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Lindows Releases Inexpensive Subnotebook 565

los furtive writes "As of March 1st $799 will get you this Lindows 2.9lb subnotebook with a VIA C3 933MHz Processor, 256 megs ram and a 20 gig HD, a 12inch screen, USB 2.0, firewire and of course the Lindows OS. Pre-orders have already started."
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Lindows Releases Inexpensive Subnotebook

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  • GNU/linux hardware (Score:3, Insightful)

    by latroM ( 652152 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:25PM (#5345361) Homepage Journal
    Sounds neat. We need more GNU/Linux hardware makers to make users familiar with the free operating system. I don`t know how free lindows is but bringing choice to users is important.
  • Kinda expensive (Score:4, Insightful)

    by GigsVT ( 208848 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:25PM (#5345368) Journal
    Considering the C3 933Mhz is slower than a PIII 400.
    • Re:Kinda expensive (Score:3, Informative)

      by Xunker ( 6905 )
      Slower at what?

      Floating point? Yes, much slower (owing to half-speed FPU and Cyrix's regretable design).

      But what else? I have a machine next to me that has a Via C3-866; In WinStones and Sysmarks it easily paces my Celery 850; Though in Q3A, the Via is laughable in comparison.

      No, the Via C3 is not a gamers machine, but in basic use it's adequate for Joe user (and it uses less than a quarter of the power of your PII-400!)
    • Re:Kinda expensive (Score:5, Interesting)

      by puck01 ( 207782 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @05:03PM (#5347016)
      Considering this [devsdeals.com] deal to be had at dell right now. I'd have to agree. # Celeron 1.6GHz, 256MB RAM, 20GB HD for $595.

      puck
    • Re:Kinda expensive (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Syre ( 234917 )
      Actually, it would appear to be faster for many applications.

      here [tech-report.com] are some benchmarks.
  • by Shinzaburo ( 416221 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:26PM (#5345379) Homepage
    Given that you can find iBooks for just a bit more (around $999), I think I'd rather have the Aqua interface.
    • If I had to choose between the two, I'd have to go with the iBook as well. However, I don't really need to choose between the two... I want to have both ;-).

      For the most part, though, I'd rather just use a super-fast desktop as my linux box, and then use my iBook as my laptop. That's a killer combination for me, personally.

      --sex [slashdot.org]

    • Considering that the ibook you mentioned weights almost as much as the Thinkpad I am typing this on (cite [apple.com]), this is not a fair comparison. The rule of thumb is this: if you want ultimate portability on a system which can run Linux, you have to pay through the nose for it. Until now, that is.

      - Sam

    • Aaargh.

      I use an iBook, and I love it. It's a great machine and I'm glad I spent the money (a little more that $999, since I bought it last year, and I maxed out the RAM, which was a worthwhile expenditure IMO.) If anyone asks me "what kind of laptop should I buy?" an iBook is usually at the top of my recommendation list.

      But.

      I'm getting really sick of the comments that seem to attach to any story about any product X talking about how you should use Y or Z instead. Linux story: a bunch of comments about how you should use OS X. OS X story: ditto, but from the Linux side. MySQL/PostgreSQL: duuude, MySQL/PostgreSQL sucks, use PostgreSQL/MySQL instead. Any story about programming language X: Language X 5ux0rz, Language Y r0x0rz. Et bloody cetera.

      Different people want different tools for different tasks. Deal with it.
    • Better comparison (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Bobartig ( 61456 )
      Lindows MobilePC - Apple iBook

      Price: $800 / $1000

      Processor: 933Mhz C3 / 700Mhz G3

      Memory: 256MB PC133 / 128MB PC100
      (Max Mem, 768MB / 640MB)

      HDD: 20GB / 20GB
      (Max HD 40GB / 40GB)

      Weight: 2.9 lbs / 4.9 lbs

      Size: 0.91"x10.43"x8.66" / 1.35"x11.2"x9.06"

