VAIO To Be First Crusoe Laptop 113
kevlar writes: "Looks like Sony has decided on putting Crusoe chips in their new Vaio laptops. " I finally got mine back from American Airlines (along with my boxers, t-shirts, and other worldly possessions that they've had for like 2 weeks). Course considering the hard drive crashes, I was kinda hoping they'd lose it so I could just get a different one ;)
Dump all INTC (Score:4)
Now Transmeta is going to kill them on the mobile and appliance market - leading edge vendors are actually biting. Intel's chip line is in big trouble.
Andy Grove, it's not paranoia you've got. The sharks are circling!
What about the other laptops? (Score:1)
So I have two questions.
First, what kind of laptop can be bought for US $1400, and second, would the prices for the Intel ones drop after the Crusoe reaches the market? By this I mean, should I wait a while longer, or just get one now?
Any ideeas would be appreciated.
Re:What OS will be used? (Score:1)
X86 CPUs -- like the laptop version of the Crusoe, for example -- are widely believed to run X86 OS's.
Re:Rob's Undies (Score:1)
Thank you.. Drive through
Yes I realize the parent post is a troll....
Jeremy
Re:SMP? (Score:1)
Now, that doesn't have anything specifically to do with SMP, but if board manufacturers were under that much pressure not to market their single-CPU Athlon boards, how much pressure must they be under not to produce SMP Athlon boards?
Business Realities (Score:1)
Sadly, to get the 15um process you want would mean displacing chips with a much higher profit margin. No one is likely to do that, and if they did, they would certainly charge more for it, so that your price advantage largely goes away.
Beyond that, of course, the mass market is based on M$ products, and that means that you will need that power, next upgrade if not today. It's sad, but true. That's why all the Crusoe based books are running Crusoe 5ks, not 3ks, even though the 3ks are just as good at 32 bit instructions, for less money and less power.
Re:Price? (Score:1)
.sig =
Re:Before you get excited: (Score:1)
Re:Here's an article (WARNING: In Japanese) (Score:2)
1. You can forget about installing IBM Microdrive - this PCMCIA slot is half of what you need
2. I'm betting that this is a Winmodem - and fromm experience - probably Lucent Winmodem - so forget kernel 2.4 unless you have a way to load their binary module to it..
Re:Vaio quality (Score:1)
Interesting, but...I'd personally like to see some kind of evidence of this before I take your word for it.
--jbRe:American Arlines? (Score:1)
Some of us prefer to travel laterally.
rLowe
PS> I am familiar with the roundness of the earth. For argument's sake, let's just say that one travels laterally around the circumference of the earth.
Re:Price? (Score:1)
Because buisness people pay through the nose for status laptops. While geeks who have seen a POS $800 laptop think there is a conspiracy to make all good hardware more expensive than that.
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Re:Price? (Score:2)
Okay, so now my needs change to the system I originally described, with a super-reflective backing on the display, to minimize the need for backlighting, and...
144DPI (or 216DPI) Greyscale TFT LCD. (That's a resolution that works nicely with the 72-points-in-an-inch metric.)
Doesn't necessarily need to give me two days of battery life, but must give me at least 16 hours. And recharge fully within six hours. Preferably four.
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Re:Price? (Score:1)
I think something like the Libretto was exactly what you were looking for - it was small portables with only 64 MB RAM and Pentium MMX processors, and a somewhat tiny LCD that could only do 800x480 or something like that - apart from the battery time. It was basically an x86-compatible, overpowered and horribly oversized PDA that could run Windows (don't know about Linux, I newer saw it tested with a Linux configuration in hardware reviews :)
I don't think that it could run for days though...
I think it was discontinued because of lack of demand though, maybe because it's high price.
I couldn't find any links except from the Swedish site under "older computers" (infos in Swedish, but the specs should probably be globally understandable):
Re:Price? (Score:2)
Stupid, stupid me: I've toyed with the idea of buying one for ages, and forgot all about it in the heat of the moment!
