Tuesday, November 15, 2005

The device that will change the world

The Wall Street Joural Online has an article on the $100 laptop, a device currently being developed under the auspices of MIT. The device can bring two major changes with it. First of all, despite attempts by Apple to prevent it, the laptop will be running a version of Red Hat Linux. This means that as the device is supposed to get rolled out in millions of units it will, for the first time, give Linux a shot at disrupting the installed user base for desktop OSes. The other major shift the device could bring is in the telecoms market. I suppose that it will be possible to install a VoIP client on the machine. Couple that with built-in wireless networking capabilities in the machine and all of a sudden you get a situation where hundreds of millions of people who don't have access to a phone all of a sudden will be able to conduct voice conversations through IP technology.

If this device really does make it to the market and is adopted by the governments of states like Brazil, India and China, the world could find itself facing a tectonic shift within the space of a single generation.

N91 - engineering v. marketing

It seems that Nokia has been making good use of the etra time they've given themselves before releasing their N91 phone: they have been subjecting it to drop tests to see how much abuse the device can take. Their benchmark device was the Ipod mini and the results are as follows: Ipod mini: dead after 12 drops; Nokia N91: dead after 300. It's good to see that someone out there is actually engineering their products.

On the other hand, I do know that the inards of the nao can withstand much greater abuse since the nano is flash based. On the other hand, are there any proud Ipod owners willing to risk the outside of their nano on a single drop?