      Optical Drive: external / internal CD-ROM

      USB: 2xUSB 2.0 / 2xUSB 1.1

      Firewire: 1 / 1

      Graphics: Savage4 16MB shared/ Radeon 7500 16MB

      Screen: both 12.1 TFT 1024x768 res

      External Video: not specified / VGA output with optional composite

      LAN: both 100BT

      Modem: optional / 56k v.92

      PCMCIA: yes / no

      Integrated Wireless: no / yes (optional)

      OS: Lindows 3.0 / MacOSX 10.2

      Software: D'load free apps via Click-and-Run / Bundled AppleWorks 6, Quicken 2003, FAXstf, iApps, Browsers

      Warranty: 2 years / 1 year (3 year optional)

      I'd love to have a > 3 lb. tiny subnote for browsing and veggin' on the couch... but for a real productivity machine, the iBooks still wins out for me. Still, wouldn't mind playing around with one!
  • Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NotTheAntiChrist ( 119853 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:26PM (#5345384) Homepage
    But would we be paying an "operating system tax"?
    i.e., can we save the $99 Lindows costs by not getting an OS installed?
    I sure hope so, lets not be hypocritical :P
    • Re:Hrmm (Score:3, Insightful)

      by npietraniec ( 519210 )
      Since this press release is coming from the Lindows site... I would venture to say "probably not"

      Lindows is software. I would expect the same if Microsoft was selling laptops.

      Sony, Toshiba, HP, etc... have no excuses.
    • Re:Hrmm (Score:3, Interesting)

      it's not really a tax when you buy a computer with the operating system. the OS is part of the whole product they're selling. the thing that bites you is that you can't get rid of the OS (give it to someone, sell it). the license agreement ties it to that specific hardware.

      i'm sure lindows their chunk on the sales price. but, the question is, can you sell that lindows OS you get pre-installed or give it away to someone else to use? can you install your lindows os on any number of machines you own (fair use)?
  • Yet for $699... (Score:5, Informative)

    by wo1verin3 ( 473094 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:26PM (#5345385) Homepage
    Yet for $699 you can get this Dell Inspiron [dell.com] with a Celeron 1.6, GeForce2Go 16mb video, and more.... add 128MB to bring it up to the same price and you can load on your own Linux Install. Why are we doing Lindows marketing for something that isn't really that great of a deal if you shop around?
    • Re:Yet for $699... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by dartboard ( 23261 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:29PM (#5345414)
      The Dell Inspiron you quote is 6.8lbs -- roughly 2.5 times the size of the Lindows PC. I'd say that's a significant difference, wouldn't you?
      • Re:Yet for $699... (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Bluetick ( 516014 )
        And, despite it's large size, the Dell doesn't have USB 2.0 or Firewire, not to mention that the Lindows one has both.

        Okay, the Dell is moderately faster. But it's not as flexible, nor is it a 'subnotebook' (I don't know why they call it subnotebook, makes you think they're targetting it for subhumans).
      • Re:Yet for $699... (Score:5, Informative)

        by BMonger ( 68213 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:41PM (#5345542)
        Also $699 is the "base price"... if you try to configure a system for $699 it's almost next to impossible. I tried to configure that system and there is nothing on the first page that tells me that switching out an option will either lower or raise the price. Clicking continue gives me a price of $1,277... I have no idea where they get their $699 prices from... frankly I find Dell's pricing scheme very misleading.
        • Re:Yet for $699... (Score:5, Informative)

          by cdrudge ( 68377 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @03:01PM (#5345749) Homepage
          Follow the grandparent's link, click the blue "Recommended Systems". Right under the phone of the laptop there is a link that says "Inspiron 2650C starting at $699". Click it. That takes you to a page that has the laptop for $849 - $150 rebate = $699. You can customize it from there.

          This link [dell.com] takes you straight to that page. Here [dell.com] is the same laptop that is $806-$150 rebate (not shown on that page but on another that leads to that page). The extra $$$ off is due from their Employee Purchase Program that anyone can get thru.
      • What!? (Score:3, Funny)

        by Idou ( 572394 )
        "The Dell Inspiron you quote is 6.8lbs -- roughly 2.5 times the size of the Lindows PC."

