Barebones Notebook 311
Gsurface writes "The first barebones notebook makes its appearance. The barebone notebook features no display, no CPU, no RAM and no HDD, but only the case, with keyboard and touchpad."
"I'm a mean green mother from outer space" -- Audrey II, The Little Shop of Horrors
No Display? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:No Display? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No Display? (Score:3, Informative)
well, here are some small ones [partsexpress.com] to get started with. I don't how well they will work with this setup, though.
Re:No Display? (Score:2)
Re:No Display? (Score:5, Funny)
If you got one of those amber displays, would they look like goldfish?
Re:No Display? (Score:5, Informative)
I bought one of these! (Score:2, Funny)
ok..... (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:ok..... (Score:2, Insightful)
Chris
Re:ok..... (Score:5, Funny)
You need only supply your own money and intelligence.
These days the answer to "Where do I get. .
You want a small particle accelerator? People sell them over the counter, or all the parts to build your own.
The only trick is to find the store. Trust me, it's there.
KFG
Re:ok..... (Score:3, Informative)
See if there's a community college or trade school in your area with an electronics servicing class that might want to fix it as a learning experience, or try a radio-TV repair shop that's been in business for a long time and might still have a tube tester.
Since it's a Decca, I'm guessing you're probably not here in eastern NC where I could help but somewhere that was once a part of the empire upon which the sun never set.
Try here (Score:2, Informative)
Try here [lcdtft.com].
They also have very small screens for your next port-linux-to-small-kitchen-appliance project.
Interesting, but (Score:5, Insightful)
It's pretty easy to go to your local dealer and pick up an Athlon, mobo of your choice, some cheap RAM, hard drive, etc. I have to say that I've never seen notebook parts available a la carte like with regular computer paraphernalia.
Besides, even if you could get those things, I have a hunch it would be far more expensive than getting a brand-new notebook from Dell or Gateway. They buy their parts in bulk and can therefore pass the savings on to the consumer.
I'm totally in favour of self-building, don't get me wrong, but I wonder if the economics of the whole deal doesn't favour just buying a new notebook outright and spending the savings on some accessories.
Re:Interesting, but (Score:5, Interesting)
I wouldn't build my own laptop, just because laptops are touchy little beasties. Heat and airflow are really important. Docking stations, and port replicators are nice. Not to mention the wear and tear due to abuse, and move moving parts (the hinges on the screen), and the various clips that I wouldn't get the right kind for, especailly not if I'm buying on the cheap. Batteries and removable parts are a problem. Power consumption, and LCD quality. Just lots of little issues that I wouldn't get right, that Dell would.
Kirby
Wear & tear is the beauty in this concept (Score:5, Interesting)
This would also be great for just keeping a laptop system up-to-date. With the way motherboards and hard disks and cd drives have been shrinking now's the time when I hope we'll see home built laptops of the same breed as home built PC's.
Re:Wear & tear is the beauty in this concept (Score:5, Interesting)
Laptops are nice, but they will never be as cheap as regular desktops due to space, heat and power consumption constraints. The wear and tear, and high replacement parts is what drives people to desktops. They aren't as fast. They can't store as much, you can't put as much RAM in them. They can't do a lot of things a good PC can. Now if they become terminals to bigger faster stationary equipment, now your talking. Then, I'm still not building my own, all I need is one with a good screen, a good video card, and a decent keyboard, nothing else matters on a terminal.
If laptops became extemely common, I could see a vicious cycle of increased sales, which increased production volume, which lowered prices, which increases sales. I don't see a way to transition to there as long as desktop PC's are a cheap as they are. A good laptop is also a lot harder to put together, especially out of commodity parts. Running cabling the right way, and using thin bundled cables instead of ribbon cables is a good idea. Having fans that turn on at the right tempatures, and blow on the right parts is critical. Getting the LCD cable snaked thru is important. Getting the tension right on the hinges. Ensuring that the screen didn't weight too much to put too much stress on the plastic while sitting open. A dozen little things. It'd be simpiler then having DIY car's, but I'm not sure there is that much public interest in it. Most people simply don't need laptops. I've never needed one. I don't travel, and when I want a computer there is one handy. I can't use one in my car while I'm driving, and most other locations I go that don't have a computer, I'm going there to get away from my computers!
