would also probably result in some free R & D and beta testing for them.
josh sisk
Re:C'mon companies, get Torx, not Tux! (Score:1)
Re:Companies should realize the value in this... (Score:1)
Final word from CompUSA (Score:1)
1: They are $199. A special rebate for $150 off is available FROM the manufacturer. You will not walk out of the store with a machine for $49.99.
2: They were pulled from the shelves before the doors opened today.
3: CompUSA has been making changes to their Inventory system and it is NOT real time. I called ahead to check and they had two. When I got in the store they had 0 in stock. They are currently working on a way to make inventory checks real time. Until then, all inventory checks come from Dallas.
In other words, DON'T waste your time; these people are smarter then Netpliance.
What's the diff? (Score:1)
What's new with the websurfer? (Score:1)
http://www.kenseglerdesigns.com/cgi-bin/UltraBoar
http://www.kenseglerdesigns.com/cgi-bin/UltraBoar
Some files are mirrored and more info is coming here:
http://www.geocities.com/d1v3rs1ty/ [geocities.com]
Damn (Score:1)
Yep, it's real (Score:2)
It's worth trying, at the very least.
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Can you get this machine for $50 with out service? (Score:2)
unless of course you want to get their service
viable business model (Score:2)
Don't get me wrong, I love linux and would like to have one of these.
My question is this. Are these machines really this cheap or are they recouping thier costs with the service. I suspect that it is the service.
Perhaps they could offer a slightly more expensive version of these devices for linux users who aren't going to use their service. This would, i think, alieviate the problems with losing revenue.
Binder
Re:Theft? (Score:2)
Re:Attractive-looking embedded PCs (Score:2)
From WS's website (Score:2)
Upon purchasing the Innovator WebSurfer Pro Set-Top Internet Appliance
customers have the option to choose one of the following:
a) To qualify for WebSurfer's $200 rebate, customers must establish a new
Earthlink (formerly MindSpring) Internet access account with a commitment of
24 months at $24.95 per month. Account must be in good standing at time of
rebate request.
b) Customers can register for the month-to-month billing plan of $24.95 a
month with a designated Internet Service Provider. Month-to-month billing
accounts do not qualify for the $200 rebate.
c) Customers can use their own Internet Service Provider but will incur a
monthly fee of $14.95 in addition to the cost of their Internet access (may not
be compatible with all Internet Service Providers that do not support PAP or
CHAP and online services such as AOL & Prodigy).
A one-time, non-refundable activation fee of $49.90 applies to all accounts at
time of registration which includes full registration and free upgrades.
figures... (Score:2)
*grin*
FLAT LCD!?!? (Score:2)
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Re:Theft? (Score:2)
I remember reading somewhere (it could be false) but something likg 2/3 of all new businesses fail.
They had ample time to change their practices after the iopener thing happened.
LK
URL to buy the thing (Score:2)
The "use your own ISP" option looks interesting. That's what I'd do if I were going to use this thing, but then I don't know how you'd go about canceling it (you could say that you canceled your service and the box was useless to you)
What a gamble... better business model than the i-opener because they can just screw ppl out of their rebate checks if something like this happens... then the company gets sued, but all the while they've got your cash and are making more!
Here's the url to buy it. [shopwebstore.com]
i-opener, TNG. (Score:2)
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another one WITH lcd (mod me up! ;) (Score:2)
They charge $100 for 3 years. This one has lcd and all. The catch: you use it at least 10 hours a month, if you want to quit and/or don't use 10 hours/month, they'll cancel your membership and you'll be charged $200-$500 (depending on when you cancel).
Maybe someone can put a hot swamp hd on it! It's very cheap anyway!
CY
/_____\. .......|
vvvvvvv../|__/|
...I../O,O....|
...I./
..J|/^.^.^ \..|.._//|
...|^.^.^.^.|W|./oo.|
Caveat Emptor (Score:2)
Story picked up by WIRED (Score:2)
The story [wired.com] has some comments from the guy behind the hacks, it turns out that it hasn't really been very lucrative selling the kits. They also ask him what he plans to hack next, to which he says he may look at the MailStation [mailstation.com], but has dismissed VIRGIN's i-apppliance since the service contract is unavoidable.
You would think that especially after the i-opener, and the MSN rebate debacles, the lawyers for WebSurfer would have taken a second look at their agreements with all their retailers to ensure the device would not be sold without a binding ISP contract.
Re:i-opener vs. this thingy (Score:2)
in actuallity, you'd need a good dozen of these before a cluster is really effective, particularly beowulf-style. Agreed, this is a pretty cost-efficient way of doing it (going for about the price of an old 486, and with a little more muscle. That and you'd have to alter all your code to work with a cluster system, so the applications you'd run on it would be completely different. So before dropping the cash, you really need to decide what you want to do with it, not just to say you have a cluster (but if you have the spare disposable income, rock on with your bad self! Or give some to me).
