Feb 17 2009

Netbooks killing off sickly Windows PC sales

PC sales are in free fall as the weak demand for Windows desktops and full-size notebooks in a poorly performing global economy is being compounded by an influx of low cost netbooks, which are gobbling up the remains of profitability in the PC industry.

Share

Feb 17 2009

Netbooks killing off sickly Windows PC sales

PC sales are in free fall as the weak demand for Windows desktops and full-size notebooks in a poorly performing global economy is being compounded by an influx of low cost netbooks, which are gobbling up the remains of profitability in the PC industry.

Share

Feb 10 2009

VIA Nano Bests Intel Atom In Netbook Benchmarks

Glib Piglet writes “ZDNet UK has a whole set of benchmarks comparing a 1.8 GHz Nano in VIA’s Epia SN motherboard and a 1.6 GHz Atom in Intel’s ‘Little Falls’ D945GCFL mobo. It’s not good news for Chipzilla: ‘As far as memory performance is concerned, the Nano is clearly superior in every test’ and ‘The VIA Nano emerges as the better processor for internet tasks. While the Atom needs 132.8 seconds to display simple HTML pages, the Nano does it in 70.1 seconds.’ The Nano even outperforms Nehalem on one test. It’s not all a win for VIA, though. The benchmark concludes that in some ways all netbooks, underpowered as they are, remain in the IT stone ages.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Feb 9 2009

HP says its netbooks likely will run three versions of Windows 7 – Computerworld


DailyTech

HP says its netbooks likely will run three versions of Windows 7
Computerworld – 1 hour ago
By Eric Lai February 9, 2009 (Computerworld) In a vote of confidence for Windows 7's suitability for use on netbook PCs, Hewlett-Packard Co.
Windows 7 beta – is Vista already dead? Independent
Allchin goes from Windows to whammy bars CNET News
New Zealand Herald – Jakarta Post – DailyTech – Popular Science
all 65 news articles
Share

Feb 9 2009

The Incredible Shrinking Operating System

snydeq writes “The center of gravity is shifting away from the traditional, massive operating systems of the past, as even the major OSes are slimming their footprint to make code bases easier to manage and secure, and to increase the variety of devices on which they can run, InfoWorld reports. Microsoft, for one, is cutting down the number of services that run at boot to ensure Windows 7 will run across a spectrum of hardware. Linux distros such as Ubuntu are stripping out functionality, including MySQL, CUPS, and LDAP, to cut footprints in half. And Apple appears headed for a slimmed-down OS X that will enable future iPhones or tablet devices to run the same OS as the Mac. Though these developments don’t necessarily mean that the browser will supplant the OS, they do show that OS vendors realize they must adapt as virtualization, cloud computing, netbooks, and power concerns drive business users toward smaller, less costly, more efficient operating environments.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Feb 9 2009

Average User Only Runs 2 Apps, So Microsoft Will Charge for More

Barence writes “Microsoft’s decision to limit Windows 7 Starter Edition to running only three concurrent applications could force up the price of netbooks as many manufacturers opt for the more expensive Home Premium. The three-app rule includes applications running in the background but excludes antivirus, and the company claims most users wouldn’t be affected by the limit. ‘We ran a study which suggested that the average consumer has open just over two applications [at any time]. We would expect the limit of three applications wouldn’t affect very many people.’ However, Microsoft told journalists at last year’s Professional Developers Conference that 70% of Windows users have between eight and 15 windows open at any one time.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Jan 29 2009

Intel releases Linux-based Moblin 2 Alpha for Netbooks

The first alpha release of Intel’s Linux-based Moblin 2 platform is now available for download. It’s designed to work on Atom-based netbook devices and it offers fast boot times and a unique Internet connection manager.

Share

Jan 29 2009

OLPC 2.0 — One Laptop Foundation Reboots

Greg Huang writes “In early January, the One Laptop Per Child Foundation laid off half its staff and shed work on the Sugar graphical interface. Now, OLPC founder Nicholas Negroponte and president Chuck Kane for the first time detail the foundation’s new plans, describe how the XO laptop will do what netbooks can’t do, and share their hope to keep working with Sugar developer Walter Bender, who left OLPC last year.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share

Jan 27 2009

Netbooks killing PC and notebook sales? It’s a myth.

The conventional wisdom in many industry circles is that netbooks, although great for some users, represent a disaster for PC and notebook industry. In fact, the industry should love netbooks. Why? Because declines in PC and notebook sales would have happened anyway, and are unrelated to the netbook craze.

Share

Jan 27 2009

End of the Road For AMD’s Geode Chip

An anonymous reader writes “AMD has no replacement planned for the aging Geode low-power chip, creating uncertainty for its use in products like future XO laptops made by One Laptop Per Child. There won’t be a Geode successor and the company has no core microarchitecture planned to replace the chip, AMD executives said. The comments end speculation about the future of Geode, an integrated chip used in netbooks like OLPC’s XO laptop, ultramobile PCs and devices like set-top boxes.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Share