It's the [Psion] [psion.com] product line, which is almost exactly what I described: runs forever on a couple of AA batteries, has right software, etcetera.
Heck, there's even a colour-screen model. And the word processor is MSWord compatible. And they're small.
K, now I'm horny to go buy one. Damn!
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Re:Before you get excited: (Score:1)
~luge
The music clip can be used to play MP3's? (Score:1)
I was under the impression that anything that uses the Sony music clip uses bastardized digital music formats, e.g. encrypted MP3 or some other format that I can't easily work with.
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
Sony ? So What ? (Score:2)
--
CmdrTaco at the airport (Score:3)
Security TFM: Actually, throwers don't worry about ticking because modern bombs dont tick.
CmdrTaco: Excuse me? "Throwers?"
Security TFM: Baggage handlers. But when a suitcase vibrates, then the throwers have to call the police.
CmdrTaco: My suitcase was vibrating?
Security TFM: Nine times out of ten it's an electric razor, but every once in a while.... its a dildo. Of course, its airline policy never to imply ownership in the event of a dildo. We use the indefinite article: "A dildo." Never "Your dildo."
CmdrTack: But i don't own a...
Are you crazy?? (Score:1)
Re:Price? (Score:2)
I'm sorry if this is going to annoy people, but look at Windows CE here. You can get nice little boxes with 100-200ish MHz CPUs - seem to be normally StrongARM or MIPS - 32-64MB or RAM, 800*600 screens. Light weight, long battery life. And a big enough screen and keyboard that you're not feeling significantly cramped. Well, I'm not anyway
If you don't want to buy anything associated with MS at all, look at a Psion 7. A bit larger and a lower screen resolution, but still a nice box. And if you want to stick with the standard software rather than converting it all to Linux or BSD, EPOC32 is rather nice.
Not too expensive, either. I've seen them going for 5-600 UKP and remember the standard tech exchange rate of £1 = $1 US...
The old IBM Workpad z50 was one of these, and got some decent enough reactions when they were being remaindered and someone worked out how to stick Linux or BSD on them. Well, they're better boxes now. Higher screen resolutions, more RAM. Heck, WinCE 3 is rather better than 2, by all accounts. Not that that's especially difficult
I can't see anything better for that sort of functionality.
Re:Price? (Score:2)
I totally agree. By the way, I own an outdated Fujitsu Lifebook B112 (Pentium MMX 233). It *does* run up to 4 hours when used for not too CPU intensive tasks. (Usually, it is around 2 to 3 hours.) So yes, it can be done and if developers would take advantage of running an underclocked CPU, long-running laptops with acceptable computing power would be reality *now*.
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Ultrasmall laptops (Re:Price?) (Score:2)
I owned a 50ct (until my hotel room got robbed on January 1st, thank you). It was a great machine (fully Linux compatible), but its battery was far too small.
Despite having only a Pentium 75, the machine didn't run very much longer than 1.5 hours while on battery, with APM activated in the Linux Kernel. In Windows 95, the machine would often run less than an hour.
There is an extra large battery available for the 50ct, but it is hideously overpriced and so I did not buy it.
Still, I liked that machine and recommend it to anyone who needs ultra-portability. It isn't much bigger than a pocket calculator and looks like a keyboard-PDA, with less than 900 gramms in weight. I am a touch-typer and of course, the keyboard was tough to use, but hey.
The thing I always enjoyed were fellow passenger on German rail asking me about my computer.
"So this is what Windows CE looks like? Do you like it?"
"No, that's Linux. It's called KDE."
"Oooh."
Since we're into anecdotes now, I prefer ultra-small and -light laptops and as I said in another post, my current machine is a Fujitsu Lifebook that is also smaller than usual. As often as people ask me about it while on the traing, I should carry small business cards with my laptop's spec list with me. The fun thing is that one can afford to put huge hard disks and memory into these critters these days, yet few people can imagine that my subnotebook runs on 160 MB Ram and 12 Gigs of harddisk, with three operating systems installed.
