|
|
|
|
|
by keyle
422 days ago
|
|
I don't know if you've seen the videos, but the latency from input to result on the screen is, very, very bad. I don't think this is actually what you want. We all want low-power retro computing but expect reasonable latency in usage. We also want WIFI working in every room and e-ink that doesn't suck and doesn't cost half a car... And the ability to browse the web (HTTPS). It's just not there yet. When someone will make a product this good with all of the modern life "requirements", that will be a vastly successful product I imagine. |
|
This device is not, of course, intended to be able to perform modern functions that are required for modern office work. Its goal is to never run out of power, and its design tries to prioritize that at the expense of everything else, including features and performance. Because for anyone that loves computers as much as I do, a computer that will power up and provide a virtually unlimited amount of software, games, programming and software development options, and connectivity is better than a more modern and faster computer that won't turn on because it has no power. This computer can run for 500-1000 hours using power saving mode, and 200 hours without power saving mode. And with the built in solar panel, there should be ample opportunities to recharge it (or just run it directly off sunlight instead of using the batteries) before it the batteries run down. In a situation where people have to adjust to living in the long term without electricity, modern office computing is unlikely to be required, nor will there be any Internet. But in that situation, I still want to have a computer that I can use to do pretty much anything. This gives me that.