If you're looking at two boxes (the iOpeners have really nice monitors, I agree), a better way to do it might be to network the boxes with a REALLY fast card, and convince the system it's really one SMP box instead of two. That way you can still tweak code, but run normal applications on it if you want. Then you can do something other than crunch inordinate amounts of numbers.
It's a good hobby, keep at it
incidentally, "holy joe" by Haysi Fantayzee is a great bouncy song to hardware hack to. I only mention this because I'm listening to it now
Big deal! (Score:2)
It is a cool hack tho..
Buyer Beware (Score:2)
There's a little technical info about the problems available here [linuxgrrls.org]. According to Kira:
"...the cache controller is totally, completely, and utterly fubar. It basically doesn't work. It has difficulty in maintaining coherency between the instruction and data caches and this causes gradually-increasing system instability."
This may not be the case with the 180mhz chip--anyone had any luck with the 180 & Linux?
numb
Is the virginconnectme box usable for anything? (Score:2)
How long can you stay dialed up and inactive - does "10 hours per month" mean you need to tap the keyboard every few minutes, or can you dial up one evening a month and let it stay on all night?
Can you dial into other ISPs? (e.g. dial into your home Linux machine's modem?) If you do all your browsing through The Anonymizer [anonymizer.com], can they track anything?
The PC isn't dead. (Score:2)
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ingenuity mixed with hackability == ? (Score:2)
"the problem may have been that there was a stonehenge monument on the stage that was in danger of being crushed by a dwarf!" - David St. Hubbins
Re:strings attached (Score:2)
Re:i-opener, TNG. (Score:2)
Does anybody know what's up? I finally got a thin enough hard drive for my i-o this weekend and now I need one of those special cables.
Re:i-opener, TNG. (Score:2)
C'mon companies, get Torx, not Tux! (Score:2)
CompUSA, Prodigy, and Earthlink (Score:2)
The $49.99 deal was with Earthlink... Pay for 2 years upfront (sign up in the store at time of purchase), and they'll give you the device for 50 bucks. Unfortunately, as a CompUSA manager told me, they were under contract only to sell Prodigy service with their computers, and selling Earthlink would violate this agreement. (The manager said this was explained to him by an Earthlink representative.)
So... CompUSA was starting a big push, and advertised the device WITH OUT ANY FINE PRINT at $49 on their website, and listed as an "In Store Only" Item...
Some people got them, some didn't... Stores even in the same town had different policies decided for several days by each store manager (some of them didn't even know what the heck the thing was).
It is my understanding that since those days of inconsistency (Probably April 23rd-29th), the stores have since made some action to prevent this discounted sale.
It's a propreitary Cyrix device, and is fairly nice for the price, but you do have to add harddrives, or mess with the internal QNX software. TV Output is typical basic 640x480 scan conversion. There are other features on the motherboard that could add onboard IDE support, network support, audio in, etc... so it is a fun toy to see what all you can do with it.
AntiPasto
Possible Reprocussions (Score:2)
However, I see at least one potential problem down the road if companies attempting to bundle services with hardware find any new device built on commodity hardware standards immediately ripped open and repurposed. Have we all forgotten that we live in the age of the DMCA? Proprietary, closed standards, systems, and software are not dead, and the major corporations whose bread and butter come from providing products and services no one else can replicate simply due to the obfuscation of their workings can be counted on to protect their interests in court.
What ever happened to the true DIY attitude of computer hobbyists and hackers? It may feel great to see that cute little plastic appliance booting Linux, but that doesn't mean you've actually built something, just stood on the shoulders of countless other engineers and programmers to give yourself a feeling of technological prowess.
Basically, if you know what you think a perfect system would be, pull together some people and build the damn thing! There's no reason that open hardware construction couldn't be just as sucessful as open software, and Sony won't be sending out the lawyer ninja to kick anyone's ass for building their own homebrew hardware.
MediaGX board (Score:2)
http://ww w.arcomcontrols.com/products/icp/pc104/processors
No mention of price though. Mabe someone could put together a cheep Webplayer Wannabe bundel made to be a cheep linux box. I think there is a market for this. Mabe a "GeekBox"... a "SlashBox"? hummm....
Re:The PC isn't dead. (Score:2)
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"You take a distribution! Rename! Stamp CD's! IPO!"
- CmdrTaco, Geeks in Space, Episode 2 from 6:18 to 6:23.
