Apr 10th, 2009 at 2:20pm
by Joe Rybicki.
AT&T Wireless has launched a program to offer notebooks for as little as $50 in some markets. With a similar setup as a cell phone plan, the wireless carrier is now offering plans that let customers get their hands on tiny laptops for barely more than the cost of a new phone.
The idea is, you sign a two-year contract for a data plan, and AT&T will heavily subsidize the cost of a cell-connected laptop. So what’s the catch? Well, since AT&T’s data plans start at $40 a month, you could look at these laptops as actually costing a minimum of $960 before taxes — when the cheapest of them can be had for around $300 at retail. Of course, that $300 doesn’t include internet access from anywhere a cell signal reaches, so it’s not like that extra $600 is completely wasted.
It’s important to note the restrictions of the plan, though: That $40 plan allows you to transfer only 200 Megabytes of data, which is very limited. If you plan to do anything more than check e-mail, you’re going to eat up 200 MB very quickly. The other data plan is a more reasonable 5 Gigabytes — but it also costs $20 more per month.
What about you — would you find this sort of setup useful?
[Read - via Liliputing]
Filed under Cell Phones, Laptops, News |
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Apr 8th, 2009 at 12:12pm
by Joe Rybicki.
If you are a child of the ’80s, chances are you spent some face time with an Apple II. These computers were mainstays of school computer classes in the mid ’80s, classes that usually included some light programming:
10 PRINT “HELLO!”
20 GOTO 10
…and, if you were lucky, perhaps an educational game like Lemonade Stand or The Oregon Trail. These state-of-the-art machines could display 16 different colors with their 64 kilobytes of memory, and ran at speeds just over 1 Megahertz. (By contrast, Apple recently released a device that includes two thousand times the memory, displays about a million times as many colors, and runs over six hundred times as fast. And it’s a phone.)
Now, Macworld reports that thanks to near-incomprehensible advances in technology, you can play an assortment of games for old Apple machines in your web browser with the Virtual Apple emulator. They even have Lemonade Stand and The Oregon Trail.
[Read]
Filed under Computers, Games, Internet, News |
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Feb 25th, 2009 at 3:20pm
by Joe Rybicki.
Hand-in-hand with the recent tiny-laptop craze comes a push toward ever-smaller, ever-cheaper desktop PCs to complement them. The latest of these is the MSI Wind DC100, which tech site Engadget recently got some hands-on time with.
As with the netbook market, these “nettops” aren’t particularly powerful; the goal here is to create a tiny footprint — in space, in energy consumption, and usually in sound (which is to say, they’re quiet!). And those are goals these little wonders tend to meet pretty well.
[Read]
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Feb 24th, 2009 at 3:10pm
by Joe Rybicki.
The tiny laptops known as “netbooks” have become all the rage over the past year or so, ever since Asus unveiled its tiny, budget, EEE PC line. Now PC powerhouse Dell is affirming its commitment to the format with the launch of the Mini 10, a tiny, colorful, and reasonably powerful laptop with a 10-inch screen.
The Mini 10 retails for about $450, a price that you can expect to come down fairly quickly as more and more netbooks hit store shelves.
Wondering what the big deal is about these little laptops? We’ll have an in-depth look at the phenomenon in the near future.
[Read]
Filed under Laptops, News |
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