HP Introduces Transmeta Thin Clients 203
prostoalex writes "HP will announce the T5500 and T5300 thin clients on Monday at the TechEX show in New York City, which use the 733-MHz and 533-MHz versions of Transmeta's TM5800 CPU. Prices range from $599 to $629."
PC vs thin client (Score:3, Insightful)
Or an X-Box, surely? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Or an X-Box, surely? (Score:2)
Re:Or an X-Box, surely? (Score:2)
Re:Or an X-Box, surely? (Score:2)
Re:Or an X-Box, surely? (Score:2)
A good thin client on the other hand will have no moving parts(no fans, no hds) and be setup out of the
Re:Or an X-Box, surely? (Score:2)
Re:PC vs thin client (Score:2)
Re: PC v. Thin Client (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, you can get a Thin Client for as little as $200-$400. I just bought several for one of my clients at about $650 a pop, but that was because I wanted them to be capable of Windows emulation and X Windows.
The real savings is in support costs, though. With regualar PC's and hard drives, the initial costs to setup and secure the workstation are much higher, and even then the users are always screwing things up with Bonzia Buddy, assorted screensavers, etc. Using thin clients with Linux or Terminal Server really cuts down on support costs.
Anyway, the statement in that article which I found odd was that HP was the leader in the Thin Client market. Everytime I have to set clients up with more TC's, I research the market again, and Wyse is always the best deal. Frankly, I thought they were in the lead for the thin client market, though I may be wrong.
Lock down your desktops (Score:3, Insightful)
In an environment which locks down the desktops to keep the users from installing additional software, Bonzai buddies, and all that other drek, your support costs are not substantially different between cheap PCs and thin clients.
The problems show up when you have to deal with users demanding access they don't need. With a thin client, you tell them it can't be done and they believe you. With a cheap PC, they know it can be done and some PHB always forces you to make an exception for that one user. An
Uh (Score:4, Insightful)
Transmeta missed the boat. Even in thin clients, they're underpowered. At 733 MHz, even low IPC won't help.
Transmeta was a good company, but they didn't get their product to market in time.
Re:Uh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Uh (Score:4, Interesting)
For a thin client though, this might be enough computing power. A thin client really doesn't do a heck of a lot other than display simple graphics. Power consumption (and therefore heat produced) is also quite low, though a ULV mobile Celeron would offer comperable power consumption. The real reason why HP went with these chips is because they are cheap. I have to wonder why they didn't go for a VIA C3 instead though. Similar power consumption, low cost and much more widely available/better supported chipsets.
I agree (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Uh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Uh (Score:2)
Re:Uh (Score:2)
And since a P3-700(M) is roughly twice [pooterland.com] as fast as a Crusoe 800, raising the IPC argument is just grasping at straws. (Check out the Fujitsu B-series 2562 vs. the Lifebook P2110 on that link).
Re:Uh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Uh (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Uh (Score:2, Insightful)
Remember they came out with their original processors when the race to hit 1ghz was still on the go. So they where in the right MHz area then. Though they have not done much to keep up since then. What happened tot hem is they lost their contract with IBM, Sony did not make many laptops and there processors never got really well pushed in the mobile computing market as they should have been. It is a great idea of a chip, but things just never went right for them.
Re:Uh (Score:4, Interesting)
It's a thin client, man. Web, email, word processing, maybe play some tunes or desktop games.
Re:Uh (Score:2)
James
Re:Uh (Score:3, Informative)
My 500MHz Celeron plays anything without getting anywhere near 100% CPU load. I guess it's mostly a matter of the video card - my Matrox G400 handles some of the stuff (scaling, maybe colorspace conversion).
And of course you DON'T do Xvid encoding on a thin client just as much as you don't do it on an X terminal (what a thin client basically is)
Re:Uh (Score:2)
"all the features" would mean you're turning on stuff that are totally useless or aren't worth the effort to calculate out... 10% time for 0.1% improvement in average quantizer just isn't worth it for most people. And decoding XviD takes about 500mhz (Celeron).
Don't blame the software or the hardware for what is clearly PEBKAC.
Re:Pixar: Good movies, suck-ass company (Score:2)
Re:Uh (Score:2)
*BZZT!* Wrong...
--Faster processors are also good for compiling kernels and compressing things with gzip / bzip2.
