Unreleased OQO 2+ OLED Version Sells For $6,500 52
psych787 writes "OQO's product line — much loved by their community at oqotalk — has recently suffered a slow, agonizing death. After dropping warranty repairs, not returning several units sent in, disconnecting phonelines, and leaving trash at their headquarters, a couple of units have survived and found eBay. The last one went for $4.5k. Now the only PC for sale to include an OLED has gone for $6.5k. At that price, perhaps a competitor bought the device to come up with something that meets the same market?"
Heh (Score:1, Interesting)
I know I want to pay $6,500 dollars for a laptop with a 5" screen!
Damn, I don't know how this company possibly could have gone out of business with idiots like that. OLEDs aren't *that* great. Take a look at your cell phone and ask yourself if you want that in a monitor. Mine has screen burn in and flickers if I look at it out of the corner of my eye. (Sure, they may have resolved these issues, but they don't look better than, say, an LED TV).
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tech evolves over time; it may very well be that future advances will drive the cost down, iron out a few of the bugs and possibly change your mind. these OLEDs are incredibly efficient and can be used to make thin flexible displays.
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>>Most OLEDs are used in cell phones. But, most cell phones do not use OLEDs. So he probably thinks his iPhone has an OLED dislpay.
Right. Because I'm a douchebag that needs a trendy iPhone?
No, my cell phone does have an OLED. I read my tech specs, jackass.
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Here's the very first result of a google search for flexible OLED.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcAm3KihFho [youtube.com]
Re:Heh (Score:5, Insightful)
I doubt that the final price is about a device with a 5" OLED screen, I think the final price is about having a collector's item, a rare prototype. As rare as it is, I would think it would fetch a much higher price.
I wouldn't know, I don't have a device with OLED. I don't typically use devices out of the corner of my eye. I'm pretty sure fading issues have been addressed, a screen made today is going to be a lot better than that made even two years ago. I doubt that an OLED and an LED TV would be comparable, because the LED TV you're thinking about is only LED backlit, it would still be LCD based and as such, still be pretty limited in real contrast ratio.
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I don't think OQO is rare and desirable enough to demand 6.5K. Someone who is paying this amount of money either has a very specific reason to do so I think.
Re:Heh (Score:5, Interesting)
An OQO is pretty rare. They were expensive computers in their day, and still have the distinction as the smallest complete x86-compatible PC ever made. (You can get pico-ITC boards smaller than an OQO, but you'll need to add storage, RAM, screen and power...). Heck, you could make it the smallest Hackintosh in the world.
The OQO 02+ is considered very desirable as it upgrades several annoying components on the OQO 02 - the CPU is better (Intel Atom vs. Via C7). The OLED version had more RAM (2GB vs 1GB), and the SSD as an option. The "normal" OQO 02+ (the one that went for $4.5k) qualified for the Microsoft XP Home license too (the netbook discounted cost).
Either way, they were also the cheapest OQOs if they were released, with the OLED one starting around $1.5k. Upgrade to an SSD and you'd have a pocketable PC that you could do iTunes, VLC, full desktop Ubuntu, VMWare, Visual Studio, what have you. Or hell, why argue about Flash support, when you can run full Firefox with flash?
I have an 02, and wanted to buy an 02+. But given OQO is out of business these days, oh well. I won't part with that much cash for an unsupported piece of equipment I intend to use. All I can hope for is the upcoming Archos 9 (running Windows 7) will be small enough to be hand-carried. But pocketing a
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I have an 02, and wanted to buy an 02+. But given OQO is out of business these days, oh well. I won't part with that much cash for an unsupported piece of equipment I intend to use. All I can hope for is the upcoming Archos 9 (running Windows 7) will be small enough to be hand-carried. But pocketing a[[[NO CARRIER
With connectivity like that, I can definitely see why you'd want to replace your 02 with an 02+.
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Did the person who sold your friend the rare Sony iPod also offer genuine Rolex watches?
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Rare != Desirable. For an item to fetch a higher price than its normal counterparts, it needs both components.
Lots of rare things out there that aren't desirable. Also, the brand isn't that big. This also isn't a major milestone tech item. The first iPod(s) (by serial number, not just model),
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the LED TV you're thinking about is only LED backlit
Wow, I hadn't looked into it. I'd assumed this wonderful new LED TV I'd heard about was, you know, an LED TV -- not an LED backlit LCD TV. Talk about false advertising, I hope they get slapped for that.
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I know I want to pay $6,500 dollars for a laptop with a 5" screen!
Me too! I heard it plays WoW!
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Don't let it happen again.
The problem is (Score:3, Insightful)
That there may not be enough idiots willing to pay high prices for it. You don't make enough money to stay in business selling only a few systems, even if you can get ridiculous prices for them.
Same kind of deal with the Voodoo 5 6000. There were a few people out there willing to spend ungodly amounts to have a special card, but not enough.