Ok, enough bragging.
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Re:Good laptops for Linux (Score:1)
What are you talking about? (Score:2)
Colbalt ships MIPS-based systems, not AMD. Of course, Penguin Computing has an AMD based system ("Niveus Athlon Mid-tower").
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Ben Kosse
Re:VAIOs are great refurb deals now (Score:1)
Re:Price? (Score:2)
2GB HD and 96 MB of RAM! 12.1 TFT screen.
Actually, My work computer is a P166 (OC'ed to 233) with 64MB of ram.... I'd let you have that really cheap!
~Hammy
"I never met a VC I didn't like, for a while."
Re:What OS will be used? (Score:1)
Re:Dump all INTC (Score:2)
I have never seen a rack-mountable server machine which packs AMD processors. I just checked three vendors (Telenet Systems, VA Linux, and Penguin Computing) and none of the are shipping AMD products.
The x86 server market is very much owned by Intel and their 440GX chipset, and Pentium III/Xeon processors.
Re:Dump all INTC (Score:1)
have never seen a rack-mountable server machine which packs AMD processors. I just checked three vendors (Telenet Systems, VA Linux, and Penguin Computing) and none of the are shipping AMD products.
Well, there is a little company called Cobalt Networks [cobalt.com] that makes a little server called the RaQ that is both rack-mountable and AMD-based. Not suitable for high-end computation work, but certainly a nice web server.
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The Specifications... (in Japanese) (Score:2)
Vaio quality (Score:2)
Sony cuts costs in products destined for American markets in any number of ways. One method is simply lowering quality control standards, letting through LCDs and such that wouldn't make it otherwise. Along with other techniques, Sony can cut its unit costs 20-30%, while keeping their jacked up prices.
Re:What about Apple/Motorola about 5 years ago? (Score:1)
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Re:Before you get excited: (Score:1)
It may be a matter of general laptop construction getting better -- they used to be all-plastic (you said "paint started peeling") but now any decent one is magnesium alloy (maybe other metals), which is a hell of a lot stronger for the same weight. The VAIOs we have today are all anodized alloys of some sort, and it would be pretty impossible for anything to peel off them (and its been pretty tough to get a dent in them, too!)...
I'm an investigator. I followed a trail there.
Q.Tell me what the trail was.
Re:Fuck Sony - They fucked 2600, the a-holes (Score:3)
Doesn't it seem odd? A corporation who vehemently opposes mp3's or digital recording is selling a "music clip" and mini-disc players. Well it's not odd at all - example, Uniden corp. makes radar guns for state and local police depts and it also makes the radar detectors you buy to detect those very radar guns. Then, they make radar guns with vg-2 chips to detect radar detectors and then they turn around and make stealth radar detectors that have antivg-2 chips.
Sony is no different here. Sony pushed the minidisc player which does record digitally into the hands of many. The minidisc format is more popular than CD's in Japan and it is pretty popular in Europe. However, when minidisc were to be marketed in the states the riaa, which the sony label is a part of, complained big time stunting the growth of that market. It is truly a shame because minidisc kicks ass.
If there is money to be made, a corporation will do whatever is necessary. Remember that different parts of the corporation may not necessarily be in accordance with eachother. Sony obviously see's that there is money to be made with the "music clip" mp3 player. If you are mad at sony, stop buying music on their label.
Re:But it's SONY! (Score:1)
Or take a minute to find out that Sony backtrack[ed] from anti-Napster spiel [theregister.co.uk]. They were quotes taken out of context from an exec who has nothing to do with Sony Music.
But hey, that doesn't make as good a /. headline as "Sony are going to firewall you to stop you using Napster!!!" now, is it?
