World: r3wp
[Tech News] Interesting technology
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Graham 10-Jan-2006 [72] | just marketing hype |
Pekr 10-Jan-2006 [73] | IBM proved their designs are good - xbox, PS3 Cell ... |
Graham 10-Jan-2006 [74x2] | Maybe their OSX runs 2-3x faster on Intel cpus ? |
In which case it must have been running on seriously underpowered processors before. | |
Pekr 10-Jan-2006 [76x2] | but overall, I am all for new technologies. I have to say I was REALLY scared of Intel's future. AMD just got better, and Itanium was really a fiasco ... |
Now Intel is getting into more cores, home media convergence processors, etc. ... that is good. Companies should care about efficiency. I want my PC to be here instead of my DVD player, with all the codecs, but I don't want to HEAR it ... no single spinning cooler allowed ... that is why I am looking into mini-itx stuff ... | |
Henrik 10-Jan-2006 [78x2] | graham, it's most likely OSX and not just raw benchmarks that they use to measure speed |
and the powerbook was grossly underpowered | |
[unknown: 9] 10-Jan-2006 [80] | Of note, I WANT to NOT be on Windows. I'm getting closer every day. In fact the spell checker in Qtask means I don't use Word so much, but we need to add a scaling input box (I like to see more of what I'm writing). We are going to get the spell dictionary into AltME eventually. |
Henrik 10-Jan-2006 [81x2] | it's important to consider that Apple aren't trying to compete with PC makers. they are competing with their own software department. it's easy for them now to create software that'll only run on highend macs. It's kind of silly for them to sell iMovie, tout its HDTV editing capabilities and only be able to run the application properly on high end macs. |
pekr, Apple have been waiting to shift to Intel for the past 5 years. IBM gave them delivery problems and couldn't deliver mobile CPUs and it's been a fight to keep up on all levels. I suspect Steve saw the initial switch to PPC as a mistake and that gave them a lot of problems. | |
Ashley 10-Jan-2006 [83] | Pekr, "why I am looking into mini-itx stuff". I have been waiting for nano-ITX for the last two years ... and in that time Apple have released Mac mini and announced Mac mini for x86. I've done the sums, even with the wholesale prices I can get on most of the PC components (Via board, laptop HDD, RAM, Case plus time/cost of assembly), and the current Mac mini still comes out cheaper and quieter even with all the Mac software pre-bundled. If Apple can release the new Intel-based Mac mini at the same or better prices, with the same or better specs, then why would anyone wait for Via to get their act together when they can buy a cost-effective off-the-shelf solution today, even if it means ditching OS X for Linux or Windows?! |
Graham 10-Jan-2006 [84] | even if it means ditching OS X for Linux or Windows?! - not understanding here. You're saying that Mac hardware might be cheaper then building it yourself. And then you ditch OSX so you can run windows/linux on the Mac ? |
[unknown: 9] 10-Jan-2006 [85] | Yeah, that does not jive with the Mac Mini like hardware I have seen. Perhaps I'm not clear on something. |
Ashley 10-Jan-2006 [86] | Graham, yes. Reichart, the price comparison is: Mac mini 1.25GHz with 40GB Combo drive and 512MB RAM: AU$799 Mini-ITX equivalent: VIA EPIA-TC10000 (DC-DC onboard): AU$229 OEM 40GB 2.5” 5400rpm HDD: AU$100 OEM Slimline CD/DVD combo drive: AU$140 512MB DDR333 SO-DIMM: AU$81 Mini-ITX case (difficult to source): ~AU$150 Cabling: ~AU$10 Power supply brick: ~AU$15 which comes to AU$725 (wholesale), and excludes: Software DVI output Packaging Assembly Look at other folks who are trying to do the same thing (with an emphasis on small and quiet): http://www.hushtechnologies.com/(starting at about 750 Euro (AU$1200)) http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/12/01/evesham_aopen_minipc_win/ ($499 pounds, so about AU$1,200 for me) The Mac mini, for this class of device, wins hands down – even if you purchase it as a Linux or Windows (when re-released as an Intel Mac mini) box. It's smaller, quieter, cheaper, and more compatible (USB2, Firewire and DVI out of the box; and includes a DVI-Analog converter for PC folks still living in the 80's). What's also telling is the noticeable increase in the number of folks asking me, “does your software run on Mac”, since its introduction – but this might also be the iPod halo effect at work. Regardless, I see a lot of them around these days and the general consensus is that “they're cheap” - and this from the Dell generation who only care about price! ;) |
Graham 10-Jan-2006 [87] | In this vein ... from http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/4600442.stm Why don't Apple go the whole hog and run Windows XP on their laptops? That way their users could run some useful applications |
Allen 10-Jan-2006 [88] | Is that new Mac Intel Chip 64 or 32 bit? |
[unknown: 9] 10-Jan-2006 [89] | Interesting... |
Pekr 11-Jan-2006 [90x9] | ashley, so you think I will not agree? well, wrong, I do agree with you :-) |
I was too surprised, that the price of mac mini is acceptable - but nowhere near you assembling the via based pc! at least here ... | |