Kirby
Re:Interesting, but (Score:2)
over a set of components with standardized
interfaces, you can upgrade, so your investment
doesn't end up a hand-me-down-to-grandma in 6
months. That's a big savings.
Re:Interesting, but (Score:4, Interesting)
It depends. I'll assume you buy parts from reputable dealers. I've seen great deals from dealers with the lowest prices at Pricewatch, but then have looked them up at Reseller Ratings [reserllerratings.com], and found that they sucked. So, let's use prices from dealers that rate well, so we actually get our parts, and if we have any problems, can exchange them in less than six months and two lawsuits. :-)
Under that assumption, you can beat, or come close, to the prices you get when you simply go to Dell and configure a good medium to high end system.
On the other hand, Dell usually has various coupons and specials that you don't find just going to the site. If you spend a while watching places like Techbargains, and pounce on the specials, you can't come anywhere near Dell's prices by building your own--even if you throw sanity to the wind, and buy from the cheapest lowball places you can find for parts.
For example, they had their best 19" LCD for something like $600 with the right coupons and rebates for a couple days. A comparable LCD from most places was $1200, and could be found for $900 on sale at the time.
Of course, this assumes starting from nothing. When you take into account that most of us building our own salvage many parts from the system we are replacing, the long term cost of building your own might be less.
Re:Interesting, but (Score:5, Interesting)
In general, you can buy all the parts and spend an hour putting it all together for at least a few hundred dollars less than a prebuilt system. You can also save extra by using equivalent but less costly parts, and by skimping on parts that aren't important to you. Find a local or online computer parts store that's reputable and has good prices, and there's no way the parts will cost as much as the total of the parts included in a prebuilt system from Dell or whoever.
The value of buying a prebuilt is not that you're getting any of the benefit of Dell's bulk orders of computer hardware (they keep that benefit in the form of profits), but that you get support and a single warranty provider rather than having to deal with all the different manufacturers when encountering a problem. You're not just paying for the brand name, although that's part of it.
Since I can build and support my own, none of my computer's parts were defective, and I don't think it's that big a deal to work with manufacturer's warranties, I will probably never pay extra for Dell brand equity and support. For my Grandma I'd probably recommend she buy from one of the majors, I'd advise her to go with Apple but she already bought herself a Gateway.
As for building my own 19" LCD monitor, I suppose that might be a worthwhile endeavor if the cost of LCD monitors were high enough to justify the millions of dollars of R&D I'd need to spend before manufacturing one.
Re:Interesting, but (Score:3, Funny)
Many people also believe that autos are a commodity. Yet we see many people putting hard work and effort into a car.
What they, and the people who build PCs (like myself), get out of their machine is much more than what someone who buys a Dell gets out of their system.
Buy a Dell if you want a tool. Build a PC if you want a friend.
Re:Interesting, but (Score:2, Informative)
In the stores that cater to people who *build* computers you'll find everything you need.
KFG
Re:Interesting, but (Score:2)
Umm, your distinction is silly. "Assemble" means putting together premanufactured pieces. That's what the pieces of the laptop would be also, unless you are talking about buying raw materials like silicon, gold, oil, etc, designing everything, and fabricating the chips and boards yourself. And refining the oil into plastic. And...
Re:Interesting, but (Score:2, Insightful)
language: His distinction was *clear*, and
meaningful. I think everyone who read his comment
understood what he meant, and understood it to be
a true statement.
Lighten up.
Re:Interesting, but (Score:3, Interesting)
Whan I say assemble I mean what a poster says I mean by build. You can go into Best Buy and purchase a HD, a motherboard, a case, memory, etc. and then you put it all togeher, kit wise. No biggy. If'in I'm under the gun I can do that in under 15 minutes these days from the starting gun to popping in the OS install CD. I know people who can do it in under 10, but I'm not as driven to impress as they are. That is not building a computer. That is assembling one, and Best Buy will not sell you a raw laptop display screen because that isn't something assemblers buy.