Quick Math check (Score:3)
24.95 * 24 == 598.80
598.80 + 54.07 == 652.87
199.95 * 1.0825 = 216.45
Total money saved by using their ISP offer == - 436.42
Sounds like a deal that really sucks to me.
Cyrix MediaGX bugs - accurate info instead (Score:3)
1. Some XFree releases have a lot of bugs in MediaGX support. Use 3.3.3.1 or 3.3.6
2. The RDTSC handling is funny. Linux will disable
the TSC and handle it fine
3. The SB emulation has bugs. 2.2.15 has workarounds for both the DMA counter bug and the DMA emulation bug.
4. The PCI bridge is a bit dim. Its fine for most stuff but put a tv capture card there and you may have issues. Its not clear whose fault that is
Otherwise its a good little CPU, it has 16K cache only but with good latency and the video from main memory does hit performance. Figure P120-P150 for a MediaGX 180Mhz.
Alan
ian (Score:3)
http://www.virginconnectme.com/ [virginconnectme.com]
this product is put out by a company called ian (internet appliance network). i had the opportunity to meet the guy who created this little piece of hardware. i can tell you that up front, the hardware is very sexy looking. i don't know much about the insides, but i *do* know that they are already working on a second generation, and they are hoping to support broadband access in that one.
the current model is limited to a supply of around 10,000, first come first serve.
the deal is you pay $50 a year for 3 years and agree to be online for 10 hours a month. that's it.
oh, and BTW, they fully invite you to hack it and run whatever OS you want, provided you stay online at least 10 hours a month. (at least that's what i was told a week and a half ago.)
For those who are wondering what it is... (Score:3)
Re:i-opener, TNG. (Score:4)
http://www.i-opener-linux.net and look around.
There are lots of new hacks with or w/o opening the
box.
Theft? (Score:4)
Wrong -- do some fact checking (Score:5)
They have a deal if you sign up for two years of Earthlink it is $49.99.
some people were able to get by this cuz the workers at CompUSA were stupid. They wised up, real fast.
-Davidu
No, it's not theft (Score:5)
People get taken for a ride by the twisted wording of licencing agreements, credit card terms, and tons of other fine print every day. If it turns out that one of these big boys inadvertently gives everyone a much better deal than they originally intended, there is nothing legally or morally wrong with taking advantage of that.
Frankly, what really is disgusting, and IMO morally wrong, is for companies like iOpener to then turn around and cry outrage and blame "hackers" for "lost revenue". It's typical of our corporate culture to pass the buck for your own screw ups, and the iOpener fiasco is just another example of their willingness to scapegoat anything non mainstream to get their way.
At any rate, I was all excited about getting one for $50, to play MP3s on, but for $199 (and with all the other pieces parts I have lying around) I can build something just as good and more expandable.
Happy Beltaine!
Attractive-looking embedded PCs (Score:5)
Beyond the obvious "it's cheap because it's intended to be bundled with a service" similarity, there's another thing that this machine and the I-Opener have in common: they are physically small (they don't take up a lot of space) and a bit underpowered compared to today's mainstream PC, which is one of the reasons that they _can_ be so cheap.
People want these cheezy/cheap PCs. This WebSurfer machine, especially with its TV-out, reminds me of Commodore's ahead-of-it's-time CDTV. CDTV was really an Amiga 500 packaged in what looked like a regular audio CD player -- something that would look at home on your stereo rack. But it was really a general-purpose computer in disguise, and you could do just about anything you could imagine with it.
There's demand for this stuff, but it seems like the manufacturers are missing something. They seem to think that if a device is targeted as having a specific embedded purpose, then it doesn't need to be programmable. (Do any of these guys remember the personal computer market of the early 80s?!?) That's one of the reasons people are trying to rip out the embedded QNX (or whatever) and stick Linux on them. Some users want to really customize these machines to do whatever THEY want.
And that gives me an idea. When I was picking out components for my firewall/music box, I didn't really _want_ a conventional PeeCee case. I wanted something that would fade into the background and look inconspicuous, like a stereo component. I checked out a few Micro-ATX cases, but for various reasons, nothing was quite right for me. So I gave up on the idea and got a minitower (but at least it was a cool one [coolermaster.com] ;-).
I think the world wants more variety in computer cases. And no, I don't mean another iMac clone. Start with the old pizza box or generic audio component size, make sure it has room on the front for
Alas, I think the computer industry doesn't recognize the existence of hobbyists anymore.
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Websurfer no longer available at CompUSA. Sorry (Score:5)
The most informed speculation is that the price reduction (from $200 to $49.95) was intended to be for a bundle of the box plus internet service.
Comments on the websurfer-hacker mailing list [feedle.net] suggest that these boxes are not as useful as the I-opener