
Techvideoblog has a
video review of the Menq Easypc E760, an $80 ARM-based laptop that runs Android. From the looks of it, I don't think this is a very good gadget, because it's slow (less powerful than an iPhone 3GS, but of course also a lot cheaper), but I agree with the Techvideo guy: the Easypc is important because it's the vanguard of a likely wave of cheap, ARM-based devices that will very soon have the necessary power for a pleasant and productive web browsing experience. Once that happens, a sizable portion of the current laptop and netbook userbase will move downmarket, and some of the constituents that the OLPC program was trying to serve (young students and the lower economic stratum) will have a network communication device available to them that's more accessible.
Member since:
2005-06-29
I think ChromeOS is pretty much DOA before it's even anything, but Android could be a market disruptor.
Android is getting hot in the phone market, and now if if this sub-netbook market takes off, we could see big growth for Android in the "mobile" market....which I'll include this sub-netbook in.
And I don't think this its really Microsoft that should be worried. It's Apple.
Edited 2009-11-14 01:54 UTC