VIA Introduces A New Laptop Motherboard 211
arrasmith writes "It looks like there is going to be an upgrade to that non-expensive $800 Linux laptop. VIA just came out with a new laptop motherboard based on the faster Nehemiah core for the C3. You can get all the specs at the Antaur homepage. If they stay near the $800 cost I can see this one selling pretty well. And they would have a great mobile media system if they added a hardware DivX decoder on top of the hardware DVD decoder. :) And now that the Linux drivers are starting to mature and the sources are finally starting to come out, by the time this is released to the U.S. market it should be a great little Linux laptop."
Finally... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Finally... (Score:1)
Remember Cyrix anyone?
Re:Finally... (Score:1)
Neither does... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Neither does... (Score:5, Insightful)
[dell.com]
2ghz celeron 20gb hd 256mb ram 14" screen... for $749
While i haven't ever owned one of these i've not had a problem getting linux on dell laptops in the past. If you are looking for an inexpensive laptop to run linux it seems to me you could do a lot better than a very underpowered core processor such as the via.
Re:Neither does... (Score:5, Funny)
*ahem*
Don't have too nice a day.
Re:Finally... (Score:4, Interesting)
In fact I recall my 486SLC/66 had desperate troubles playing mp3s yet my MI/133 [or 166 I forget] would sail through them with power to spare. My 233Mhz MII was even sweeter.
At the time I could put a mobo+cpu together for like 200$ or so.
My current processor cost 225$ alone [iirc].
Oh yeah and as another poster pointed out the Cyrix cores were much better with heat than intel/amd. The C3 is even better.
Tom
Re:Finally... (Score:2)
When I can double speed for $50, I upgrade.
Re:Finally... (Score:5, Interesting)
Since they started using solid, low power cores based on Centaur team designs.
> Remember Cyrix anyone?
You mean the team that VIA disbanded when they decided to go with primarily Centaur-derived technology? What about them?
--
-JC
http://www.jc-news.com/coding/SFi/
(the above contains exaggerations, but less so than parent)
Re:Finally... (Score:5, Insightful)
My wifes computer uses a MII 200mhz. She won't let me upgrade it. It works fine for her, browsing, email and mp3s.
My little m10000 Nehemiah mini-itx toolbox PC here chugs along fine for DVD ripping, PVR, video processing, etc. When I get a pretty case for it, it's going into the living room.
Re:Finally... (Score:2)
We've got Linux laptops now, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
Seriously though, this is a Good Thing. But I know and you know that larger companies aren't going to go for Linux because the "GPV" bothers them.
I think there ought to be a BSD laptop (no, MacOS X on a PowerBook doesn't count!), if only because I think every Linux needs to have a corresponding FreeBSD - light, truly free, and just as powerful in most cases as its GPL'd competitor.
Why not?
-uso.
Re:We've got Linux laptops now, but... (Score:1, Offtopic)
(if you don't know Japanese, don't mod this)
Re:We've got Linux laptops now, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
I certainly don't know that -- in my experience larger companies don't really care what OS it runs, as long as it runs their apps and gives the user experience they want (whether this is true for lindows or not, I have no idea, but linux and freebsd are probably comparable).
In many cases they like linux because it has a buzz (freebsd doesn't, really, despite OSX), and that makes them feel less nervou
Re:We've got Linux laptops now, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
[Companies with in-house support staff want to standardize on as few systems as possible, and since linux currently has a fairly hefty corporate mind-share advantage over freebsd, freebsd is likely to lose out in many cases.]
Re:We've got Linux laptops now, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
The whole point to the BSDs as well as to the GNU project was to create OSes that aren't owned by big companies, so the code-proliferating traditions of unix hackerdom can continue. Donating code to big compan
Re:We've got Linux laptops now, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
I think an ideal license would be one that allowed *unmodified* binaries - that passed an MD5 test - to be distributed with just a Web link to a copy of the source that, when built, produced the exact same binary, but require modified binaries to include the source code.
That would give all the advantages of the GPL without turning off companies.
-uso.
Re:We've got Linux laptops now, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
If this was true, the BSD license would never have been written.
You don't have to allow your code to be used in this manner, but there are tho
Re:We've got Linux laptops now, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
By taking out the advertising clause one problem was solved, but another one was introduced. Of course the advertising clause had its problems, but you can't claim the BSD licence we use today is the same licence we started out with.