No, by build I don't mean buying gold and raw silicon, but I do mean buying *individual* memory chips, a blank board, acid etching your own traces, soldering the chips to the board. . . and then putting it aside, because you haven't built your motherboard in similar fashion yet.
Yes, there are people who do things this way. Who *build* their own board, of their own design. Purchasing the individual chips and discrete componants and then soldering them together. Usually to make a special purpose computer or sound device, or a PC expansion card that performs some nonstandard function.
This is how the first Apple computers were *built.* This is how Sinclair worked in the design phase. This is how many expansion card manufacturers first got a handle on the business while making neat things in the garage.
And there are stores that cater to these people. Radio Shack used to be one of these stores. Now they sell little plactic helmets with swirling lights on top and model Trans Ams that tumble across the floor.
But in many a fair sized town, tucked down some back alley, there is a little shop that most people don't know about, and if you go in their front door you wont see a little plastic helmet anywhere.
You WILL see a display of oscillicopes to the ceiling. Soldering stations. Raw, unetched general purpose circuit boards and PC expansion cards. Thousands of individual chips. Wire of all possible description. Resistors. Capacitors. Trasistors.Breadboards. Etc.
All that stuff that can be used to *make* something, rather than just assemble it by plugging pre made things together.
This sort of shop will also sell you a display for a laptop. They're used for things other than laptops.
Like the display on a custom programable audio synthesizer.
Yes, people still hand craft those too.
Some people are funny and don't just go to K-Mart for everything.
Go figure.
I build most of my own furniture, rather than purchasing premade or *assembling* the stuff that comes out of the box from Home Depot or BJ's. Usually that means a trip to the lumber yard, but yes, *sometimes* that even means going out to my wood lot and cutting down a tree and making my own boards.
Try it. It's fun as all hell. You can buy an attachment for your chainsaw that lets you rough cut your own boards without an expensive mill. After seasoning you run them through your power planer, or even maybe scrape them by hand, depending on what you're building.
But I'm not so pedantic as to imply that to "build" a computer you need a chem lab to make your own raw expoxy from chemicals you extracted from sea water and scraped off your forehead.
That would be silly.
KFG
Re:Interesting, but (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, they buy them pre-assembled and slap a name badge on them, then screw you with a huge mark-up. [toplaptops.net]
Re:Interesting, but (Score:2)
if it gets consumer demand, it will get cheaper. Plus labor is removed from the equation, and support is spread out to different companies.
INDUSTRY STANDARD for notebooks... (Score:3, Interesting)
Desktop users are blessed with a standard form factor (ATX and variants) describing physical specs for motherboards, cases, power supplies, peripheral connectors and so on. Wouldn't it be tremendous if there was a widely recognised standard for laptop/notebooks? Being that the featured article is slashdotted, I cant say if that was the idea, but links posted in the comments included the "barebones" concept as offered by ECS, and I got the impression the components were ECS-specific...
Imagine if there was an "MPX" standard (Mobile...PC...X...whatever--just to pick a 3-letter designation as an example). You could buy a generic laptop caseand power supply and load it with an MPX mobo and your choice of keyboards, touchpads, trackballs, displays, etc. These could be obtained from most any source, form a multitude of manufacturers.
The MPX spec. would specify how these components interconnected--one could go so far as to include notebook variants of PCI or AGP (whereever PC Card devices couldn't fit the bill, such as video card upgrades--not sure but does Intel's new Mobile CPU/chipset architecture not touch on that?). Perhaps devices like keyboards and touchpads would use internal USB-based connections, and there would be a standard display connector and sizes (to correspond with a selection of standard laptop/notebook case sizes).
Mmmmmm... MPX would be nirvana, and as prices came down it couls supplant ATX and it's variants. Well, I suppose not TOTAL nirvana if having Apple iBook looks is really important to you. It wouldn't be UGLY, but an MPX form-factor laptop made from a mix of Taiwanese parts might very well be as sexy as the beige box in Dilbert's cubicle. HOWEVER, there is a big market out there for boring-but-practical, and I'm sure the uber-geek case-modders and companies like VooDoo would find ways to make cool cases within the constraints of a standard like "MPX"...