Re:Uh (Score:3, Informative)
With the amount of effort I see people put into making ultra quiet computers, you'd think something like this might actually do well. I'm tired of my own office sounding like a wind tunnel, and I've considered many times m
Re:Uh (Score:2)
1. Thin client apps are not designed to be client-cpu intensive, that's why they're using thin clients! Hello?
2. Comparing a Crusoe clock speeds to Intel/AMD (which is also asinine) is worse than comparing a G5 to a P4.
3. 99% of your mainstream thin client apps will BLAZE with this Crusoe chip. It's no secret to
4. Judging Transmeta dead without regard for the upcoming Efficeon [efficeon.com] is
Re:Uh (Score:4, Interesting)
TMTA [nasdaq.com] $2.39 +0.48 +25.13% 12,305,832
Re:Uh (Score:2)
IIRC, Transmeta chip performance was something that depended on its learning how to optimize for a specific task.
Existing benchmarks tended to emphasize how fast each of several tasks were accomplished once.
So Transmeta's offerings tend to look worse than they might be in use, day to day.
Re:Uh (Score:2)
long night indeed.
Re:Uh (Score:2)
$600 for a thin client? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:5, Insightful)
A company might, however. These units cost about the same, or a little more, than a standard PC. Unlike a standard PC, however, they are geared from start to be slave units to a server. The user can mess up far less on one of these than they can on a PC, and any software updates and other administration happens on the server and not on the individual desktop units. A user can use any client anywhere; nobody's locked to one particular machine (and replacing a faulty unit is done in minutes, with no need to mess around with backup restoration). And, of course, if you need more capacity, you only need to upgrade the server backend, so these have a lifespan that is a good deal longer than a standard PC.
The decrease in administration hassles, the improved security, the decreased power consumption and the interchangeability all add up to a pretty compelling advantage compared to putting a full-blown PC on every desk - for a medium to large organization.
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:2)
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:2)
In addition if they don't have fans, it both keeps the noise down to silent (which enhances productivity) and is one less thing to break and need replacing, making the # of movable parts 0.
Finally, if the Transmeta processor is energ
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:2)
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:2)
As for the fans, they still make noise and still break.
And the whole thing uses more electricity. We often forget this has a cost. I forget where, but I once saw the numbers as a result of consolidating a roomful of servers onto an IBM mainframe - they save $250,000 a year in electricity costs. Paying attention to these things can find your company money where it didn't think it had any.
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:2)
Actually, they cost about twice as much as a mini-atx. Don't forget that UNIX (and therefor Linux) was always designed to operate with dumb terminals (thin clients) connected to a centralized host. The X11 protocol was also designed to operate distributed among network connected hosts. It's not even that hard to set up.
Even Windows these days has "
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:3, Informative)
Even then, you can get older PII class systems used for less than $50 USD, which would run just fine as X terms, with a decent monitor and GFX card.
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:2)
When something on your home-brew PC dies, you're responsible for diagnosing the problem and acquiring the parts necessary to fix it.
HP's tech support is notoriously bad (I've dealt with it in the past week) but at least you can hand off the problem to someone else. I don't think you'd appreciate being the only point of contact for 100 home-brew thin clients' tech support.
Re:$600 for a thin client? (Score:5, Informative)
The 533 MHz = $349
The 733 MHz = $369
Whatever (Score:5, Interesting)
It's nice to see Transmeta doing SOMETHING, but it still looks like they've been running themselves in circles since the day they first used a product.
Never mind the PC world for a minute. Is Transmeta having ANY luck selling their chips for use in embedded systems?
Re:Whatever (Score:4, Interesting)
Checkout this company site [rlx.com].
They use transmeta chips in thier blade servers (multiple physical computers in one enclosure, for super high density computing).
Heres a direct link [rlx.com] to the model 1000t, pretty neat design, and a company worth watching.
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
The only thing going for them is the ability to use the PC platform for *some* embedded applications but even that is a moot point since you can target linux to lots of embedded processors. Unless I had something that needed MS Windows I would n't even bother looking at them, I would most probably be able to find a M
Wrong pricing (Score:5, Informative)
It says right at the bottom of the article that the prices for the new units have not been announced.
Jay (=
What's the deal. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What's the deal. (Score:4, Funny)
This is what we in the industry like to call the X factor.
Specs and Diagrams here: (Score:4, Informative)
The specs look like this is aimed at a corporate market? Strange since a whitebox computer would be cheaper. I suppose power consumption, etc. are all important. The T5500 comes with 128mb of RAM, and the 733mhz Crusoe 5800 processor, runs Windows CE and IE 6, and supports Citrix, etc.
I still think I'd prefer a whitebox with no hard drive running LTSP.
When will they give up? (Score:5, Interesting)
Most recently, the sun ray [sun.com] is about half the price, has cool take-your-session-anywhere technology, and last I heard isn't selling like hotcakes. So either HP knows something I don't or this is just more evidence of clueless management...
Re:When will they give up? (Score:5, Insightful)
We started off here at work with a System 36 and dumb terminals at everyone's desk. Everyone got their work done, and aside from hardware problems, there was no need to get up and walk to somone's desk. If anyone had problems, it was all centralized. All my work was done from my desk.