(Yes I am the same AC as the one that posted the original comment.)
Re:Because BSD is dying, stupid! (Score:2)
Plus this: http://www.bsd-laptop.org/ [bsd-laptop.org]
Why Lindows? (Score:2)
Re:Why Lindows? (Score:5, Informative)
steveha
And it is actually well supported! (Score:5, Informative)
and I'm told there is even support for their hardware MPEG-2 decoder now in mplayer (haven't actually tried it yet). All in all this is some sweet hardware, and I'd much rather buy Via than Intel chipsets. With Intel chipsets, if something is unsupported, you are basically on your own. In contrast, Via has actually come forward on the mplayer mailing list and asked for people willing to help add support for their MPEG-2 decoder extension. What else could you possible ask for?
Personally, I don't care about 10% chipset performance as long as I know Linux works on the damn thing. Just google for the troubles people are having running Linux on their Centrino notebooks and you will see what I mean.
By the way: I can play full-screen DVD and DivX even on my (older and supposedly much inferior) 933 MHz Ezra C3, with AC3 sound. It's just a question of the correct compiler switches. These CPUs are not as fast as an Athlon or a Pentium M, and I wouldn't want to transcode a DVD to MPEG-4 on them, but they are fast enough to do real work like software development. If these become available in Germany, I'll buy one.
Re:And it is actually well supported! (Score:3, Informative)
I know, judging by the sheer number of posts on deja and the results on google, that their IDE chipset gave linux nightmares for ages.
In fact, my UDMA100 capable motherboard will only work at UDMA33 on Linux. If you try to go faster, you'll get massive data corruption.
Check it out... Via IDE Corruption and Linux [google.com].
Re:And it is actually well supported! (Score:3, Informative)
In addition, the fact that it's still limited to UDMA33 seems to scream that it's not fixed.
Re:And it is actually well supported! (Score:5, Informative)
Not sure if the following contradicts this or not, but this page at mini-itx.com [mini-itx.com] states (emphasis mine)
Additionally, this thread at viaarena [viaarena.com] documents what sounds like substantial-sounding hurdles getting linux going on mini-itx.Re:And it is actually well supported! (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes it is well supported (Score:5, Informative)
On the X side 2D works (accelerated) as does TV out. VIA sent me a code drop fairly recently which includes XFree 4.2 3D support and kernel side DRI modules, as well as further Xv overlay (but not the mpeg2 engine). Testing that hit a problem on 1600x1200 but once that is sorted it'll get pushed upstream.
The 3D needs a couple of people with the time to work through the Mesa changes from XFree4.2->4.3 and update the 3D driver code to make it work again. (or use Xfree 4.2 8))
The 3D stuff is all in the DRI project CVS for the interested, as is the savage 3D stuff they released at the same time - although that also needs further work.
Alan
AMD? (Score:3, Insightful)
I've never been a big Intel fan to begin with, but how does the VIA chipset and Linux support stack up against AMD? How friendly are they to open-source in comparison?
Re:Finally... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Finally... (Score:2)
Also, the CLE266 chipset doesn't have linux support from VIA, XFree-4.4 will have 2D drivers for the onboard graphics, and sound is coming along in ALSA, but RIGHT NOW linux totally sucks on VIA's low-power stuff.
If anything, VIA should be working with GCC developers to get really good CPU targets worked out,
Re:Suggestions for VIA (Score:2)
Then I guess it's not really profit, huh?
800 bucks (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:800 bucks (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:800 bucks (Score:2)
Re:800 bucks (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:800 bucks (Score:2)
Who is actually carrying around their laptop all day? And if they really are carrying around their laptop all day, why do they even have it, considering they aren't really usable while being carried? 5 pounds is nothing.
Re:800 bucks (Score:2)
[Another common example might be college students.]
Re:800 bucks (Score:2)
Re:800 bucks (Score:2)
Re:800 bucks (Score:2)
Quite right
A 5-lb notebook is a bigger notebook, it means carrying a larger bag.
Take this from someone who carried a 7-lb notebook, a 5-lb Targus bag, along with a power supply, kensington lock, a book to read, lunch and papers... (no extra battery)
That's 15-20-lbs of dead weight.
Now carry that bag onto public transit. It's a PITA. It has to be guarded too -- you can't put it down very often, and you can't wear a backpack on a crowded subway.
