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Everex, the company that brought us the $200 gPC, has announced plans to market a line of laptop computers for under $300. These will not be "ultraportable" subnotebooks like the Asus Eee PC or the Intel Classmate, but full-sized laptops with 12.1 to 17 inch LCD screens. Although details of specific models have not yet been announced, Everex reports that these laptops will, like the gPC, feature the gOS operating system. Everex anticipates that the laptops will become available in the retail channel in the US during the first half of 2008. It is not yet clear whether these computers will be marketed through Wal-Mart, as are a number of current Everex laptops and desktop computers.
The inexpensive laptops will follow the model of the gPC, reducing costs by featuring lower-powered processors, standard RAM configurations of just 512 MB, and Linux in place of Vista. Because Linux generally runs well on lesser hardware platforms, performance is not expected to suffer.
The gOS operating system is a slightly modified version of ubuntu 7.10, using the "Enlightenment" desktop in place of Gnome or KDE. Enlightenment offers fewer desktop features than Gnome or KDE, but runs faster as the tradeoff. gOS also features one-click access to online Google apps, although it also includes the latest version of OpenOffice.
The recent emergence of a market for lower-speced PCs bucks the trend of increasingly ever-more-powerful hardware platforms as the starting point for new computers which has been the model for personal computer marketing since the development of personal computers 30 years ago. The low-spec market seems to have been created unintentionally by the United Nation's noncommercial OLPC project. The OLPC was designed by the UN in conjunction with MIT and Red Hat as a not-for-profit attempt to offer a cost-effective tool which might promote education in the developing world. The OLPC's success in squeezing impressive functionality out of inexpensive hardware is suddenly being copied by a number of commercial entities.
Everex is a US division of Taiwan's First International Computer Corporation.
http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Ever..._200_PCs_and_300_Laptops_Coming_Up_10231.html
The inexpensive laptops will follow the model of the gPC, reducing costs by featuring lower-powered processors, standard RAM configurations of just 512 MB, and Linux in place of Vista. Because Linux generally runs well on lesser hardware platforms, performance is not expected to suffer.
The gOS operating system is a slightly modified version of ubuntu 7.10, using the "Enlightenment" desktop in place of Gnome or KDE. Enlightenment offers fewer desktop features than Gnome or KDE, but runs faster as the tradeoff. gOS also features one-click access to online Google apps, although it also includes the latest version of OpenOffice.
The recent emergence of a market for lower-speced PCs bucks the trend of increasingly ever-more-powerful hardware platforms as the starting point for new computers which has been the model for personal computer marketing since the development of personal computers 30 years ago. The low-spec market seems to have been created unintentionally by the United Nation's noncommercial OLPC project. The OLPC was designed by the UN in conjunction with MIT and Red Hat as a not-for-profit attempt to offer a cost-effective tool which might promote education in the developing world. The OLPC's success in squeezing impressive functionality out of inexpensive hardware is suddenly being copied by a number of commercial entities.
Everex is a US division of Taiwan's First International Computer Corporation.
http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Ever..._200_PCs_and_300_Laptops_Coming_Up_10231.html

















