Lindows Webstation 340
dr.karl.b writes "Lindows.com has announced the WebStation, a hard-disk-less pc that boots from a CD, similar to the now dead ThinkNIC, for $169 (no monitor). Different versions are available from 2 vendors, TigerDirect and iDOTpc.com. The TigerDirect version has a 1.1GHz Duron, 256MB PC2100 DDR, 56X CD-ROM, 10/100Mbps NIC, floppy, modem, keyboard and mouse. The iDOTpc.com version has a 800MHz C3, 256MB PC133 SDRAM, 56X CD-ROM, 10/100Mbps NIC, but without a floppy, modem, keyboard or mouse. The TigerDirect looks like a better deal, at least now ($169 = $189 - $20 rebate). The 2 different versions seem to have confused the authors at C/Net and The Register, who only report the specs of the iDOTpc.com version."
Huh?? (Score:2, Insightful)
I've ran CD based distros before but I've had a hard drive also..
How do you play games on it (as the feature list says), or download MP3s, or read email, etc if there is no where to save the data?
Ok so maybe it uses a virtual drive..what happens when you reboot?
I'm confused, am I missing something??
Re:Huh?? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Huh?? (Score:5, Interesting)
from their webpage: "The Lindows WebStation is ideal for multi-computer households, school rooms, training labs, call center, community access machines, etc. It also makes an ideal computer kiosk. With such a low price, you can afford to put multiple WebStations through your home, school or business."
basically it's ideal for anywhere you have another computer(s) around, for datakeeping. basically it's just a computer with equivalent of knoppix in it.
though, this fails where lindows is trying to sell this (easy enough for people unfamiliar with linux), because setting up some storage through the net for it isn't that simple as plug this baby in (and people with a clue could make their own custom knoppix quite easily).
Re:Huh?? (Score:4, Interesting)
1. Battery-backed FLASH RAM like in the ThinkNIC
2. USB-based "key" drive (sold separately)
3. Online storage ala X-Drive
If they can swing a deal with a cable/DSL provider for those people who don't own or want a "computer", they might have a killer item. Cable/DSL providers can lease or sell the units to people and then upsell their service with online storage and app-serving (ASP).
Re:Huh?? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a good idea, considering if you don't have a hard drive to save things on, you won't be wasting your isp's bandwidth downloading stuff.
Re:Huh?? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Huh?? (Score:4, Informative)
Imagine a lab of these... (Score:5, Interesting)
Imagine a public computer lab that was filled with these thin clients (for the lack of a better term). People would have to buy specially made USB memory keychains that would be programmed with their user information, and then they could plug it into a terminal to use it and save their data to it. That would be both secure for the user, as they literally can't leave anything behind, and more convinent for the maintanance of the lab, as there is nothing that the user can do short of physically bashing the computer to actually damage it.
Use without a hard disk. (Score:2, Informative)
How do you use it without a hard disk?
Simple, their workstations, they access a file server for storage and retrival of data/information.
Re:Use without a hard disk. (Score:2, Interesting)
How much does a 1GB hard disk cost anyway?
Re:Use without a hard disk. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Use without a hard disk. (Score:2)
Re:Use without a hard disk. (Score:2)
1. Only do things that don't require hard disk storage: readin email vi imap, web browsing, etc. Just use the RAM as a cache while you work
2. Use a small USB "thumb drive". These drives are a little small as 128MB, but realistially that's more than enough storage for most people's personal files (ie: not applications and configuration data)
3. USe NFS, SMB, CORBA or some other type of networked storage protocol to access your files on a central server. This is the model that
it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:2)
2 GB hard drive? (Score:2)
Why not stick a 2gb drive or something small in there just for the OS?
Can you tell me where one would find such a creature?
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:5, Insightful)
Besides, you know that the machine is just going to get stuffed with pr0n. Better to limit them to what tmpfs will hold.
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:2)
Then they had to buy newer machines with NT4 Workstations and no NT Server. That's when the students go crazy and started installing warez'ed games on them. I even wacked one remotely right when they were copying the archives on the HD.
