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I've noticed an interesting phenomenon lately: the *really* tiny
laptop market seems to have dried up. I used two really small laptops a couple of years back: the Toshiba Libretto, and a 2 lb version of the early Toshiba Portege. I think the reason is that Laptops have become the primary computer for many of us, thus typically comes in a fairly complete form factor. Even the Mac 12" powerbook is > 4lb and a bit bulky compared to the two above. So I have been looking around for a good "pocket book" sort of computer .. at least 800x600 screen with enough guts to become a carry-everywhere web, email and editing critter. .. and something that a laptop owner would still find an interesting adjunct to their computing world. Anyone know of such a critter? I was hoping the PSP or some sort of large hand-held would fill the bill but I haven't found one googling. My phone (Treo) does all this but too poorly for anything but emergencies. -- Owen Owen Densmore http://backspaces.net - http://redfish.com - http://friam.org |
On 12/5/05, Owen Densmore <owen at backspaces.net> wrote:
> I've noticed an interesting phenomenon lately: the *really* tiny > laptop market seems to have dried up. I used two really small > laptops a couple of years back: the Toshiba Libretto, and a 2 lb > version of the early Toshiba Portege. > > I think the reason is that Laptops have become the primary computer > for many of us, thus typically comes in a fairly complete form > factor. Even the Mac 12" powerbook is > 4lb and a bit bulky compared > to the two above. Averatec has a 10.6" WXGA model 1000, weighing 3.6 lbs. It's a 1.1GHz ULV Pentium-M, so maybe it won't melt the solder off the motherboard. I haven't seen one, I just stumbled across it on www.averatec.com. -- rec -- |
I just got a ThinkPad X41 Tablet that I like quite a bit. Here's some cnet
reviews http://reviews.cnet.com/ThinkPad_X41_Tablet/4505-3121_7-31398077.html It weighs 3.6 pounds. Without the tablet feature the X41 is a pound lighter. On 12/6/05, Roger Critchlow <rec at elf.org> wrote: > > On 12/5/05, Owen Densmore <owen at backspaces.net> wrote: > > I've noticed an interesting phenomenon lately: the *really* tiny > > laptop market seems to have dried up. I used two really small > > laptops a couple of years back: the Toshiba Libretto, and a 2 lb > > version of the early Toshiba Portege. > > > > I think the reason is that Laptops have become the primary computer > > for many of us, thus typically comes in a fairly complete form > > factor. Even the Mac 12" powerbook is > 4lb and a bit bulky compared > > to the two above. > > Averatec has a 10.6" WXGA model 1000, weighing 3.6 lbs. It's a 1.1GHz > ULV Pentium-M, so maybe it won't melt the solder off the motherboard. > I haven't seen one, I just stumbled across it on www.averatec.com. > > -- rec -- > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at Mission Cafe > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > -- George T. Duncan Professor of Statistics Heinz School of Public Policy and Management Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 (412) 268-2172 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20051206/e1e67342/attachment.htm |
In reply to this post by Owen Densmore
You might look at the fujitsu P series "lifebooks" -- linux geeks who
want ultraportability rave about them -- I took a look, but that's far too small for me. IIRC, Lenovo was also talking about adding a 10" to the Thinkpad X series. Thank you, Tim Densmore -------------------------- "Shared pain is lessened, shared joy is increased; thus do we refute entropy." --Spider Robinson On Dec 5, 2005, at 9:37 PM, Owen Densmore wrote: > I've noticed an interesting phenomenon lately: the *really* tiny > laptop market seems to have dried up. I used two really small > laptops a couple of years back: the Toshiba Libretto, and a 2 lb > version of the early Toshiba Portege. > > I think the reason is that Laptops have become the primary computer > for many of us, thus typically comes in a fairly complete form > factor. Even the Mac 12" powerbook is > 4lb and a bit bulky compared > to the two above. > > So I have been looking around for a good "pocket book" sort of > computer .. at least 800x600 screen with enough guts to become a > carry-everywhere web, email and editing critter. .. and something > that a laptop owner would still find an interesting adjunct to their > computing world. > > Anyone know of such a critter? I was hoping the PSP or some sort of > large hand-held would fill the bill but I haven't found one > googling. My phone (Treo) does all this but too poorly for anything > but emergencies. > > -- Owen > > Owen Densmore > http://backspaces.net - http://redfish.com - http://friam.org > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at Mission Cafe > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: text/enriched Size: 1848 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20051206/d4e6728c/attachment-0001.bin |
In reply to this post by Owen Densmore
A good small laptop is the IBM ThinkPad X41. Some of my colleagues have one with Linux (Ubuntu) installed. It is very leight, but it does not have a CD or DVD drive (you have to use network, USB stick or external CD/DVD drive) http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1759,1823700,00.asp -J. -----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht----- Von: Friam-bounces at redfish.com [mailto:Friam-bounces at redfish.com] Im Auftrag von Owen Densmore Gesendet: Dienstag, 6. Dezember 2005 05:37 An: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Friam Betreff: [FRIAM] Web, Email, Textediting: < 2lb & reasonable display. I've noticed an interesting phenomenon lately: the *really* tiny laptop market seems to have dried up. I used two really small laptops a couple of years back: the Toshiba Libretto, and a 2 lb version of the early Toshiba Portege. I think the reason is that Laptops have become the primary computer for many of us, thus typically comes in a fairly complete form factor. Even the Mac 12" powerbook is > 4lb and a bit bulky compared to the two above. So I have been looking around for a good "pocket book" sort of computer .. at least 800x600 screen with enough guts to become a carry-everywhere web, email and editing critter. .. and something that a laptop owner would still find an interesting adjunct to their computing world. Anyone know of such a critter? I was hoping the PSP or some sort of large hand-held would fill the bill but I haven't found one googling. My phone (Treo) does all this but too poorly for anything but emergencies. -- Owen |
In reply to this post by Owen Densmore
I've decided to resurrect this because the Nokia 770 just turned up on
slashdot. What do you think: $359.99, Linux, WiFi, widescreen hiresolution display, onscreen keyboard, tiny, light, and it's sold out. Orders placed before 12/17/2005 are expected to ship by 1/20/2006 but Nokia is increasing its production. Oh, and there's an open source development site at http://www.maemo.org/. Go ahead, Owen, give yourself a late christmas present and bring it to Friam next month so we can see how it works. http://europe.nokia.com/nokia/0,1522,,00.html?orig=/770 -- rec -- On 12/5/05, Owen Densmore <owen at backspaces.net> wrote: > I've noticed an interesting phenomenon lately: the *really* tiny > laptop market seems to have dried up. I used two really small > laptops a couple of years back: the Toshiba Libretto, and a 2 lb > version of the early Toshiba Portege. > > I think the reason is that Laptops have become the primary computer > for many of us, thus typically comes in a fairly complete form > factor. Even the Mac 12" powerbook is > 4lb and a bit bulky compared > to the two above. > > So I have been looking around for a good "pocket book" sort of > computer .. at least 800x600 screen with enough guts to become a > carry-everywhere web, email and editing critter. .. and something > that a laptop owner would still find an interesting adjunct to their > computing world. > > Anyone know of such a critter? I was hoping the PSP or some sort of > large hand-held would fill the bill but I haven't found one > googling. My phone (Treo) does all this but too poorly for anything > but emergencies. > > -- Owen > > Owen Densmore > http://backspaces.net - http://redfish.com - http://friam.org > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at Mission Cafe > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > |
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