If I'm ignorant of something like this already in existence, please share info!
Who needs a screen? (Score:4, Funny)
And why use a hard drive when you have perfectly good cassette tapes laying around?
Re:Who needs a screen? (Score:2)
Re:Who needs a screen? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Who needs a screen? (Score:5, Funny)
We, my friend, had to input our code using dip switches, 1 byte at a time. And heaven forbid that you make a mistake near the end of the program, 'cause then we had to start all over.
Re:Who needs a screen? (Score:5, Funny)
We, my friend, had to input our code using dip switches, 1 byte at a time. And heaven forbid that you make a mistake near the end of the program, 'cause then we had to start all over.
You had dip switches? You were lucky! We had to ... no, I just can't bear it any more.
Re:Who needs a screen? (Score:4, Funny)
Durned-kids these days.
Re:Who needs a screen? (Score:5, Funny)
And it comes with a barebones webserver (Score:3, Funny)
I think it's their webserver that is running without a CPU.
AKA (Score:5, Funny)
Re:AKA (Score:2)
Re:AKA (Score:2)
Problems with hosting on a barebones laptop (Score:2, Funny)
Finally something that ISNT a beowulf cluster (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Finally something that ISNT a beowulf cluster (Score:3)
How many fucking LCDs, trackballs, etc would you need for a Beowulf cluster?
It might be semi-silent and useful as one.
Oh this is too easy.... (Score:3, Funny)
Slashdot - Sarcasm, Trolls, and Ego... All under one roof
Finally (Score:2, Insightful)
A way out of the MS tax (Score:2, Funny)
But from what the little blurb said, this looks like an excellent way to avoid paying for Windows and all the other bundled software that people don't want or need. Though the cost of parts and installation may offset this just a bit.
Re:A way out of the MS tax (Score:2, Insightful)
Anyway, why would I want to get a barebones notebook when with some judcious picking and choosing, you can have a killer laptop for not too many pesos: 1.8GHz P4M, 512Mb RAM, 40GB 5400RPM HD, CD-RW/DVD-ROM combo drive, 1394, 64Mb Mobility Radeon 9000 and a flat out awesome 15" 1600x1200 display. How much? Only $1750 US. Dell Inspiron 8200. Even came with that lump o' shite XP Pro from Messysoft.
Re:A way out of the MS tax (Score:2)
Re:A way out of the MS tax (Score:3, Interesting)
this looks like an excellent way to avoid paying for Windows and all the other bundled software that people don't want or need.
As a middle ground, it would be interesting if vendors would sell you a notebook computer with everything but the hard drive. I just upgraded my notebook hard drive, and it was very easy to do. Without the hard drive, there can't be any software pre-installed, so no MS Tax.
Woo...a cyberdeck (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Woo...a cyberdeck (Score:2)
Latte [thinkgeek.com].
Another couple of caveats: hella expensive, video is crappy onboard SIS Vampire Video with no way of swapping it out.
Website (Score:2, Funny)
Tech tips: add a motherboard, processor, ram, ethernet and HDD. Might want to add some software and an OS also.
Re:Website (Score:2)
Barebones webserver (Score:2, Funny)
Keyboard? Keyboard? (Score:5, Funny)
someday: microphone instead of keyboard--but when? (Score:2)
Someday, many agree, as speech input matures, the microphone will become more important than the keyboard.
So, my question is: What year do you think the microphone will surpass the keyboard in importance?
I'm all for lighter notebooks... (Score:2, Funny)
Call that barebones? (Score:2, Funny)
Here's my picture of a real barebones notebook
Pretty neat, isn't it?
Re:Call that barebones? (Score:5, Funny)
Didn't you read the article? They have that exact same picture up.
Create a market for Laptops parts? (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe this will cause laptops to be more similar to desktops, as parts are standard?
