Linked by Amjith Ramanujam on Tue 8th Jul 2008 19:39 UTC, submitted by snydeq
Hardware, Embedded Systems Decrying stasis in the laptop industry, InfoWorld's Tom Yager and crew have designed their ideal laptop for 2009 given the components are available currently. The project was subjected to the same limitations manufacturers face when whiteboarding a new notebook and introduced only those components that would increase end-user productivity manyfold. The resulting AMD Puma-based WorldBook Ether and WorldBook Meteor [specs, tour, pricing] include an 'Embedded Smartphone' system-in-system ARM microcontroller, flash-memory overlay for fast boot, and ATI/AMD Hybrid Graphics for power-saving switched mode.
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RE[2]: OLPC
by monodeldiablo on Wed 9th Jul 2008 04:14 UTC in reply to "RE: OLPC"
monodeldiablo
Member since:
2005-07-06

Amen.

When my wife got her Thinkpad, she had me disable the trackpoint. One day, while she was resizing a bunch of photos, she got fed up and whined about how inaccurate it was with the touchpad, how she had to lift her thumb while keeping her pointer finger depressed in order to do major resizes, how accidental brushes while she was typing highlighted other windows and interrupted her typing, how she had to do all of her pointing with her least dextrous finger (her thumb), etc.

I enabled the trackpoint.

One hour of awkward discovery later, she disabled the *touchpad* and has been a trackpoint convert ever since. She refuses to buy another laptop with a touchpad. Ever.

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RE[3]: OLPC
by sakeniwefu on Wed 9th Jul 2008 11:41 in reply to "RE[2]: OLPC"
sakeniwefu Member since:
2008-02-26

I am happy to hear you found some poison for your mouse, but the touchpad beats the mouse any day if you set it up correctly and you take the time to learn it instead of just plugging a mouse in(even old dogs learn new tricks according to the Myth Busters). I can play games(FPS) and move windows around without even moving my hand.
Also, Intel graphics is the way to go with a Linux or OSS laptop although I would probably get an ATI card for a desktop where you can install coolers and replace molten parts easily.
I don't care about desktop effects but it does that fine and I am currently playing both Linux and ~3 yo or newer Windows games in my free time, and the card works cool and silent.
After the ATI heater finally managed to bake all the components of my old 15" machine, I wasn't going to put an nVidia card in a 13" laptop.
I invested my money in more memory, a LED screen and a faster processor and it pays.
3D gaming, virtual machine updates, and firefox with 60 tabs open won't slow down or heat up my computer anymore, even when done simultaneously.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2