        That's roughly 2.5 times more 'puter for you money!

        Looks like you dun made yourself a fool.
    • Re:Yet for $699... (Score:3, Informative)

      by jonnythan ( 79727 )
      That Dell is almost 7 pounds. That's a big notebook.

      This Lindows thing is less than 3 pounds. That's a massive (ha, ha) difference. The way I see it, it's not such a bad deal for such a tiny notebook that still has a nice sized screen, especially when you toss in built-in super handy CompactFlash.
    • Re:Yet for $699... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by arvindn ( 542080 )
      isn't really that great of a deal if you shop around?

      You said it yourself. People's time is valuable.

    • by IGnatius T Foobar ( 4328 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:45PM (#5345584) Homepage Journal
      Wasn't it just a few days ago that someone on "Ask Slashdot" was looking for a value-priced notebook whose purchase price did not include the Microsoft tax?

      This really is a breakthrough, despite it being LindowsOS. This is, perhaps, the first time you can buy a truly Linux-preloaded notebook, as opposed to some of those other "boutique" shops where a Linux machine costs 50-100% more than the same machine loaded with Windows from a first-tier vendor (usually because they simply bought the machine from one of those first-tier vendors and then threw away the Windows license).

      But as usual, Slashdotters will find something to complain about. I'm not complaining. As enamoured as I am with my ThinkPad (which I bought used), if I were in the market for a notebook computer right now, I'd give this one some serious consideration.

      This is the first time in history that a notebook vendor isn't charging you more for a computer with an operating system that costs less. Even if the very first thing you do is erase LindowsOS and install RedHat, this is still a significant milestone.
    • Re:Yet for $699... (Score:5, Informative)

      by evilviper ( 135110 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:53PM (#5345673) Journal
      My Sotec notebook is 4LBS, has a built-in combo DVD/CD-RW, 256MB of RAM, 20GB HD, etc. All that was $750, and it has a 1.2GHz Celeron, not a piece of crap VIA-C3, which performs like it's less than half it's own clock-speed.
  • Graphics chipsets (Score:4, Interesting)

    by jmertic ( 544942 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:27PM (#5345396) Homepage Journal

    Any idea what graphics chipset these use? The specs left that out ( usually means it's a bad one ).

    • by bsharitt ( 580506 )
      I'm guesing it's good enough for word processing and web browsing, which is okay since I'm guessing this isn't a gaming note book.
    • Re:Graphics chipsets (Score:5, Informative)

      by BMonger ( 68213 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:36PM (#5345488)
      From http://idot.com/TheStore/Desktop/787Spec.asp?Produ ct.id=787&Cate.id=2 [idot.com]

      Integrated Savage 4 AGP 4X graphic core (up to 16MB Video Memory)
    • Not sure what they're using off hand, but looking at motherboards that use the 933MHz C3, they usually have some sort of hardware acceleration such that you can watch DVD's on them. As far as 3D abilities, they're typically pretty crappy. Given that this is probably aimed at people who want to write a paper and surf the web, maybe listen to MP3's or a CD this is probably sufficient.

      Actually, for a subnotebook, light weight computer this may be a good deal. I'm still using a pentium (one!) notebook as it is small enough and light enough to do what I need it to do. I'm mostly curious about battery life. I know the C3's also came in a low power/low heat flavor (passive cooling is fine), I've got to wonder if that was just too crappy to use or something. Light with a long battery and enough power to write a paper/work on a talk while listening to music would be enough to get me to shell out less than $1k, no problemo.
      • Re:Graphics chipsets (Score:5, Informative)

        by kriston ( 7886 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @03:00PM (#5345736) Homepage Journal
        All Via C3s are low power/low heat. The 933 MHz model is exceptionally fast for its power and heat requirements. The chipset is the integrated Via ProSavage (the old S3 stuff) which has specific acceleration support for MPEG (DVD) decoding. I build systems based on this processor and they are excellent for everything except 3d gaming, and I've never seen anyone expect to do 3d gaming on a notebook PC for under $2500, anyway.