They even have a demo!! (Score:2)
Already slashdotted
Buttons? (Score:3, Interesting)
How many mouse buttons do you get with that, or do you add it/them, too?
(from my iBook, with USB 3button mouse plugged in!)
Re:Buttons? (Score:2)
I much prefer the older laptop's that had the trackerball. Much easier to control and they didn't go crazy if you pressed to hard.
Re:Buttons? (Score:2, Interesting)
Most brilliant layout--EVER.
Could type, AND "mouse" without moving your hands.
Two mouse buttons, above and below trackball, the top one basically flush to the keyboard. You could have you fingers on the home row, move the 'ball with a thumb and click with the other thumb. Was great for word processing. It's no wonder that there are still (admitadly somewhat nuts) people out there who still do a lot of writing on their PowerBook 170's and whatnot. Plus, Word 4 and 5.1 were quite nice as were MacWrite Pro and some other classics...
Trustworthy Hardware Platform (Score:3, Funny)
Barebones laptop without a display? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm all for bare-bones, but I at least want all the bones!
Re:Barebones laptop without a display? (Score:2)
I would RTFA but it's been slashdotted.
Wow (Score:5, Funny)
And the damn thing STILL runs Linux. Wow!
Oh. nevermind..
barebones server (Score:2, Funny)
ECS DeskNote perhaps is what they review? (Score:2, Informative)
Features! (Score:2)
Only on Slashdot would these be considered features.
In saying that I think it's a great idea! All my desktop machines are custom built, would be a shame to have to get a branded laptop now!
Hey, I used to have one of those... (Score:5, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
For Sale (Score:3, Funny)
Asus (Score:5, Informative)
Actually it's been possible for some time to get an Asus [asus.com] notebook similar to this, with just the case, motherboard, and LCD on it. I'm not sure Asus really wants you to be able to get them this way and they come in a "white box".
One of the guys at work got one of these, went to Intel's channel partner site, got a PIII mobile CPU for next to nothing, snagged a decent 2.5" HD from one of our retailers, and threw in some SODIMMs that we had in stock and he got a really nice notebook for hardly anything (this was a year or two ago).
He was even able to call up Asus and tell them the stickers wore off his notebook, and they sent him out some new ones for free, so you can't even tell it's not the real deal.
On the other side of things, I do believe from opening up quite a few notebooks for repairs that the vast majority of notebook components are somewhat standardized. The batteries tend to be the most varried components inside the notebooks. Consider that there are only a very few manufacturers of notebook computers that are outsourced by the major computer vendors, and that makes for some pretty standard stuff. It's even possible to get the "white box" version of most of Dell's notebooks direct from the company that manufactures them for Dell, last I checked anyways.
Interesting... (Score:5, Interesting)
Why, you ask, do I care so much? Is it just to be 'elite'? Hell no, it is because I *hate* dealing with any problems that crop up in the warranty period. In dealing with my desktops, a part breaks under warranty, I contact that particular company, send in that *one* part, and have a replacement back in short order. Some people say they are afraid of hardware manufacturers trying to blame other pieces of equipment to avoid servicing, but that has never happened to me. I send it in, they test and verify that it is broken, and they fix it or send a working part. Has always been smooth for me, thankfully.
With the whole systems approach, something under warranty breaks. I call and say 'this portion of the laptop is broken, I want to send in this part, or at least remove the hard drive so some idiot tech doesn't see Linux, freak out, and reformat with Windows'. They say 'Linux isn't supported, you must include the hard drive, it *will* be wiped and replaced with Windows so we can run our test software to verify the problem is fixed, and if we cannot do this we will not repair it'. I've been fighting for weeks to get warranty repair without losing data. The problem is easy to test, if you press the power button and the power light comes on, the problem is fixed, end of story. If the power light stays off even though AC is connected, it is still broken. The problem with it has *nothing* to do with the drive, and they don't need to run any software to figure out if they fixed it or not. Why should it be any of their business what I run, when it clearly didn't cause the problem? Guess I got spoiled when I would call this same company regarding a business laptop and had them bend over backwards to kiss my ass regarding the very same request about not shipping a hard drive.