Re:You Idiots, get a PB G3 (Score:1)
osx too little too late
blahblah
dont have the fuqin pretense to tell people to get a life, when you are doing exactly the same shit they are. we're all waiting for something better to come down the pipes. you are. they are.
amazing to see how quickly you can ride up against sony but at the same time side with your own side. wtf? this isnt a war here. no one is supposed to have to wipe out the other to suceed. this is about us, the consumer, getting what we want. who cares who brings it to us?
why the fuck is everyone letting themselves be such mindless add re-selling drones.
bah. im just fed up this morning.
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Solaris/FreeBSD/Openstep/NeXTSTEP/Linux/ultrix/OS
Re:Dump all INTC (Score:1)
But of course, JMO.
It's a publically traded company's site. (Score:1)
- Mike Hughes
Sherman, set the Way-Back machine to... (Score:1)
ROTFL! There are no [cough...choke] "backlights" anymore. Active matrix means each pixel is its own teeny, tiny incandescent bulb! Sherman, set the Way-Back machine to...
There are some low power machines somewhat simiilar to what you propose. They tend to eliminate the hard disk in favor of non-volitle ram and run WinCE on a weird processor, but people don't want them: too slow.
Actually I submitted it two days ago (Score:1)
Re:Price? (Score:1)
You can get an extra battery which will double your time, which add up to still lighter than all other laptops (2 lb + 0.5 lb)
Oh and, libby kick picturebook's ass.
CY
I've heard this before (Score:1)
Re:Dump all INTC (Score:1)
Let's get this moderated down. Any post with a fact as clueless and incorrect as this needs to be moderated down.
Apple Powerbooks (Score:1)
So What? The Apple G3 Powerbooks have gotten 5 hours out of a battery for years, now.
The iBooks, which have been out for a year already, get 6 hours.
Re:What are you talking about? (Score:1)
You are mistaken. They used to be MIPS, but they moved to AMD some time ago. Read the documentation on their site. It says "x86-compatible processor". I have seen inside many 3i and 4r models.
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Yes and no. (Score:2)
I did read some of the documentation on their site, which says "64-bit processor" of which AMD is *NOT*. However, I did not read the RaQ 3 or 4 information which are "Intel-compatible processor" based.
The NASRaQ and the Qube are also still listed on their site as being 64-bit processors, which means the MIPS chips.
I think it's a little unfair to say "they used to be MIPS but moved to AMD some time ago" when they still sell MIPS based systems.
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Ben Kosse
Re:Price? (Score:1)
I do agree with you and FFFish about how absurd battery life is. I just don't see, barring some incredible discoveries in battery or LCD technology, how we could hope to see these low-cost para-notebooks within even the next five years.
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All generalizations are false.
Re:Yes and no. (Score:1)
The NASRaQ and the Qube are also still listed on their site as being 64-bit processors, which means the MIPS chips.
OK, but we were talking about the RaQ servers. The original ones were MIPS-based. The current ones are AMD-based. That's all there is to it.
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Re:Dump all INTC (Score:2)
old news? (Score:1)
Price? (Score:2)
In the acticle, it says $2,299 - and a quick conversion to canadian, and it looks like... $3500 or so.
Sucks.
Oh well, I guess I'll have to buy a used one. But I thought Crusoe was supposed to be cost-effective...
you, the reader, decide.
American Arlines? (Score:2)
Who flies anymore? I thought we all used the space elevator!
Transmeta, just in time for xmas (Score:1)
"Hitachi Ltd. is slated to start selling Crusoe-powered notebook computers in November. Quanta, another leading maker of notebook computers, said it will ship Crusoe-powered products to IBM Corp. later this year.
Gateway Inc. and America Online Inc. have also said they plan to use Transmeta processors for their jointly developed "Internet appliance" products that will go on sale later this year."
All the heavy hitters lining up to deploy the chip and Sony has so much faith that they're deploying it in their flagship portable.
Now if only sony would install dual booting linux at the factory, I'de buy them by the 6 pack!
Finally... (Score:2)
There was an article about this on CNET.com [cnet.com] two days ago.