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:5, Funny)
you should teach my girlfriend how to do that
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:4, Interesting)
Rename Memory Editor to "explorer.exe"... Easy!
I actually always enjoyed figuring out ways to violate crappy Microsoft security (not just 95/98, even NT/2000/XP!)
Early on, it was just a matter of looking through the help files for links that would open exporer or anything else. Later it could be something like unmaping a network drive, so that the program that was supposed to run, can't... Then there's always the F8 trick, which has helped many times. With Win95, if that isn't there, you can hit CTRL-C when it gives you the message that scandisk needs to run, and get to the C: prompt that way.
For those that have even more serious restrictions, you need a little more talent. When a program can't be run, you rename it to something simple that is allowed. When write-access is taken away, you just have to search around to find a place where you have write access... Usually the Netscape cache folder, temp folder, etc. Then just download a program like poledit to that writable folder, name it exporer, and remove restrictions.
For better versions of Windows, users aren't allowed to write changes to the registry, so poledit and others don't work. For that, you go a step further... When a program like taskmgr won't run, you copy that to another machine, open it with a hex-editor, search for "Policies" and change any letter in "Policies" so it doesn't find the reg key that tells it it shouldn't run. Copy taskmgr back to a folder you have access to, and it will run. Same goes for regedit and others.
If you don't have access to certain folders in expolorer or comand.com, there are ways to get there... The help system works great for that. If help isn't available, you can enable "Links" on the taskbar, and clicking on that you can tell explorer to open that folder, which then allows you to navigate up to top level folders, then down to any place you want.
From my experience, breaking policies on dozens of computers with incredibly restrictive policies, I am conviced that there is no way to enforce policies... Windows just doesn't have that strong of security in place to make it possible.
On the other hand, there's no question that Unix systems are completely capable to enforcing the will of the administrator, so it's a very good thing for curious individuals like myself that Unix wasn't more popular at schools, and other public places. Then again, with good security, maybe the admins wouldn't have been so terribly afraid of users screwing up the system with any tools they were given, so maybe they would have let users do anything they wanted within their confined space...
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:5, Interesting)
The machine, virtually unbreakable, is designed to get you online. You'd be amazed at the number of e-mail stations sold in the world and the number of people who are only interested in e-mail, IM and E-Bay. Okay, okay, maybe online weather, stocks and sports scores, too.
The big deal here would be to sell online storage space. Save everything online!
Before people start whining about the speed of this, consider 2 things --
1. If done by the ISP, one hop upstream, it will be very fast.
2. No matter where it is stored, it'll beat the pants off of accessing everything from a damn CD-ROM.
This also creates a market for "personal streaming". Rip your own MP3s/OGGs and have them stored online. Have icecast run from the service with a limit of 1 or 2 simultaneous streams and maybe a password for access. This way people can store their music online and now worry about CDs or such.
USB Pen Drives (again . . .) (Score:4, Insightful)
You can get 64mb USB Flash drive for about $10. That is good enough to save a moderate amount of personal files. Don't think "only web" here, though. It comes with Open Office (or just use a knoppix flavor for whatever software you are into), which will, say, let kids write a word document, save it on the USB drive, and print at school. Definitely has potential as an "offline" tool(think "lower income").
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:4, Insightful)
As for what happens if the business fails and it all gets auctioned off? Well, the only thing the end user would have lost would be some time. You DO own all the CDs you'd be ripping, right? Thus, you have backups.
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:4, Insightful)
Cost + the concept that something could go corrupt? At least with a Read-Only media for the OS, a virus is wiped out with a reboot.
Re:it seems silly not to include a hard drive (Score:3, Funny)
Add a hard disk? (Score:2)
Re:Add a hard disk? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Add a hard disk? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, the above can all be accomplished with some weird write protection on the hdd, but compare costs here. A cheap cdrom can cost under $20. Try and find a hdd in the same price bracket. Then add the cost of all the magic necessary to make it kiddie-proof*.