Also, come a year and a half after purchase, say my memory has a problem. Well, the system is out of warranty. With my desktop, the memory happens to have a lifetime warranty. Having a system where everything is at least a year warranty, with some parts longer is much better than having the whole thing end after a year.
A memory manufacturer has never threatened to deny me service because of the software I run, as long as I don't overclock. A video card manufacturer has never said they can erase my drive contents if they want to run tests. Why should I have to deal with this treatment for laptops? Why is it that I can even build PDAs from parts, and to this day I cannot build a real laptop from parts?
Almost a good idea (Score:3, Interesting)
Free start-up business idea.....
Re:Almost a good idea (Score:2)
Even with XP/NT you should be using some remote desktop software. Then you have a single monitor/keyboard on a small cart that you wheel around in dire emergencies when nothing else would do.
Lunchbox! (Score:2, Funny)
Text of the Story (Score:5, Informative)
Posted 2/28/03 at 10:00 am by Anton
ECS announced recently its DeskNote i-Buddie A980 mobile desktop PC, the first ever mobile barebone computer. It features no display, no CPU, no RAM and no HDD, but only the "case" with keyboard and touchpad. The indisputable trump of the novelty is that you are free to install the most high-end and cutting-edge hardware, or you may buy not really expensive components that are enough for your needs.
Here is the list of i-Buddie A980 technical peculiarities:
* Supports Socket 478 Pentium 4 / Celeron processors with 400/533MHz FSB with 3.06GHz clock-speed and above;
* SiS650 chipset with SiS962 I/O controller;
* 1 DIMM slot for up to 1GB of PC2100 or PC2700 DDR SDRAM memory.
* Integrated graphics core, ability to install NVIDIA GeForce4 Go420 mobile graphics card.
* 2-channel ATA-100/66/33 integrated controller;
* Includes an 8x DVD-ROM drive;
* Free bay for 2.5" HDD;
* 4 USB 2.0 ports;
* FireWire (IEEE1394) port
* IR port with transfer rate up to 115.2Kbit/s;
* 10/100Mbit/s Ethernet adapter and connector;
* Integrated 56K modem;
* 6-channel audio solution and built-in speakers;
* Size: 342mm (W) x 300mm (D) x 34mm(min)/50.5mm(max);
* Weight: 1.8Kg.
End-users have a lot of opportunities to expand and configure such computers, they even now can choose between 14" and 15" TFT panel, what should allow ECS' customers to get the most cost-effective solutions possible.
According to this French web-site, such barebones will be priced at $300. Not expensive, I believe, but remember that you will need to get a display, a microprocessor, a memory module and a hard disk drive to make it functional. It seems that the DeskNote i-Buddie A980 will hit the stores quite soon, as certain European local resellers of DeskNote computers already promote it and it seems that the only thing that stops them from starting the sales is the absence of appropriate LCD displays for such computers.
Last year ECS did not achieve its full-year shipment targets on the DeskNote line of products (see this news-story). Elitegroup Computer Systems decided to follow its usual strategy of offering the cheapest products possible and in order to achieve this it needs to buy as few expensive devices as possible. Since LCD panels seem to be the most highly-priced parts of DeskNote systems, the Chinese company decided to sell the DeskNote PCs without LCD panels in order to keep the inventory level of such units low. This seems to be the right idea in order to keep the lowest prices possible; however, I doubt it will help ECS to skyrocket the sales of its DeskNotes in Europe or the USA, because not a lot of customers want to build notebooks on their own. On the other hand, a lot of companies sell already functional DeskNote computers, which purchase seems to be more interesting.
Time will tell if ECS is able to boost its sales of portable desktop computers by selling display-less DeskNotes.
And the pictures, too! (Score:4, Informative)
Sounds weird, but... (Score:2)
...I was just trying to find something like this recently. I wanted something that would mostly stay put, run off AC, and use a real monitor...but that was also *quiet* and small enough to move around occasionally. Various small-form-factor PCs would fit the bill, but so would a laptop would a broken display, so I actually got as far as seeing if I could find one for sale. Now there's a third option.