        KRis
    • Any idea what graphics chipset these use? The specs left that out ( usually means it's a bad one ).

      Probably one with power that scales to match the processor. The C3 isn't exactly.. any good for any game at all. At least not a 3D accelerated game. This T1 is so disgustingly bogged down that I can't find the benchmarks now, but a 933mhz C3's OpenGL and Direct 3D performance are right on par with an Athlon 500mhz. If you're looking for a notebook to play games on, you're not only looking at the wrong one, you're looking in the entirely wrong end of the spectrum. Be ready to cough up 3 times that.

    • I'm in no way a graphics expert, and I mean in no way, but I noticed the following text on the store page:

      Integrated Savage 4 AGP 4X graphic core (up to 16MB Video Memory)

      Not quite Doom III territory, is it?

  • I wanted something I could put in the glove compartment of my car and wire directly into the stereo ... something like a Toshiba Libretto. Ah well. Guess I can just mount it elsewhere in the vehicle.

    mkdir Dashboard; mount -t HUD /dev/display/ /Dashboard
  • that 800$ isnt really inexpensive? ANother 200 gets you an ibook new.
  • OS License (Score:5, Funny)

    by WPIDalamar ( 122110 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:29PM (#5345413) Homepage
    But if I don't agree with the OS license, can I return it for a partial refund?
  • This is a great idea except one flaw. Now Lindows, which isn't even a competitive OS maker, is now trying to fight the likes of Dell, Sony, Toshiba, IBM, and the rest. Good luck is what I have to say. It actually looks like a decent laptop for college students (read: cheap, and no MS tax) and I know the first thing I'd do is try and put a real linux distro. However, it has a compact flash, does linux know how to handle that?
  • by LordYUK ( 552359 ) <jeffwright821@noSPAm.gmail.com> on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:29PM (#5345420)
    How long till someone gets a linux distro to run on it? oh wait...
  • Windows? (Score:4, Funny)

    by SirDrinksAlot ( 226001 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:29PM (#5345422) Journal
    Can you load Windows onto it? :-)
    • Heh, I was thinking the same thing. I wouldn't mind having XP on something that size, especially if you could get 512MB of RAM.
  • How "well" does that Via/Cyrix 933MHz processor actually perform?
  • I've seen a P4 2,4ghz, 512mb RAM, 64mb VGA card, 40 or 60gb HD, CD-R(W)/DVD combo, with 15 inch screen for just 999,-, including MS XP and MS Works. Didn't buy one because I simply don't have a need for a laptop. Besides, any OS can be deleted and replaced by some other one.

    • Re:So? (Score:3, Funny)

      by dartboard ( 23261 )
      So does that behemoth weigh in at 2.9lbs as well? More like 8lbs you say? Ahh I see so they aren't really comparable at all! Glad you straightened us out, thanks!
      • 8lbs, heck for that price, it's probably a straight up desktop replacement running straight up desktop parts (read P$ not P4-M). Must have a 45min battery life and could well weight more than 10lbs.
    • Besides, any OS can be deleted and replaced by some other one

      In most cases yes, the OS could be replaced, but that doesn't mean that all the hardware will be supported, especially on laptops that may have non-standard parts. That's one of the biggests risks with putting another OS on a laptop.

      <anecdote type=story> I had a compaq presario laptop that came with Windows XP, read through the license agreement, didn't want to agree to it so I install an old Win2k I had laying around and it was a major pain to get it working after hours of downloading drivers and trying to figure out the hardware I finally got everything working except the sound. A few days later after tring every driver I could find, and it still not working, I figured I'd try linux. Linux found all the hardware just fine, but still no sound. However, because it was open source I was able to download a path for the kernel and viola! the sound worked. So I happened to get lucky with finding a patch for linux, but not all alternate OSes would probably run. </anecdote>
  • by BMonger ( 68213 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:32PM (#5345441)
    I don't know all the much but their iBook comparison is off... I think they have Powerbook and iBook specs combined into one notebook... the iBook has a G3 chip not a G4 and I don't think it has PCMCIA slots either...
  • I've got one of the fanless 533mhz versions for my car MP3 player project. I'd say it was as fast, if not faster than a pII 400. Not a gaming box, but more than enough horsepower to run Office 97 and Mozilla without problems. Guess that is not really saying much, but that is all folks looking for this type of thing might want -- assuming the battery life was solid.
  • by magarity ( 164372 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:33PM (#5345453)
    Obviously this is an OEM model made by someone else (probably VIA themselves). Lindows doesn't have enough market pull to have a custom model made to their own specs. So I bet it is already selling like hotcakes in Southeast Asia with someone else's name on it and Windows installed. Does any recognise it?
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Taiwan company name Aamax Technology Co., Ltd.