The only way you can have a company that survives on a market like that is if you have extremely low overhead. If you don't really do any R&D, then sure you can deal
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For my money, I'd rather have one of IBM's Power6 systems. The least expensive one is only about $5.5k, less than the OQO.
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Re:Heh (Score:4, Informative)
Smart competitors (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sure they're just dying to get into that huge market that OQO failed to make any money in.
Pricing (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess it just turns out they priced them wrong... shoot, they've got the market for $6500 laptops cornered.
6.5k != 6101 (!) (Score:4, Informative)
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Don't like to nitpick? What are you doing on Slashdot then? Keep up the good work, I say!
And whilst we're about it:
the only PC for sale to include an OLED
A PC with a single organic light-emitting diode? Of what interest is that?
"OLED" != "OLED Display"
Yay pedantry!
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You must work for NASA - this is metric money, not imperial. Got to be careful with those conversions, you never know when one might accidentally cause a probe to slam into Mars at high speed.
DeLand, FL (Score:3, Interesting)
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Not sure... (Score:2)
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Its no DIY project. the board for the 02+ is 11+ layers, try and do that on your own.
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If it were a sandwich, it would make Dagwood proud.
InnerWeb
OLEDs are awesome (Score:3, Insightful)
I can see where someone would want to have a working prototype of one of the first devices with an OLED display, it's probably headed to a museum somewhere.
market spoke (Score:1)
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I use my OQO all the time. It was becoming irritating constantly hauling laptops and equipment all the time to client sits, and I decided to settle on the OQO due to its form factor. The extended battery gave me plenty of power for all day use, and since it could run any OS I wanted (linux, xp, etc.) I could run all the apps I needed.
I runn Visual Studio, SQL Server, IIS, all my dev tools without a problem and if I need a bigger design environment I either shrink the screen down, or (most of the time) jus
Haha, that's just stupid (Score:2)
smudgy pics (Score:2)
I'd totally buy one, if a bit cheaper. (Score:3, Interesting)
... if it were cheap enough. Seriously. OQOs, despite all their limitations and faults, were *awesome* if you wanted what they had to offer. I don't think they had entirely the wrong idea with their product, they were just a) ahead of their time and b) too expensive.
I met a chap at Linux Kongress in Hamburg who was running Linux on his OQO (the original one). He was able to demonstrate his x86 Linux development project on it. It was capable of VGA output, so he was able to run his presentation from it too. And it was small enough to fit in a (large-ish) pocket. The promise of a palmtop fulfilled, in a way. It doesn't matter that it's underpowered - so are netbooks and those are plenty popular.
A netbook-based OQO-like device would totally rock. I'm sure modern technology is up to the task of putting together a *cheap* device in an OQO-alike form-factor. If one were available at a reasonable price (i.e. a bit cheaper or about the same price as a netbook) I'd be very interested in picking one up. Media player, internet browser, ebook reader, running full desktop software. Plug in a keyboard and screen if you need to do anything serious on it - the market also should be capable of producing a docking station with laptop screen + keyboard with a DVI cable on, so that you can carry it around in a laptop case to supplement your palmtop device if you anticipate doing more serious browsing or typing.
The closest things to this that I currently see in development are the OpenPandora (http://openpandora.org), which isn't PC compatible but is pocketable and has a mini keyboard, clamshell design, runs Linux. And the new Intel MID chipset, which may not (?) be PC-compatible from what I've heard but will be x86-based and therefore able to run normal PC software for any OS that can boot on it in the first place. These should give us some of what we want - but hopefully some enterprising company will see the potential for a true netbook-based OQO-alike.
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It's a horrible form factor concept. It only makes sense if you 1) are wedded to an x86 desktop OS, and 2) must have thumb typing. This is the case for very, very few people. Most people are better off with either 1) a netbook for your desktop OS, or 2) a smartphone for thumb typing.
Getting both in one device costs $$ for a reason: tiny market, no economy of scale.
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Horrible for many, useful for others - it depends on price and on what you need it for. I'd use it whilst away from my desk at home and whilst traveling. Most people wouldn't want one but there could still be enough to be a market.
I would not want it enough to pay through the nose for it (a la OQO) - but if they had netbookish pricing they'd have my attention. Basically the same hardware, so seems possible. My own netbook has such a small keyboard that I'd want to bring an external keyboard anyhow - and
total misfire (Score:2, Insightful)
Shoving marginally laptop class computing resources into a palmtop with a thumb keyboard and a dinky, even if cool OLED screen is just stoopid. Either ya have to go bigger and be a netbook, or smaller and be a phone. This OQO concept was a tinker's wet dream, wishing for a market.
When the state of the art gets to the point where a laptop class CPU can operate in a compact mobile phone-sized format there might be some potential for a few vertical markets.. Beowulf cluster in a briefcase anyone?.... Beuler?