We then moved off dumb terminals and replaced everything with PCs. Trips to people's desk are frequent (probably 20 a day) and the rest of the time is spent building replacement PCs. Users store their own data, and if their drive crashes without a backup, they're SOL. How do you get a user to backup their data on a regular basis? Got me.
Now we start looking at server based solutions like Citrix and $300 Wyse terminals on the desk. Hmm.. minimized trips to the desk, all management centralized, hey, didn't we used to have that?
It looks to me like we have a trend. We got off the diskless/helpless workstations in favor of robust, useful boxes. Now we're heading back that helpless box stage and centralize our configuration, installation, and data. I predict that diskless will always be, and in fact will be favorable in reduced admin costs. because of that I welcome a market that is competitive at the thin client level.
Re:When will they give up? (Score:2)
Re:When will they give up? (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, and I should also mention that something like telling users to save their data on the server makes sense
Re:When will they give up? (Score:2)
LAN networking stayed fairly steady at 1-10mbps shared until 100mbps Ethernet took off a few years ago. Easily fast enough to update text screens and to do simple GUIs. And back then it was cheaper to buy a big CPU instead of a desktop big enough to do the heavy duty stuff you have to allow for but which isn't the norm.
But then wire speed stayed at 10mbps for a while and CPUs got cheaper while GUIs which needed this power got more common. Now it's harder
Re:When will they give up? (Score:2)
Re:When will they give up? (Score:2)
Except that the "terminals" today have more power than the mainframe of back then. Yes, they're centralizing stora
Re:When will they give up? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's kinda like "client/server", then "decentralized" then "client/server" then "decentralized" then "client/server" etc..
History is good at repeating transitions between different computing paradigms and back..
Re:When will they give up? (Score:2)
Go Transmeta! (Score:3, Insightful)
At least Sun Micro's "Sun Ray" system will get some much needed competition out of this.
We use Sun Ray's here at work [nih.gov], and while they do thier job pretty admirably, they do have some quirky lock-up issues we haven't been able to resolve.
Price is incorrect (Score:5, Informative)
In Other News... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In Other News... (Score:2)
It's amazing to me that companies will sell lesser technology for a higher $$ like that. What's more amazing is some yahoo at a large company will convince their manager that they'll need to purchase 1000 of these and distribute them among the company.
Re:In Other News... (Score:2)
Re:In Other News... (Score:2)
Re:In Other News... (Score:2)
Perhaps for console apps (Score:4, Interesting)
It is a wonderful toy, but too slow for human consumption, modern software just craaawls, and it only works as a surfpad via a thin and tuned Netscape 4.7. OOo is painfully slow. MP3 playback worked OK.
The only use I can see for this kind of device, and I admit that it'd be enough for me, is for remote ssh administration of my servers with some music rocking in the headset.
ssh runs just dandy on a 533 Mhz Crusoe. Anything with pretty pictures does _not_.
Re:Perhaps for console apps (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Perhaps for console apps (Score:2)
Re:Perhaps for console apps (Score:2)
Pictures of T5500 and T5300 (Score:5, Informative)
Fat Client For Same Price (Score:2, Informative)
Larry Ellison failed twice. (Score:5, Insightful)
1: Take a failed business model.
2: ???
3: Profit
Re:Larry Ellison failed twice. (Score:2)
1) times are tight, and when looking at cost savings, thin clients are really the way to go.
CHeaper to admin, cheaper to run, cheaper to replace on of these thena PC.
Bear in mind these are overall costs. sure, you might be able ti get a PC for the same cost, but how much are you going to spend in man hours installing and updating software.
2) easier to keep up to date when the next virus hits.
Larry's timing was horrible.
Re:Larry Ellison failed twice. (Score:2)
You don't buy Hardware from a DB company or DB software from a Hardware company (Unless it's IBM, which does everything)
Thin Client Prices (Score:4, Insightful)
These thin clients are $599 to about $629, similar to the prices I found but I can't understand why companies make them so expensive. I decided to build my own using VIA mini-ITX boards for less than $300.
It amazes me when companies fail to analyze why previous thin client computing initiatives haven't caught on, and put out thin clients that cost the same as a full desktop PC. My local bank (Barclay's) have replaced old X Terminals with Dell desktop PCs (P4s!) running Exceed, and I assume they chose this based on price.
- Brian
Re:Thin Client Prices (Score:2)
It's true that thin clients often seem overpriced for what they are, however, the working lifetime of them tends to be much more than your average PC. Longevity doesn't seem to count for much when buying.