[*] does not include said kiddies removing cdrom and coating with strawberry jam. But that's what backups are for.
Re:Add a hard disk? (Score:3, Funny)
No that's what super glue is for.
Re:Add a hard disk? (Score:5, Informative)
This would be good for Libraries and Colleges. (Score:3, Insightful)
I think college campuses and libraries could really use this, its a good idea it just needs some marketing.
This is not a "thin client," (Score:2, Insightful)
Should be easy to change the OS (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Should be easy to change the OS (Score:2)
And frankly all lindows does is Marketing. Ok, and their Click-N-Run software to distribute what most of us pull from our distro CD's or the net.
Re:Should be easy to change the OS (Score:3, Interesting)
Visit this page [zarb.org], add a few URLs with it, then type "rpmdrake" and tell me if Mandrake doesn't have something at least as easy to use as click-n-run - for free. It'd surprise me if there wasn't at least as nice a GUI tool for Debian.
Re:Should be easy to change the OS (Score:2, Informative)
Lindows [lindows.com] is debian.
It would not be that hard to make a bastard child of the two. After all there is no sense in reinventing the wheel.
usage. (Score:5, Insightful)
A good example would be a telemarketing center, where only data is passed to the system, a little input from the end-user, and then stored on another system.
This would work well with a POS system as well.
Or, an MP3 player in your house where the system just pulls music off your file server.
Get the idea now?
Re:usage. (Score:3, Insightful)
On the contrary...
This is a perfect machine for Grandma if you are worried about her clicking on some chain-mailed trojan, or spyware, or otherwise fsck'ing up some setting and then calling you up in the middle of the night to ask for help fixing it. Just tell her the machine needs to "rest" at night; every morning she'll get a squeeky clean reboot.
Re:usage. (Score:3, Insightful)
I would sincerely hope that they use something other than a CD-ROM.
Ring.
"Molly hey, can you send me that data from accounting?"
"Sure, Pete, hold on a sec... Hang on, my CD-ROM is spinning up. Almost there... Ok."
"Great, can you take a look at the spreadsheet with me so we can go over the numbers?"
"Sure.
Re:usage. (Score:3, Informative)
Agreed, although the POS software must either be web based or you must be ready to roll your own CD based distribution (maybe using Knoppix as the base). The CD that ships with the machine isn't going to help at all if the POS software is not web based.
cheap drives (Score:2)
Re:cheap drives (Score:2)
Look around, can you find a drive that's less that 10GB and/or less than $50. Not retail. It's like the car market. If a company would design a decent vehicle and run it for a couple of decades it would be dirt cheap. (Think VW Beetle.) Car manufacturers hate that, which is why they insist on designing completely new cars every 3 or 4 years, and competely new lines every 6 to 10.
In Aussie dollars... (Score:4, Interesting)
Visiting a random local wholesaler [dma.net.au] and using their one-off retail prices: AllInOne Mobo $99.00 (choice of 3), CPU $104.40 (Athlon 1800+, or $130.80 for a Celeron 2GHz), RAM $54.00, CDROM $32.40 (writer $58.80 AOpen 48x, DVD $70.80 BenQ 16x), case $58.50 (midi tower, 300W PSU), total AUD$365.10. Their website is buggered again as usual because they derive it from an Excel spreadsheet and the code to do it sucks so badly that I completely eclipsed it with 90 minutes' worth of effort using gawk and oocalc to turn the spreadsheet into a PostgreSQL database and PHP to display it.
Options: 128MB USB thumb $66.00.
Treating another random wholesaler [ple.com.au] similarly gives $99, $118 (2000+, identical Celeron), $66.00, $50.00 (writer, no reader avail; cheapest DVD at $118.00 includes CD writer), case $40.00 total AUD$373.00.
USB thumb for $69.00.
Add roughly $15 for a keyboard and mouse, $20 for a modem (or $35 for a hardware modem, which I'd recommend for reliability), so $400.10 and $408.00, respectively. For $100 extra you'd get twice the CPU and in one case a burner on top of a reader, lose the floppy (or pay $17), and I'm guessing that either shop would bundle the collection for AUD$389 or less, especially if they expected to sell lots of them.