      From their site (google cached):

      Specially Package
      eNOTE OEM Notebook

      12.1" Poly-Si TFT/
      C3-933 LVM CPU, VIA Chipset
      256MB/20GB/56K/LAN/WXP

      For more information, please contact with us ASAP.

      This not on their website anymore.
  • by binaryDigit ( 557647 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:34PM (#5345466)
    They totally botched the iBook entry in their little comparison chart. They are comparing to the PowerBook not the iBook. You can get a 700mhz iBook for $999, much better comparison. Makes you wonder about their other choices.
  • by net_bh ( 647968 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:34PM (#5345467)
    Here is the CNET news item [com.com]

    Here is a link to the Idot [idot.com] website.

    Here is a link to the Gearzoo [gearzoo.com] website.

  • by pz ( 113803 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:34PM (#5345469) Journal
    A 933 MHz C3 is approximately equivalent, in real-world horsepower, to a 550 MHz Pentium (on integer tasks, much worse for floating-point). The C3 is not a high-performance architecture, although it has been tweaked for very low power consumption.
    • by mrklin ( 608689 ) <ken...lin@@@gmail...com> on Thursday February 20, 2003 @03:02PM (#5345764)
      I would say it is better than that. I use a VIA C3 900 Mhz processor in a Shuttle small form factor PC (SV24) at home. It uses so little power that it does not require a CPU fan.


      It is sufficient enough to do the following without problem:

      • Decode MPEG-2 i.e. playback DVD or VOB files.
      • Encode and decode MP3.
      • Generally Office tasks and web surfing.
      • Even gaming (with older games like Counterstrike) if paired up with a decent graphic card.


      What it does not well (at least for me):

      Encode MPEG-2.

      Handle or manipulate large files (800+ MB high bitrate DivX file, apply Photoshop filter to a TIFF file etc, etc). (This is with 512 MB RAM and a large fast driveXP.)

      New games that are CPU intensive.

      If you have to seriously ask 'Will this have enough power for my (insert task here)?' then a C3 is probably not for you.

      $800 is too much to pay for that anyway although I like its hardware specs (both firewire and USB).

    • Anyone know what C3 core the notebook is using.

      There is the old Ezra and the new Nehemiah. The latter uses full speed FP (Ezra runs a half the processor speed = reason for being so slow on most benchmarks)

      If it is upgradable this might be a pretty good deal after all. The CPU sells for $35+ or so.

      More infor on Via C3 chip here [theinquirer.net]

  • 1.2 celeron, 256 RAM, 20 gig HD (30 if purchased from SAMS), CDR/DVD combo drive $850.00

    MUCH better deal IMO.
  • by NineNine ( 235196 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:35PM (#5345472)
    And what I want to know... will it run Windows 2000? If it can, I'm all over it. That's not a bad deal.
  • blatently posted here a few months back:

    http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/04/22/1256 25 3&mode=flat

    have a nice, slash-ad-reading day!
    • by los furtive ( 232491 ) <ChrisLamothe@NOSPam.gmail.com> on Thursday February 20, 2003 @03:00PM (#5345738) Homepage

      Uhm......no.

      I'm just a regular Java developing shmoe located in frigid Canada, who first saw this article on The Register [theregister.co.uk] and since Slashdot is USA-centric, not to mention very supportive of anything to do with Linux for the people, I figured it was worth submitting since a lot of people might have missed it and would be very interested. I do not have anything to gain from this, and have no vested interest in either Slashdot, Lindows, Via or any other company mentioned in the post.