We have a few Exceed PCs used almost entirely as X-terminals but they are running on NT. Since NT is no longer supported, and they don't look like they are wort
Re:Thin Client Prices (Score:2)
And I'm sure the time spent on repairing PC hardware, the electricity saved, etc., would be more than worth the added cost.
A local high-school replaced Macs with PCs running Windows. I assume they did this because Mac OS is horrible, and Windows is a wonderful operating system.
Just goes to
Too Expensive (Score:4, Insightful)
Check out peewee linux....
Re:Too Expensive (Score:2)
Re:Too Expensive (Score:2)
Or.. (Score:2)
Silent fast-ish thin client $500
Rus
Hey, Mini-ITX fanboys (Score:5, Funny)
These are terminals, not stupid little computers shoved up an ET dolls ass.
Terminals generally include monitor, keyboard and mouse, ready to plug and play.
Thank you, that is all.
Re:Hey, Mini-ITX fanboys (Score:2)
These are terminals, not stupid little computers shoved up an ET dolls ass.
Terminals generally include monitor, keyboard and mouse, ready to plug and play.
Thank you, that is all.
Bzzzt. Wrong answer!
Monitors are almost always sold separately. Check out HP's site and you'll see them listed under "options and accessories". I've got an office full of monitors that'll
alternative (Score:2)
Re:alternative (Score:3, Insightful)
get the picture?
Now I would use one for the home, but for a lot of business, this is the way to go.
Re:alternative (Score:2)
When Less Is More (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course as others have pointed out, there is no pricing info; but let's assume for a minute that the things are priced the same or more than a regular PC.
Why buy one?
Because these things aren't aimed at J. Random Linux Hacker, or even Joe Blow Windows user. They're aimed at corporations who want to keep people locked down. Just try keeping a PC made from standard parts totally locked down. I've even seen standard PCs kludged with locks and keys, which people just ended up jimmying open so they could install a video card they could use to play games when the boss wasn't looking!
With just a stupid thin client on your desk, you have to stay focused on the budget spreadsheet, or the timeline for ordering new timeline forms, or TPS reports, or whatever it is that's infinitely more boring than what a standard PC can offer.
In other words, it's more likely to be secure by design right from the start.
Also, there are fewer players in this space. Basic economics tells us that when there is less competition, prices remain high.
Just to disclose, I do have some stock in Transmeta, and it's doing really well today.
Would I buy such a device? Of course not. I have no need for it. I'm not a corporation that loses $50/employee/day in lost productivity due to PC maintenance and games.
Re:When Less Is More (Score:2)
In all fairness, if you plan to be using a standard PC as a thin-client, you don't need to lock-down anything, since everything is on the server.
Also, effectively locking the case will stop tampering. There are many cases designed to be locked, so they aren't just kludges.
what about the t5700? (Score:3, Informative)
Overkill? (Score:2)
Re:Overkill? (Score:2)
It's probably a similar effect as in HD purchases at the local shop. If I should need to replace one of my systems' hard drives, the largest one consuming less than 10 GB (across two OS's), I'll probably have to buy a 40 or 60GB drive. This in that smaller units aren't available anymore, and even if they were, the price differential would probably be so small in comparison that I'd just buy the sizes that are available. For a few percent increase in price, just go ahead get
How about a Transmeta based mini-Server? (Score:2, Interesting)
Thin clients may be useful in some limited business applications. But, it does not seem to be a very big niche.
There is growing demand for small linux server boxes. Either for network use, as a T1/DSL router/firewall/VPN box. Or, as a small LAN server, doing things like DNS/DHCP in a corporate environment. Or, as an everything server for Home/DSL use, WWW/SMTP+spam-asassin/Proxy/DNS/DHCP/etc.
If someone could package the TM5800 in a small form factor case, with no fans, and a drive bay for either a 2.5
Re:How about a Transmeta based mini-Server? (Score:2)
Why do so many people on /. always have to say this crap?
If you want a gateway/server machine, you get a low-power, dirt-cheap box. What you are suggesting is like buying a home computer system, and then striping out 80% of it, then upgrading part of it... In other words, why not just get a $100 system that was designed for the job,
Thin Clients Vs. PC (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Thin Clients Vs. PC (Score:3, Interesting)
Go build a Linux Terminal instead (Score:2)
Instead of going to HP, go out and get yourself a AMD K-6 or something similar, 64 MByte of RAM, and good graphics card from Ebay. If you have money to spend, spend it o
Ah, but the man has a point (Score:2)
If one person wants to play doom on one... fine. He can do it while another person checks their email, and yet another writes a paper. Set up a large RAID for all the
Who could ask for more than that? I've looked into a similar setup with a dual-proc main server, but I was planning on simply us
I think it does... but I have not used it (Score:2)
pretty damn cool indeed.