If you have a car, you can't leave the bag in the trun
Re:800 bucks (Score:1)
Re:800 bucks (Score:2)
http://dealmac.com/artclick.html?53275,73413
It's good to see Linux laptops, but $800 for a C3 based system really isn't competitive.
Re:800 bucks (Score:2)
Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:5, Informative)
And I don't even have XVideo, which would speed up decoding (it does a part of divx/dvd decoding in hardware, namely colorspace conversion and scaling). The current VIA mobos have XVideo support in XFree86 CVS, IIRC.
Re:Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:2, Interesting)
I see a lot of motion artifacts under every player, even after employing the syncfb module on a matrox.
Re:Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:1)
Ah.. the new elite. I bet you need vertical refreshrates of 120hz plus, too. Your eyes are too delicate to use a screen that costs less than $2000.
Don't say it.. you're an audiophile too, your ears start bleeding if that one record of yours is played on a setup that costs less than $4000.
Re:Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:1)
a 24fps video is going exhibit tearing artifacts unless your refresh rate is 72hz, etc..
Re:Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:3, Funny)
You know what's funny, I used to think 70 or 75 was a good solid refresh rate. Now that I run 85hz, I can see the flicker at 70 and every now and then at 75.
Keep squinting, friend. Soon you will see the fnords.
Re:Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:2)
On the refresh rate thing, switch to LCDs, they stay at the last level until 'refreshed' to the level in the next frame, that's why there is no flicker at any refresh rate with LCDs.
Re:Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:3, Informative)
ok i'll do it for you: i was able to watch divx movies and record them at the same time.
Re:Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:2)
From what i have read, the 800 EPIA is barely fast enough to do one of the things you mentioned, let alone both.
Re:Who needs hardware DivX... (Score:2)
Don't get me wrong, I like VIA, even if their products thend to be flakier than others, but they at least innovate. See mini-itx, no-fan CPUs, dual channel ddr, etc. Intel has stopped doing that for a while, as it does not sow favourably on the balance sheets.
hardware divx/dvd saves battery power. (Score:4, Interesting)
blockquote from their site: [via.com.tw]
Hardware decoding necessary? (Score:2)
Or is this machine even more poky than that?
Re:Hardware decoding necessary? (Score:1)
In short, the C3-cores are slower than even similar-speed celerons, but they're getting better, and a 1GHz Nehemiah is fast enough to do multimedia
Yes and no... (Score:2)
what i wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:what i wonder... (Score:3, Interesting)
Not that I doubt you, but where have you found these off-lease deals? Usually for $800, you get a P3, 500 to 650 Mhz, with a used battery (on average my experience has been 50% charge) and possibly some case defects (nothing functionally wrong, but definitely used). I've had to replace both battery and keyboards on all the used laptops i've bought, within 1 year. (3 dells, 1 thinkpad, 1 toshiba). These are not co
Real men build their own refrigerators... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Real men build their own refrigerators... (Score:2)
Cooling and heat dissipation engineering (Score:2, Insightful)
From what have seen, many retail laptops seem to use custom heat dissipation schemes. I think we can feel pretty certain that work has been put into these custom schemes by professional engineer-types.
I also wonder whether you will be able to purchase some of the components and materials used in these schemes for your own use from companies which supply them, rather than having to buy in bulk. They may simply n
Cool - a neat BSD laptop. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Cool - a neat BSD laptop. (Score:2)
Re:Cool - a neat BSD laptop. (Score:2)
Let me give you an example: about a year ago, I was broke, but wanted a cheap laptop with 802.11b for lightweight scripting and admin work for my web development clients. I spent
Great news... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Spoiled Much? (Score:2)
Motherboard? (Score:5, Interesting)
I can't find any info on any motherboard. Everything they have is only about the cpu. Maybe I'm just not seeing it, but can anyone point me to where the VIA site discusses the actual motherboard. I was getting very jazzed thinking that I might be able to purchase a motherboard and use it for some projects (low heat, low power, small form factor, nice).
Re:Motherboard? (Score:1)
Laptop processor, not laptop motherboard (Score:3, Informative)
I could find no information on a motherboard, just the processor chip.
Is is any good? (Score:4, Interesting)
Yes, it is! (Score:5, Interesting)
I own an nvidia graphics card and am happy with it because some lunatics [minion.de] ported the nvidia driver to the 2.5 kernels. But the nforce users are pretty much lost.