      I hope this little reply helps shed some light on things, and my I suggest in the future that you take the time to write a proper link?

      Oh, and for the record, while I agree an iBook would be close to the same thing, with better brand name recognition...it still costs $200 more, and weighs more too (I could be wrong on this one). Another reason why I submitted this story was that only 3 weeks ago I purchases a Toshiba Portege 4000 [digital-daily.com], which cost about twice the price for similar features, and weighs a pound more! I was hoping somebody might see this and save a buck...although I must admit I'm very satisfied with my Portege.

  • Lindows... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by zzxc ( 635106 )
    While the Lindows laptop is meant for consumers, I don't think it will sell very well. Why? Because most people who would buy a linux computer want a distribution made for power.

    The only real market share it would get would be non-computer-literate people who want to use their computers for very limited purposes.

    The laptop may also attract people who want to install another linux distribution on it, however.
  • ...if some nice hardware company, like an HP or a Dell, would produce a low-cost laptop similar to this with *your choice* of distro preconfigured?

    No, wait, no one reading /. would want to own one. Instead, wouldn't it be nice if they would sell you a laptop with *no* O/S installed, for $400 less than usual?

    I'd buy one.
  • i am wondering, does it support windows? until it all hardware is supported under windows, we can't expect it to take off and appeal to the masses.
  • by jo_ham ( 604554 ) <joham999 AT gmail DOT com> on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:42PM (#5345543)
    The second column is titled "ibook" incorrectly (missing the capital even) when the specs in the boxes are clearly for the 12" Powerbook.

    As much as I want my iBook to have an 867Mhz G4, it's just not on the cards. All iBooks have G3 processors at 700 or 800MHz, and they cost a darn sight less than $1,700 - the most expensive 12" iBook is $1,300 and blows this Lindows things out of the water.
  • I didn't see any mention of sound. For me, that's somewhat important in a laptop, as I like to listen to music while I'm coding on a plane or in the car (if I'm not driving mind you) or even at work.
  • by arvindn ( 542080 )
    Since you're sure all the hardware works with linux, you can buy the thing, wipe the disk and install RH/Debian/Gentoo whatever.
  • Lindows is satan.. (Score:4, Informative)

    by xchino ( 591175 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:46PM (#5345596)

    I would never suggest Lindows for ANYONE. Don't get me wrong, I really like the idea. I was super hyped about it being sold on cheap wal-mart PCs. Then I checked it out for myself. Here's what I found that I didn't like...

    It always runs under single user mode. IRC somewhere, and you IRC as root. STUPID.

    Click'n'Run doesn't work until you subscribe. Then you get to pay for all your software that you could have installed as easily with any other package manger, and a few commercial versions of free software.

    That's where they went wrong IMHO. I can understand the financial reason for the Click'n'Run situation, but I see no justification for crippling Linux security to such an extent. I was hoping for a version of Linux that my Windows friends could use. Instead I got a generic version of Windows.
    • by alienw ( 585907 )
      Apparently, you are retarded. I think the things you mention have been adressed about a million times already.

      First, the running-as-root idea was smart. The slashdot masses need to understand that people do NOT want to fuck with passwords, usernames, and that shit on their PC. On a server, fine, but not on a PC.

      You don't install a super-secure keycard system for every room in your house, do you? That would be fucking annoying, and would at most protect you from yourself. That's about what the regular distributions are set up like. That does not make them any more secure. If you don't have many users on the system, then you don't need the unix password system and you might as well run as root. Yes, you need to have external services shut off, but Lindows is very good in that regard. So, care to enlighten me about how to hack a system with no open ports and a strict iptables config, even if it doesn't have a root password?

      Besides, your argument is invalid in any case. If you don't want to run as root, you are free to create a normal account. Lindows supports that.

      As for click and run, I have one word for you: easy. I subscribe to Mandrakeclub for the same reason. It makes it easier to get stuff for your distro. Yes, I could fuck with .tar.gz sources and get them to maybe run on my system, but I'd rather pay a few bucks so somebody else does the dirty work. What's the problem with that?