Sony's Transmeta-powered laptops to hit market next month [cnet.com]
Hitachi has a Crusoe powered laptop coming out in November.
Picturebook (Score:2)
who cares? (Score:1)
SMP? (Score:1)
Here's an article (WARNING: In Japanese) (Score:4)
If you just want to look at the PII/400 next to the Crusoe version, here are some pictures: (from the same site)
Left side ports [impress.co.jp] (PCMCIA, Memory Stick and 1394/iLink)
Right side ports [impress.co.jp] (Video out (?), Audio, USB, power, something else, wheel-thingy, and modem)
Re:Before you get excited: (Score:2)
> years ago.
Consumer reports has reports on the defectiveness of various companies and the equiptment they make. Sony is 3rd highest for defectiveness. Great quipt. for at a price.
Tigers don't change their stripes quite easily... crappy then, crappy now.
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Re:WHO CARES? (Score:2)
The correct engineering approach would be to take whatever CPU solves the given problem better.
If you have 30W 16" TFT screen then probably you shouldn't care about few watts saved on processor. However if you got mini-notebook with transflective LCD (that can work in full color without backlight) then you should pull out your calculator. More and more devices fit the latter category these days.
Re:Price? (Score:4)
Which is, in my opinion, pretty damned dismal.
What I *really* don't understand is why no manufacturer is releasing a Pentium-200-based laptop. With the kind of technology that could be applied to that level of CPU (.15um, advanced power saving modes, miniscule voltage/amperage requirements), the CPU would become an insignificant drain on the batter.
Yes, yes: backlights are the powersucker. Surely there are technologiesHe said product tests indicated that the new Crusoe chip afforded PictureBook users two times the stamina of previous models. The typical session span with the Crusoe chip could last up to 5.5 hours.
And a 200MHz Pentium is more than enough for the typical wordprocessing functions of a laptop. Few and far between are the folk who are attempting to run Quake 1024x768x32 on their laptop...
If the manufacturers would just get sensible about it all, we could have a P200, 96Mb, 6Gb system with a near-full-size keyboard and good video-out, that would be *ideal* for wordprocessing, accounting and web browsing -- probably the better part of 90% of most laptop functions.
Fix the backlight problem, and those puppies would run for *days* on a single charge, not a bloody useless 5 hours!
Price it at sub-$1K, and the world would beat a path to their door. My god, I'd take two of them!
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VAIOs are great refurb deals now (Score:2)
- Mike Hughes
Anyone with a sence of morality... that's who. (Score:2)
Except for the fact that WW2 took place sixty YEARS ago. And the leaders of Germany at the time have all died by their own hands, been hanged by the Nurmberg tribunals, or died in prison.
The Sony incident took place less than sixty DAYS ago. And the executive in question is, to my knowledge, still in power, not having been so much as fired, much less hanged or imprisoned.
So, yeah, a boycott IS still in order.
john
Resistance is NOT futile!!!
Haiku:
I am not a drone.
Remove the collective if
Re:Price? (Score:1)
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Re:Sherman, set the Way-Back machine to... (Score:1)
Let me be the first to correct you. Active matrix does indeed use a backlight. My laptop has an active matrix display (purchases a year ago, not WAY back) with a touchy backlight. Sometimes the backlight won't turn on right away when I boot. I can see the screen very faintly, so the pixels are on, but certainly not bright enough to see, until the backlight kicks in.
-josh
Re:Price? (Score:2)
Which is, in my opinion, pretty damned dismal.
You haven't used a laptop lately, have you? My 300 MHz VAIO gets about 1 hr. (Claims 6 - guffaw) If this machine in really *delivers* 5 hours of compute time, it's worth the price of admission.
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Re:You cheked a laptop?!?! (Score:2)
I hate carrying anything more than a book, minidisc player and a bottle of water onto the plane and I wish everyone else felt the same. When my wife flew Quantas around Aus & NZ last spring she said they MADE her check her laptop. It wasn't a choice.