So how is it better than a cappuccino pc? (Score:2)
http://www.cappuccinopc.com/ [cappuccinopc.com]
==>Lazn
Re:So how is it better than a cappuccino pc? (Score:2)
Barebones Laptop (Score:3, Insightful)
CPU: 1.8 GHz Mobil P-4 $445.00
RAM: PC133 128MB $37.97
HDD: 20GB $149.00
DISPLAY: 14.1 LCD Screen $749.00
TOTAL: (APPROX) $1380.00
/. effect)
On top of the cost of the "Barebones" system. (which I don't know thanks to the
A quick vist to a certain well known retailer sells a Toshiba Satellite for 999.97.
"I wasn't even supposed to be here today!"
-Dante Hicks
Re:Barebones Laptop (Score:5, Informative)
CPU: 1.8 GHz Mobil P-4 $445.00
Yes, but you can get a Northwood 1.81 GHz for $136.99 from pricewatch (this is the low-ball figure)...I'ld never buy from a low-ball vendor, but it should put you in the ballpark
RAM: PC133 128MB $37.97
Don't forget it has to be SO-DIMMs...
But...close...$33.05 from Axion Technologies...
HDD: 20GB $149.00
$105.00 for an IBM 30GB ATA100@4200rpm
DISPLAY: 14.1 LCD Screen $749.00
$589.00 for a Sony VAIO PCG-FX370 15.0" TFT LCD [laptopparts.com] or $395.00 if you're willing to go with a 12.1" Compaq
TOTAL: (APPROX) $1380.00
More like $670.00 - $864.00
Finally! (Score:2, Funny)
who will be the first to offer mod chips? (Score:2, Funny)
No attached LCD is kinda neat (Score:4, Interesting)
Scene 2: I remove the busted LCD, sew the laptop back up, fire it up on the external monitor and then I notice something; this is groovy. Sure it needs an external monitor, but I just created a fairly cool portable desktop computer out of a piece of junk. Keyboard and track pad built in. And still easy to take else where I need it, like home (where I have another monitor I can use) or a presentation, and even has a nifty built in 2 hour UPS. And it's real quite.
So would I actually buy something like that? Maybe not right away...but if the price was right I might. I'm telling you, sitting here looking at it, it looks cooler than you might imagine.
You may find this useful... (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.ecs.com.tw/products/a980.htm [ecs.com.tw]
and here's a mirror for the ineviatable slashdotting:
http://www.meatspace.co.uk/ibuddie/ [meatspace.co.uk]
A few pictures, and a lot of info (Score:2, Informative)
You can already do that here. (Score:2, Informative)
and it still (Score:4, Funny)
Wait a darned second . . . (Score:3, Funny)
High-end Mead notebook: $3.00 USD
Run of the mill input device: $1.00 USD
xScruffx
Ill sell you one - good price too. (Score:5, Funny)
For only a nice even $1000.00 !!! You get the following Barebones Laptop:
No Display!
No RAM!
No Battery!
No Extra Battery!
No CPU!
No Keyboard!
No HDD!
(1) Laptop Carrying Case.
You get to pick all the compnents you want in your barebones system - and each can be added at an additional cost.
ACT NOW! While supplies last!!!
One Small Problem... (Score:5, Informative)
[actonlinestore.com]
This product differs from a notebook in that it does not include an integrated battery. An optional external battery is available. (emphasis mine)
I don't think so...
Re:Already /.'d? (Score:2)
Re:Already /.'d? (Score:4, Funny)
In Soviet Russia, the sites Slashdot you!
Re:Already /.'d? (Score:4, Funny)
Considering the web server has no display, no ram, no hard drive...
Re:Zero posts and its already down? (Score:2)
Uh-oh
Re:Zero posts and its already down? (Score:2)
The site www.xbitlabs.com is running Apache/1.3.14 (Unix) mod_perl/1.24 PHP/4.0.3pl1 FrontPage/4.0.4.3 mod_ssl/2.7.1 OpenSSL/0.9.6 on Linux
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)