And guess what? The price of MS-Windows XP Home OEM is AUD$189, and MS-Office XP OEM is AUD$429 - more than the cost of either machine, and a combined total of half as much again as the hardware, just to do word-processing. Mandrake Linux 9.1 PowerPack edition is AUD$99.95 inc GST and includes two good office suites plus extras (and of course the ingrates amongst us can download it for free).
There are no slow low-capacity hard drives left. They'd cost nearly as much to make as a fast, high-capacity drive (similar materials, similar plant) and nobody's going to bother putting together a plant to build drives that won't sell. Put it this way, if you had a choice of a 5GB drive for AUD$75, a 10GB drive for AUD$80 or a 40GB drive for AUD$95, which would you buy? If you can get 128MB of Flash for AUD$69 and (with a compressed FS) that's enough to run your system, why would you want a bulky, noisy, unreliable hard drive? The Cyrix-based motherboards are only selling well for niche markets, and I suspect that low-capacity hard drives would be the same. Make one small, slow, low-power, low-heat, long-life and you might find a market - until Flash gets that cheap too.
Re:Hard drives are inherently expensive (Score:2)
Re:Hard drives are inherently expensive (Score:2)
Think Geek is selling 20 Gb USB 2.0 solid state drives for $199.
Think "USB flash disk" instead of "hard drive". This manufacturing cost is significanly lower, there are no moving parts, power requirements are smaller, heat generation less, etc.
A nice solution (Score:2, Informative)
It's a nice solution because a similarly equipped and more proprietary thin client (a Wyse terminal, for example) is much more expensive and most of the thin clients have Windows XP Embedded on them.
Kudos to the Linux world for lowering costs again!
even lower cost solution (Score:2)
I've been wondering for a while why no one has tried to sell dual-headed displays with two keyboards and mice. It could lower the fratricide/soricide rates among families with only one computer.
Re:A nice solution (Score:2)
http://www.gentoo.org/news/20020916-ut2k3.xml [gentoo.org]
~Will
HD (Score:2)
That really implies a Hard Drive, huh? Maybe the HD is an option that allows these "features"?
It also seems that advertising a 56X CDROM drive that you can't use without removing your OS might be a little misleading as well.
Re:HD (Score:2)
Not at all. You can run OO off the CD (doh!) and 'save' them by emailing them and/or using network storage and/or using a usb flashdrive.
Re:HD (Score:2)
The marketing I read sounded geared toward a 'Joe Sixpack' that wants to get online cheap, experience the World Wide Web and get himself an email address. Mr. Joe "what the fuck is a usb flashdrive" Sixpack. Joe "network storage?!? my ass" Sixpack.
This thing is being marketed as a cheap, easy, bulletproof way to get online (no matter what its more practical uses are). Network storage is not cheap, easy or bulletproof.
My point is that they are marketing ca
iDOTpc (Score:5, Informative)
So consider this customer satisfied. If you're going to order one of these diskless PCs, you certainly won't have any reseller problems if you order from iDOT.
Re:iDOTpc (Score:4, Informative)
On the other hand I've worked for TigerDirect in the past and I can tell you that they will screw their customers at any chance they get. Even employees don't like to buy from them (and they get a discount). I'd suggest definately buying from iDOT instead of TigerDirect.
Funny thing (Score:3, Funny)
If Lindows.... (Score:3, Interesting)
External storage -- Re:If Lindows.... (Score:2)
So, FTFL (Follow the Freaking Links) first next time.
Re:External storage -- Re:If Lindows.... (Score:2)
Yeah, lots of luck trying to use the very CD-ROM (or CD-RW) drive that the OS is running off of!
Re:External storage -- Re:If Lindows.... (Score:2)
You could use this system in combination with a small print/fileserver though. That would work well for computer labs or Internet cafes.