I get so sick of trying to get off the plane and waiting for the guy in the row in front of me to get his briefcase from under the seat, the latpop from the overhead storage bin in front of him and his garment bag from the storage bin two rows behind him.
When they finally get around to giving me a laptop with a DVD player, I'll start carrying it on the plane (along with half-dozen extra batteries) for watching movies. until then its dead weight thats getting checked.
Re:Sherman, set the Way-Back machine to... (Score:1)
Re:What about the other laptops? (Score:2)
On the notebook market - it's a total different story. No one will guarantee you that if the new mobile Pentium III or the new Mobile Athlon prices will be reduced - you'll pay less - the chances are that you'll pay the same (or maybe little lower, and I'm talking about a few dozen dollars less)..
Re:Price? (Score:1)
Now that I think about it, PDAs have taken over that marketplace, haven't they? Maybe we need to look to the PDA market to fulfill our needs. How about a Palm, with a screen the size of an etch-a-sketch? Give it a decent greyscale LCD screen that can be used, comfortably, in the dark. Give it a PS/2 port to plug in a Happy Hacker keyboard. Give it 32MB RAM, and a 1GB disk. Possibly a USB port, and definitely the ability to use PCMIA. I think an $850-$1000 price tag is not unreasonable for something of that caliber. (You can buy sub-$1k notebooks from HP now. A Palm-on-crack should cost no more.) And it would have to work with a stripped-down GNU/Linux or NetBSD. Would you buy one? I know I would.
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All generalizations are false.
Re:Good laptops for Linux (Score:1)
Re:Good laptops for Linux (Score:2)
anyone?
Re:Good laptops for Linux (Score:1)
Re:SMP? (Score:2)
Alpha Processors Inc. are working with AMD to create a chipset for quad and 8 CPU's.
There are some ciruclating rumors that Transmeta thinks about SMP for their Crusoe, but for desktop..
Note: the way that AMD will work with dual processing is called P-T-P and not SMP. Exactly the same as alpha does.
Re:What OS will be used? (Score:1)
If they would be willing to do the drivers for Linux (binary or OpenSource...), another issue is that can I have preloaded with Linux and get discount, since I don't need Microsoft OEM software in machine.
-- .sig
No
Re:What OS will be used? (Score:2)
Re:Sherman, set the Way-Back machine to... (Score:1)
you're too generous... how about I'm high on crack? :)
This isn't a REAL laptop (Score:1)
I really don't see the big deal about battery life. My laptop will make it all the way across the country when I bring a spare battery. And it's not even all that good.
There was a guy sitting across from me on a flight the other day who had an Apple PowerBook. First off, the thing was about 1/2" thick and had a huge screen. He pops in a DVD movie and proceeds to watch the entire thing (~2 hours 20min) in full-screen video. The quality was amazing. He did all of this with battery life to spare. It was still chugging along when he finally had to put it away because the plane was landing.
This is just a guess but I'm thinking that the Crusoe processor will not have enough juevos to decode full screen DVD movies.
Re:Dump all INTC (Score:1)
Re:What about Apple/Motorola about 5 years ago? (Score:1)
Re:old news? (Score:1)
Bowie J. Poag
Re:Price? (Score:2)
Before you get excited: (Score:2)
1) This is only a picturebook. Yeah, it's a good start, but still- not exactly the most practical way to blow good money.
2) I, for one, will never be buying another Vaio. I bought a pretty early one (Pentium200) and the sixe and performance are pretty solid. But the construction is shit. The paint started peeling and bubbling nearly immediately, two major screws just plain old fell out, the inner ring of the female end of the power plug fell out (still works, but is loose), and the battery died. And (in less than two years!) they've stopped producing the battery, so I can't get a new one of the same type. What else... oh, yeah, the thick (1") vertical black stripes that frequently appear on the screen. Umm... does that cover it all? Oh, wait, there is also the friend's vaio where the screen hinge broke. And did I mention the 6 month warranty? ARgh... the vaio is soooo close to being about the ultimate laptop. But completely shoddy construction just makes that impossible.