      If you don't like Lindows, use Mandrake. I like them, but I can see where Lindows might fit in. The fact that something might not be intended for certain types of uses is a concept slashdot whores can't grasp.
  • by Kiwi ( 5214 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:52PM (#5345660) Homepage Journal
    When I look for a laptop, I choose a laptop based on three factors:
    • Cost (check)
    • Size and weight (check)
    • Full-size keyboard (I want one of these things in front of me to make sure the keyboard is almost as good the one on the Thinkpad I am writing this on)
    • Battery life (check)
    • Linux compatibility (check)
    Note that performance is not listed here; I am typing this on a PIII 450 and am more than happy with its performance. I want a laptop which does not need charging and does not need a forklift to carry around. If I wanted performance or the latest gee-whiz 3d chipset, I would get a desktop.

    If the economy was better and I was working again instead of being a student, this is something I would very seriously consider buying. As it stands, this is my dream laptop.

    - Sam

  • by Treebeard the Ent ( 638978 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @02:52PM (#5345664) Homepage Journal
    How can for compare a laptop PC to a PDA? I certaily hope my PDA doesn't have a 12.1" screen or a full sized keyboard sticking out of it (although you can buy one to plug into it) 20 gig hd? nope, but you don't need that much with your PDA (unless you're using it as an MP3 Player too).

    It like Sunkist selling thier oranges saying: Our oranges are orange and juicy... apples aren't. Our oranges are great for making orange juice... apples are not. Our oranges taste like oranges... apples do not.
  • by juuri ( 7678 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @03:16PM (#5345904) Homepage
    Standard laptop PeeCee parts so enjoy putting whatever OS on it you want:

    PC-UM10 from sharp [sharpplace.com]

    Sharp 2.9lb laptop: P3-600, 128meg ram, 20gig drive
    • I was drooling over the Sharp PC-UM10/30 ultra-lights a few months ago. That was before I met one in the flesh at Circuit City.

      These machines are amazingly thin and amazingly light. I'm sure they are a joy to have in your lap. That is, as long as you don't have to type. The keyboard is disgusting. I'm a little spoiled because I'm used to my Thinkpad 600x, but my hands started to cramp up within minutes of typing on the Sharp. After typing a half a page of text, my fingers were crying for me to go back to my Thinkpad.

      That, and the thing feels pretty flimsy (price you pay for 0.7" thickness). My love affair with the Actius line is over.

      Erik
  • by presearch ( 214913 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @03:18PM (#5345933)
    Nice ripoff of Apple's web site look and feel.
    Seems like Robertson is incapable of doing anything
    without leveraging off of somebody else's efforts.
    Linux, W/Lindows, mp3.com. What an info-age parasite.
  • Lack of Internal CD (Score:3, Informative)

    by ackthpt ( 218170 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @03:20PM (#5345957) Homepage Journal
    The lack of an internal CD, on my Sony Vaio 505TX was a major source of angst. Consider hooking up something hanging off a cable, with an external powersupply, slightly wider (squared) than a CD and 5/8" or more thick and how to place/dangle it while using this on your lap. I'd never consider another laptop w/o internal CD. Now I'm sure you can find a nice little laptop somewhere with a CD, and comperable to this and slap Lindows or RH or whatever and you'd be happy as a clam.
  • by JonathanF ( 532591 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @03:25PM (#5346017)
    I'm glad that I'm not the only one who noticed that they used the specs for the 12" PowerBook in place of the iBook; how fair is a comparison like that... to the Lindows system (or the others, really)? The 12" PowerBook is probably one of the faster and most full-featured laptops in the class, so of course it's going to cost $1799.

    The worst part is that it's evident that Lindows isn't just exaggerating the value of their system - they're blatantly trying to deceive people into thinking that they have the only affordable small-sized laptop in existence. One wonders if they think that the $999 iBook only exists in a parallel universe!