Lifetime... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Lifetime... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Lifetime... (Score:2)
Re:some stats (Score:2)
Am I the only one who misses the days when trolls (tubgirl is similar to goatsex in terms of disgust) actually read the questions, instead of just writing "some stats regarding this exact question?"
~sigh~
Apple Pro Mouse (Score:2, Insightful)
In short this is only useful to people running NFS or SMB servers in their basement/home office/garage to allow the thing to be useful. No hard drive means no long term cache. You can't save files off of it meaning either run to your normal PC to download the file or connect to previously mentioned network share to
Re:Apple Pro Mouse (Score:4, Interesting)
Just for the hell of it, I went to mwave.com, and priced out their absolute cheapest pre-assembled barebones system. I was able to get a system with a faster processsor and a better motherboard for $153, or $165 with a cheap keyboard and mouse included.
Add a 50 cent burned Knoppix CD to the system, and you just got yourself a better system for $3.50 cheaper, and with no rebate hassles.
E-mail? (Score:3, Insightful)
If this thing has no hard-drive, wouldn't that make email a little difficult? Unless they mean web-based email or an IMAP client then people are gonna lose a lot of there email.
Downloading files would be a little tricky to...
Re:E-mail? (Score:2)
As far as email goes, all of my users are either webmail or IMAP. BFD.
Re:E-mail? (Score:2)
Re:E-mail? (Score:2)
Re:E-mail? (Score:2)
If this thing has no hard-drive, wouldn't that make email a little difficult? Unless they mean web-based email or an IMAP client then people are gonna lose a lot of there email.
On the WebStation page [lindows.com] (linked to in the posting here on Slashdot), it says the following: Web-email, Send & reply to messages! You made a good point about this machine, but your question was easily resolved by RTFA. :) At least Lindows doesn't overtly pretend that this thing will be a full-blown POP/IMAP/whatever e-mail sol
Re:E-mail? (Score:3, Interesting)
- Faster Performance Than Windows
- Spell Check, Send And Receive E-mail (POP, IMAP)
- Surf The Web Faster (with pop-up blocking)
- Instant Message Anyone (AIM, Yahoo, ICQ, MSN)
- Built-In Web Browser And Mail
- Play MP3 Files And Digitize Your Own CDs
- Play Games With Added Power
- Use Microsoft File-Compatible Word-Processing, Spreadsheet And Presentation Software (.doc,
- Perform Photo Editing And Graphic Design
- Manage A
iDiotPC? (Score:5, Funny)
Swap? (Score:2)
This is a nifty idea, but only if you have a network file server, and can deal with all your HD-less boxen being offline, when you upgrade the NFS, or when it breaks down.
And then there's network traffic......
Re:Swap? (Score:4, Interesting)
NFS is not needed here, because all of the programs and data live on either the CDROM or in RAM.
You are obviously mistaking this for LTSP.
Not tough (Score:2)
So basically... (Score:2)
Actually, "that ain't not bad." I'd like to try lindows but I'm not gonna pay even $50 for it without knowing what I'm getting. But if I can get a barebones PC thrown in with the deal, it don't seem like much of a risk at all. Hell, stick an old 40GB drive in the box, sell it, and make a profit on the deal...
Knoppix (Score:2)
It'd be perfect on this type of thing.
A few web browsers? (Score:2)
Joe gear and Jill SewingCircle don't need "a
Use them with USB drives! (Score:2)
The Tiger system has pretty decent specs -- with more memory (add
If editors can't research computing (Score:2)
What killed the ThinkNIC anyway?
What a huge box (Score:2)
The iOpener was a much better piece of industrial design. Maybe it was just too early.
that's a feature (Score:2)
And, unlike the iopener, this thing even has a NIC. Imagine that! A fast network connection in an "internet appliance!"
pc (Score:2)
The home computer is finally here (Score:2)
I think we're finally coming to it slowly. I do it with an old surplus laptop, which sits in the kitchen. It runs a slide show when doing nothing else, has a sheetfed scanner for all the receipts and house paperwork, and is a web browsing station (including recipies from epicurious!) for when I'm in the kitchen.