~luge
But dump the HD (Score:2)
Description of Microdrive Roadwarrior and Deluxe kits. [microtechint.com]
Re:Price? (Score:1)
Ummm... While Crusoe may be cost effective, Sony is not
Stick a Sony lable on anything and just watch that price increase.
You cheked a laptop?!?! (Score:4)
Man, consider youself lucky to have gotten it back. Never, never, never check a laptop. Of the people I know who have done so, they have something like a 50% recovery rate on those. I don't think there is an easier thing for someone to steal while being handled that is worth so much. Unless you have the thing well, well hidden in your bags. Plus, the insurance you get on checked luggage a) doesn't amount to enough to cover your laptop and b) it specifically doesn't cover laptops. Have you ever seen how they handle luguage? You lucky they don't drop some lead weights on it or something.
Get a nice computer bag, and put the thing in the overhead bin, or under your seat or something.
Oh, and did I mention AA sucks?
Yep (Score:1)
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Re:Before you get excited: (Score:2)
Re:Price? (Score:1)
You make it sound so trivial. While we're at it, why don't we just fix the battery problem, so laptops can run by absorbing spiritual energry from the æther? ;-)
That's like saying, "Man, why don't they just sell Ferraris for $1.25? I'd buy half a dozen!" If you can think of how to make that cost effective, I guarantee you that your salary will soon increase to the point where you won't need a cheap notebook. Heh.
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All generalizations are false.
Re:Before you get excited: (Score:1)
I got a PII/350 Superslim back in April, and considering I take it everywhere, I'm surprised how well it's stood up. The only thing I notice that shows me it's not new is the coloration is a little off where I rest my right hand by the touchpad.
Check them out again, if you're in the market. I'm surprised a laptop as little as mine is stands up as well as it does. I could only assume the bigger (ie, nonsuperslim) modles are equally well-constructed these days.
Re:Fuck Sony - They fucked 2600, the a-holes (Score:2)
If this doesn't work, my backup plan is to distract Telsa with candy and take hers.
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All generalizations are false.
Come on, this is Slashdot! (Score:3)
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All generalizations are false.
haiku (Score:1)
This would stop a normal man,
but I'll jump your bones!
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All generalizations are false.
haiku (Score:2)
yet low UID ensures
high moderation.
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All generalizations are false.
Re:Price? (Score:1)
Actually, even the graphite iBook is a great deal. I'm in the market for a laptop ($1400-$2000), and it looks pretty schweet, but I have two issues:
(http://www.redhatisnotlinux.org [redhatisnotlinux.org])
Anyway, I'm currently leaning towards the IBM i2000 series Thinkpads. Cheap and fast... (if not very good!)
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All generalizations are false.
Good laptops for Linux (Score:1)
Re:WHO CARES? (Score:1)
If you want a PIII, go get one and stop whining. Not everyone needs a superfast PIII laptop, or can afford one.
Re:Dump all INTC (Score:2)
If you are running a production server, go with an Intel chip. They may be more expensive and lower performing, but Intel is well-known and recognized as a stable solution. Thus, if the Intel chip dies, it'll be treated as a rare occurance. However, if you recommend an AMD solution (against management's wishes), and the AMD solution dies, you're out of a job.
I like AMD. I love their athlons (waiting for a dual SMP system... which would run much better than a dual Intel SMP system). Just that AMD isn't regarded as a "reliable" workhorse that Intel seems to have.
After all, there has to be a reason why Intel can do all these fiascos (FDIV bug, F00F, 1.13GHz Pentium III, i8x0 chipsets, RAMbus) and still charge a premium on their stuff. Especially since Intel's chips tend to be more expensive than their equivalent-performing-or-better AMD counterparts.
But it's SONY! (Score:2)
Let's show them we have something like a memory and something like a conscience.
Michael Cohn
[1] and I admit Crusoe sounds pretty neat