we used mini-itx with our kiosk systems and I was really rude to via and their qa .... I departured with them and told them to come back, once their stuff works properly .... | |
I have one contact in-there, and she was really polite .... so - it is now three years and situation is a bit different now - they opened their drivers etc. | |
cn700 chipset is also more powerfull ... but - thry to look at Commell, or others - there is now many mini-itx boards ... | |
and please - don't compare mac-mini with barebones - they are full featured multimedia stations, including ability to be server by remote control only, via display .... look at Shuttle or MSI ones ... | |
well - I have never used OS-X, but I am not scared - but - I need modern codecs - divx, xvid in codeck-pack or ffdshow, bsplayer ... just give me those sw on OS-x | |
and give me rebol/view there ;-) | |
I also fear - touching OS-X, as good unix based derivative, would mean no way back for me to crappy Windows, where still inserting the floppy may mean your OS is gonna block for few secs ;-) | |
Graham 11-Jan-2006 [99x2] | modern PCs shouldn't need floppy |
but the same thing happens with cdrom access :( | |
Pekr 11-Jan-2006 [101] | exactly, that was my point ... |
JaimeVargas 11-Jan-2006 [102x2] | Pekr. You are missing a lot, and Btw All the multimedia stuff you mention is already running in OSX. |
How to make money from Open Source -- http://tinyurl.com/cnkza | |
Henrik 11-Jan-2006 [104x2] | pekr, of course all these things are already available for OSX and have been for a long time. One thing that kind of surprised me is how many apps surpass Windows equivalents in quality, simply because the underlying foundation with Cocoa is incredibly strong. You can tap into a lot of amazing functions and the OS itself can do things where Windows would need third party software to do the same. For example, look at Jaime's presentation from the REBOL conference. It was done in Keynote which is a presentation program made by Apple which makes Powerpoint look like a silly joke. It uses full 3D hardware acceleration and can apply pixel shader effects to the presentation through Core Image. By having a very strong set of video functions as well, presentations can be exported to a lot of different videoformats from DV to H264 or MPEG4, etc. in any size or framerate. You can also convert parts of it to a PDF document or a bitmap image. All this is possible, because OSX does this in Cocoa and is available at the developer's fingertips. This is also what made apps like iMovie possible, because they integrate into OSX. Often the wrong question to ask is "Does program X exist for OSX?", because the programs are different and often of much higher quality. A lot of programs don't even have Windows equivalents. The community reminds me a bit of what bedroom programmers did during the old days of the Amiga, when they used the hardware and made beautiful demos. There are a lot of small, free apps available that do 2-3 things. |
I've also just rebooted my Mini with a 72 day uptime to install the latest update. It's an amazing little brick! | |
[unknown: 9] 11-Jan-2006 [106] | http://www.engadget.com/2006/01/11/creative-labs-pc-less-skype-internet-phoneplus/ |
Anton 12-Jan-2006 [107] | Ah! Great news Reichart. This is what we are after. :) |
[unknown: 9] 12-Jan-2006 [108] | Getting closer, I want wireless like a cell phone with headset though...I will keep looking. |
Pekr 12-Jan-2006 [109] | what do you mean? you can have headset with each blue-tooth supporting cell phones today ... but you probably mean something different? |
JaimeVargas 12-Jan-2006 [110] | He wants the inexpensive services of Skype and the convenience of Wireless, and so do I. |
Pekr 12-Jan-2006 [111x2] | hmm, wireless ip telephony? |
there is usb blue-tooth stick which will catch your signal to 100m distance, but that is just for the headset and you have to have your pc running .... | |
[unknown: 9] 12-Jan-2006 [113] | BT sucks! |
JaimeVargas 12-Jan-2006 [114] | Exactly. There are WiFi VoIP phones already, but not WiFi Skype phones. |
Pekr 12-Jan-2006 [115x2] | pda or smartphone with bt or wifi then? |
then go with pda and install one, no? | |
[unknown: 9] 12-Jan-2006 [117] | Yeah, just give me a simple 802.11 box with a simple UI and a headset jack, that is all. Make the software programmable even, so people can make it Skype (or what ever). This would be the best selling hardware design, and open one. |
Pekr 12-Jan-2006 [118] | Reichart - the support in Windows sucks :-) For short connections bt is ok - I use it every day in my car, as police already caught me on phone during my drive and I paid for that :-) |
[unknown: 9] 12-Jan-2006 [119] | But you have the overhead price of a PDA, so we are talking 300 + just for 40 worth of hardware. |
Pekr 12-Jan-2006 [120x2] | there is plenty of pdas out there, or smart phones, supporting wi-fi, no? should be fast enough to install skype and transfer it to your home network ... |
yes, now I understand ... no easy solution then ... | |
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