http://liliputing.com/2014/12/compulab-launches-utilite2-tiny-arm-based-ubunt...CompuLab launches Utilite2: Tiny ARM-based Ubuntu PC
"The Utilite2 can run Ubuntu or Android software, has fanless aluminum case, and features a Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 quad-core processor. It should be available for purchase this month.
The little computer measures 3.4″ x 2.3″ x 1.1″ and uses between 3W and 8W of power. It features 2GB of RAM, 4GB of built-in storage and support for up to 128GB of removable storage thanks to a microSDXC card slot as well as mSATA SSD support for up to 512GB of additional storage.
The Utilite2 features Gigabit Ethernet, 802.11b/g/n WiFi, Bluetooth 4.0, 4 USB 2.0 ports, a micro USB OTG port, line out and line in audio jacks, and HDMI output."Why is this significant? Up until this point all the boxes have been Intel based and have been "upper end" Linux boxes power-wise.
Like many things computerish, the lower end of stuff has moved up in power to cuddle up to the mid and upper reaches of "what used to be" top end only a year ago.
This is a mid-level Qualcomm Quad Core system on a chip that was first used in phones, yes, but the ongoing changes in Linux have suddenly made this fully supported system on a chip a little Linux power house that can easily run a full bore fanless Ubuntu desktop station.
Qualcomm, the 800 pound Gorilla of Mobile, Intel's current mobile nemesis has actually arrived on the desktop .....
Auuuggggh !!!Extend this thinking a bit --- Win 10 is supposed to run on phones and tablets. Eventually, it is supposed to run on native ANDROID/ARM chipsets too. If MS intends to survive and grow in China, this is the sort of hardware they need to be able to run upon. Once MS rewrites Win 10 to get lean and mean and fit on this sort of hardware, by then the hardware will have grown in power to come up to meet all the needs that Win 10 will have.
Intel is not blind to this, they have already created a crop of Haswell and Bay Trail stuff that gets very close to this Android/ARM/Linux/Intel/Microsoft convergence point. If MS was keeping up better than they actually are, the convergence would have already happened.
The new Chinese Spreadtrum partnered Intel stuff makes further motions in this direction, and MS is a current part of that activity as well. Eventually, MS will get there.
Give it a year and OS/hardware convergence will happen.
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My interest was always "what can replace my existing hardware with 2x better stuff on the cheap". If I was still running my old single core AMD Athlon 64 white box machine, this stuff would fit the 2x bill with lots of room left over. Soom my "new" Core Duo machine will become replaceable as well.
Asus's little Win 8.1 Eeee 205 laptop full retails at $199 and Amazon, Best Buy and Staples are running it on sale at $149 fairly regularly now. In other words, if you bought one for more than $149 you aren't paying attention.
Reasonable laptop tech now sells regularly for less than $200.
Windows machines are UNDERCUTTING Chromeboxes price-wise right now --- this is significant and it does signal a change that all PC makers need to take a closer look at what they plan to be building over the next few years. Remember, 85% of non-business related PC sales are taking place in these lower price ranges right now.
Reviewers are saying the Asus 205 machines are acceptable for keyboard and trackpad and speed for any net-based operations.
All reviewers are also beginning to give lighter consideration to "local run softwares" as the local run stuff is beginning to kinda phase out now.
All parties are saying the same thing, apart from local
work based data crunching 90+ percent of what you really do all takes place on the web.
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On a personal note, I have been hunting a better monitor for a while now. My old 19" SVGA flat screen was showing its age (or my eyes were, anyway) and the VGA plug on it wasn't finding all that many things to plug into any more.
So, for $129 on a Black Friday Amazon special, I got me one of the new class of monitor/TVs, specifically a last year's top of the line Samsung 24" Monitor/TV.
It is odd, having a remote for my monitor, but it is a very clear, very detailed 1366 x 768 output that is a
natural PC supported resolution that goes well past 720p but stops short of 1080p on the tv side.
This means NO HASSLE getting it running (it just detected and ran on Linux Mint 17) with NO HASSLES AT ALL.
I did have to turn down the backlight and bright and contrast way down towards the minimum specs on the machine itself -- as a TV it was set up to project across a room and at 3 feet that level of light output was a bit much.
So as a monitor it is easy do and flaw free. As a TV it requires the use of a remote, which is somewhat new to me, having a remote control sitting out on my desk.
Actually, I have two remotes on my desk now, as I bought a FireStick for $24 just to see what Amazon is up to. FireStick isn't as complete as Roku nor is it as user friendly at this early point in time. But what a FireStick does do is stream Amazon Prime free movies and songs and all the rest of the Amazon freebies perfectly right out of the box. The not so little 24" monitor/tv is a natural 16:9 resolution which is the standard wide screen display size for streamed movies.
Amazon's little linux based HDMI plug in stick has NO ISSUES running the DRM stuff from Amazon while everything else Linux based is blocked from doing so (intentionally so, by Amazon of course).
So, I have a Linux Mint PC hooked up to a monitor/tv streaming Amazon Prime and Netflix and Crackle and all the other major DRM players right here at my easy chair. I can get to all the rest of them using my Chrome browser of course, but the Amazon Prime stuff was still the main hold out that drove the need for this trick.
Speakers, I have the original Labtec PC speakers being driven by the PC and I have the built in 5 watt TV speakers that kick in when I am using the FireStick to stream a movie as a TV. So, sound I got -- and I can still plug in my headphones for when I am watching silently while Momma is trying to sleep.