Intel chipsets tend to be well supported as well, but let me mention these: "Winmodem" and "Centrino Wiress LAN". Good luck running OpenBSD on one of those. Apart from that, Intel chipsets are expensive and historically never performed well, especially on notebooks.
If I had to buy a new computer tomorrow, I would only even consider VIA and SiS. Both chipset companies are usually well supported by Linux and BSD, and their hardware is supported as soon as it is on the market. With Intel, you usually have to wait a few years until the hardware is obsolete and then Intel will release some driver under some non-GPL license (see the e100 driver for Linux, which was only recently released as GPL).
VIA and SiS may not be the highest performance chipsets around, but they work well, have absolutely no stability issues (except maybe under Windows) and are well supported. And "well supported" outweighs anything else anyway. I'm too old to run around in circles around nvidia or Intel, begging for even a binary only driver to get my machine to work at all.
Re:Yes, it is! (Score:2)
Re:Yes, it is! (Score:2)
Re:Is is any good? (Score:2)
The Cyrix C3 (the processor) is a wannabe 686 without the full instruction set, so you have to do a special step in the install of Linux (I learned that on Mandrake) in order to keep it from running (or should I say locking up) with the 686 version.
I've also read speed is about 60% of PIII, so the ultimate cost is in the speed/performnce.
But for a sub $200 PC (which I got that had the VIA C3, with CD, 128MB, and 20GB HD) it was within my cheapskate price range. (=))
Not Fast Enough for high-def video (Score:2)
Resolution overkill (Score:2)
In any case, is there anywhere except off a HDTV broadcast or demos like that one you have pointed to where you can actually obtain video at that high a resolution?
Mac on Antaur page? (Score:1)
I love when they use stock photos with Macs in them for companies selling x86 products. It's like the group that does advertising/site design can't remember that not everyone uses Macs (or it's not important to them).
Don't get me wrong, I prefer Macs and I used to troubleshoot them for an ad agency. It was amusing when they would do ads for PCs and ask to take photos of Macs & their parts.
Nice for the U.S., even better for the rest (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Nice for the U.S., even better for the rest (Score:2)
I wouldn't worry - the growth in linux will probably create a feasible market for ARM based PCs like the Iyonix [iyonix.com].
Everything fine but video... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Everything fine but video... (Score:5, Informative)
From: Tim Roberts <timr@probo.com>
Date: Wed, 09 Jul 2003 11:32:34 -0700
Subject: [Savage40] Better Driver Out There
To: savage40 <savage40@probo.probo.com>
Reply-To: Tim Roberts <timr@probo.com>
Return-path: savage40-bounces@probo.com
Well, folks, it appears that my Savage driver is now a LONG ways from the state
of the art. I am no longer "da man".
Unbeknownst to me, VIA/S3 have been quietly bulking up their snapshot of the
Savage driver. Recently, they were persuaded to release their driver to the
world in source form:
http://www.linux.org.uk/~alan/S3.zip
I have not tried to compile this yet, but based on a quick perusal of the
source code, it looks like it:
* Supports all of the Savage chips
* Supports video4linux for videoport/zoomvideo
* Supports the Chrontel TV part on ProSavageDDR motherboards
* Supports MPEG motion compensation acceleration (XvMC)
and (drum roll, please):
* Supports DRI and OpenGL
They have made so many changes that it is almost impossible for me to determine
whether all of my recent fixes are in their code, but given the thoroughness I
see in other places, I suspect that they are.
So, if you have the inclination and ability to build from source, it would be
well worth your trouble to give this a try. If you do build binaries for
either 4.2.0 or 4.3.0, let me know and I will announce it to this list.
--
- Tim Roberts, timr@probo.com
Providenza & Boekelheide, Inc.
Stupid question? "Laptop motherboard formfactors"? (Score:2, Insightful)
I mean, what good is a laptop motherboard if it won't fit in some random "obsolete" laptop case?
Seems like there are plenty of small "real" motherboards if you want something standard, that works.
Not a troll, really curious.
$800! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:$800! (Score:2)
For the record it's Dimensions: 10.6" x 9.6" x 1.3" & 4 pounds.
Re:$800! (Score:2)
Though the Celeron offers much more performace than the VIA, depends on your priorities. Heck, I hate carrying stuff so much I really just bring my Zaurus now. Btw, would you like to link us to this notebook? I'm sure someone would be interested.