Plus it can play music and web radio station
Why a case? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why a case? (Score:3, Insightful)
This would be PERFECT...if... (Score:5, Interesting)
You run a program on the CD to customize an installation of LindowsCD. You pick the home page, maybe the network share where files are saved, bookmarks, etc. It already knows the hardware so no config necessary.
You click a button and out of your burner pops a LindowsCD perfectly configured for your environment. You stick it in the machine, and deploy.
I can think of a thousand uses for this. You could rig a kiosk in the lobby that would only let people view the company webpage. You could rig some workstations that would allow visitors to view files you have made available in a public share but they can't save anything there or locally. You could rig that perfect PC so grandma could check her e-mail and thats all it does.
With no data kept locally, and no possibility of OS corruption, your only support requirements are to tell people to reboot. Or have the machine reboot once a day, etc. If you ever need to change anyting, reburn a disc with new settings. If the CD ever goes belly up, put in the backup. If it still won't work, you can be sure it's a hardware issue.
Lindows, SO CLOSE. Please (or Knoppix) someone take the OS-on-CD to the next level. Yes having Knoppix and LindowsCD is great, but no one wants to have to setup their mail settings each and every time the system reboots. Give us the tools to create our own custom task-oriented OS CD.
As an alternative...flashram? A CF reader and a 32MB card cost what, $25 on the street? More than enough to keep mail settings, bookmarks, etc.
- JoeShmoe
As a matter of fact... (Score:4, Informative)
Back then most people laughed. And described like that it still sounds laughable, doesn't it? Why would you pay money for an SDK and then sign a license for X$/install to sell a linux distro when you can put one together, based on debian (as lindows is) or redhat, for free?
Well, now look: lindows has a reasonable amount of brand recognition and press. You can put together a distro of redhat and try to get your compu-idiot clients to use it, or you can offer the same thing with a distro that is being sold at wal-mart and gets favorable press in all sorts of consumer press. Which do you think offers the better marketing opportunity when it comes to the technically challenged?
Re:This would be PERFECT...if... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:This would be PERFECT...if... (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, the Lindows part of this seems pretty lame, since you have no hard drive (which most windows software, even most games, needs to be installed to befoe it will run!) and can't pop out the Lindows CD to read a windows application CD. For surfing the web and a lot of other stuff Knoppix will do just fine.
I do agree with the basic premis, more needs to be done to make thinks like thi
Add a NIC, mod the CD = Firewall (Score:5, Interesting)
Any idea if the Lindows version has anything special to enable it to run 100% from CD? Is the entire CD GPL'd?
MadCow.
eMachines is a better deal (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm getting to the point where I think that low end computers should have a "No customer servicable parts inside" sticker on them. For the coupla hundred bucks they're almost disposable.
Re:Security Holes? (Score:4, Funny)
-a
It's not readonly. (Score:2, Interesting)
So when you reboot, you get a fresh start.. but otherwise, it's still a running machine, and you can infect and do what you want with it until it restarts.
No Security Holes (Score:3, Interesting)
No hard drive. No user data stored. Nothing of interest on the CD (easy enough to get a copy of it without hacking into you). No place except memory to store an exploit, and that is lost after reboot. No writeable files to infect.
There certainly will be OS updates, or alternate OS's like Knoppix that you can use. They certainly have no need to send you a CD, but you could likely download and burn one (on another system, clearly not o
Re:Updates? (Score:2)
No files to erase or modify. You aren't storing credit card, bank information on the unit. You can't corrupt the machine (non-writable media) and can't mess with any data (there isn't any).
It puts security flaws in a whole new perspective. Yes, several would still apply (SSL/TLS vulnerabilities, etc.) but a good many of them would be meaningless.
-Charles
Re:Updates? (Score:2)
TV.
Game console.
This cheap thing which I can code to do just as I like.
Umm yeah I think we have a winner. Now I'll go build one.
Re:Great idea (Score:2)
Re:Great idea (Score:2)
Re:Beware Tiger Direct! (Score:3, Interesting)