    No matter how much the cost or weight might be appealing, I can only see this laptop as being a nightmare for anyone who isn't technically experienced. Imagine some middle-aged couple trying to get an Internet connection, for example, or to get their USB printer to work. They probably wouldn't get much help at all from any company outside of Lindows, and "go check out the Ars Technica Linux forum" (as another example) is not going to help when many support-dependent people aren't even savvy enough to recognize when they have something like Windows XP! No matter what you might think of Macs, they at least have some official support beyond their manufacturer.
    • And apple is trying to decieve people into thinking they have the only small-sized full-pwered laptop in existance. hmmmm....

      Anyways...its clear that apple introduced the 12" powerbook because they're gonna kill off the iBook line...the only reason why the iBook is still around is to get rid of all those old G3 chips they still have in inventory...the high end iBook is verrrry similiar to the 12" powerbook
  • by IWantMoreSpamPlease ( 571972 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @03:31PM (#5346081) Homepage Journal
    Is how friendly the hardware is to alternative OSes?

    It's got (a kind of) Linux on it, how well would BeOS, or OS/2 or some other *nix distro install on it?

    Would the alt.OS drivers be easily available?

    The last sublaptop I got was so damn windows only I couldn't even get BeOS or Mandrake to complete an install, much less find drivers for it.

    I would find this good news simply for the alt.OS crowd.
  • by newsdee ( 629448 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @04:22PM (#5346568) Homepage Journal
    Since you can get a free Linux for any PC, you have to consider the extra hardware benefit that you get with this laptop.

    - For $200 more, you can buy a new entry-level P4 laptop or an iBook.

    - For almost the same price you can build a Mini-ITX system running at 933 Mhz with a 15" flatscreen monitor. With this option, you can further reduce the price if you have some spare parts (Hard Drive, DDR Ram, USB/Firewire CD drive, etc).

    Of course the second choice is not as "portable" (no working on bus/trains/planes), but if you're broke and need a solid PC, it's a good entry-level choice. :-) I just built one instead of buying a laptop and saved $400 by reusing old parts. And yes, it fits in my backpack :-)

  • C3 vs. Crusoe? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by steveha ( 103154 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @05:48PM (#5347413) Homepage
    If you benchmark a 933 MHz Crusoe chip laptop (such as a Fujitsu Lifebook P2120 [fujitsupc.com]) versus a 933 MHz C3 chip, which would win?

    Both are low-power. The Crusoe is even-lower-power than the C3. I know raw CPU power isn't the reason why a person buys a laptop, but I'm still curious.

    You will pay more for the Lifebook, but it also has better 3D hardware (Mobility Radeon vs. Savage). That might make a big difference if you want to play Counter-strike or something, if the CPUs are at all similar in computing power.

    I used a K6-III/450 for years, and I suspect that either the C3 or the Crusoe will be just fine for web surfing and such.

    steveha
    • Re:C3 vs. Crusoe? (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I own a C3 800 and it will run circles around a Crusoe of the same MHz. Crusoe is basically a failure. C3 is the world's smallest x86 core, it's almost as low power as a crusoe (we're talking a small milliwatt difference here). And VIA C3 gets you more MIPS per Watt than any other x86. (about 50% more power per MIPS than a StrongARM though). Think of a VIA C3 as a 486 on steroids (but capable of using the full instruction set). The FPU on the C3 is pretty wimpy (crusoe's complete lack of a true FPU makes it extremely wimpy). The FPU is going to be half-speed(or worse) of your typical celeron/p-iii.

      If you are interested in a C3, but don't want this laptop get one of the VIA EPIA-800 motherboards for about $100. (Or one of the newer EPIAs for more money)
  • by markw365 ( 185614 ) on Thursday February 20, 2003 @09:12PM (#5348826) Homepage
    I'm sitting here looking at one, and it's a slick little machine. No floppy or cd, but it _WILL_ netboot so installing Debian won't be that hard. It has an RTL 8139 chipset, so hopefully JHRIV compiled that into the kernel image so we don't have to do a custom tftp kernel to install debian on the thing. Slick little notebook however. :)

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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