Re:$800! (Score:2)
Re:$800! (Score:2)
Its all about how the weight is distributed. Since 1.1lbs of clothes is distributed across a fairly large area of your body you don't notice it as much, likely with body weight.
For another example, see magicians lying on beds of nails. The performers weight is distributed across all the nails. Whereas if all his weight were concentra
Re:$800! (Score:2)
"if they added a hardware DivX decoder" (Score:2)
Re:"if they added a hardware DivX decoder" (Score:2)
Video card drivers (Score:2, Offtopic)
How does Radeon behave under linux in notebooks? . Ho
Not a very good deal (Score:5, Informative)
HP notebook has a 15 inch screen, VIA a 12.1 display (both have the same max resolution).
HP notebook has an Athlon XP 1.8 (1.5 gig clock frequency) cpu, the VIA notebook has a much more limited VIA C3 933mhz cpu.
The HP uses PC2100 notebook memory and supports up to 1 gig. The VIA uses PC133 memory and supports up to 768 meg. Both come with 256 meg standard.
The HP came with a 30 gig hard drive, the VIA comes with a 20 gig drive.
The HP uses an ATI video chip and can share up to 64 memory. The VIA uses a Savage video chip that can share 32 meg.
The HP came with a combo DVD reader/CD-RW writer; the VIA lists the CD drive as optional!
I'll give credit to the VIA in that it has USB 2 and firewire; the model of HP notebook I'm using does not have firewire (it is an option) and as far as I know USB 2 is not available (it has USB 1.1, 2 outlets).
Also to the VIA's credit is that it has a compact flash slot as well as a PCMCIA slot, the HP has only PCMCIA.
Both have a LAN connector, but additionally the HP has a built in modem (handy on a notebook when you travel) and SVGA video out (as well as the normal mouse and VGA out porrts). The VIA has no mention of a modem or a video out connector.
HP also threw in a free (after rebate) USB floppy drive, neither system comes with a floppy.
The VIA is much lighter, so if you're looking for a light notebook rather than a PDA it might be a good choice, but as a general notebook you can get a lot more of a notebook than this even after paying the Microsoft tax (the HP comes with XP home). The HP does support Linux just fine; I use Knoppix with it all the time. Only conflict I've seen is with the free wireless PCMCIA card that was thrown in the deal, and the VIA doesn't come with wireless hardware, so if you get a wireless pcmcia card that will work with Linux on the VIA it will likely work on the HP as well.
So it's good to hear that people are offering Linux notebooks, but I would much rather see HP offer their notebooks with Linux or no OS at all and take what they give Microsoft off the price. Just because VIA is offering a notebook with Linux does not make it a good deal.
A perverted rackmount cluster (Score:3, Interesting)
If you stack the laptops closed side by side, you can fit 20 of them in a width of 19". If the depth of the rack is 30", you can fit 20 on one side and 20 on another. The height would be 5 rack units, but you'd probably need 1U for power/network cabling. You'd also probably want a 1U 48-port ethernet switch and a 1U shelf for a total of 7U. Each laptop comes with its own UPS. Each laptop - sans hard drive - would probably suck about 20W while on - and 15W when in powersave mode. With 40 laptops, that's 6 rack units of 800W with 40GHz of processing power for $32000.
Each box would boot off of a solid state disk (8MB compactflash or 16MB USB thumb drive) with enough smarts to join the cluster.
Power distribution would be the only real challenge, perhaps some parallel DC bus that all laptops suck 12V off of.
Ok, enough of that.
Personally, this could be my next laptop. I've always looked to Transmeta for long-running laptops, but they've always been to consumery/trendy/expensive for me to consider.
What about Dell? (Score:2)
Re:What about Dell? (Score:2, Informative)
What about a laptop with SiS 550 ? (Score:2)
They also have a SiS 550 SoC which is a processor + chipset, basically an entire mobo and processor in one chip at $35 a piece. Add 128mb ram, a cheap 10GB seagate hdd and an 800x600 LCD, and you have around $200 laptop. Such a beast would work well with KDE and Linux and would sell well.
I know I'll buy at least two of em.
But of course it will have a VIA chipset... (Score:2)
Re:21164 Alpha PDA (Score:2)
Right. Too bad that it would be too hot to hold on to and have a battery lifetime of about 10 minutes.