On 01/22/2017 05:32 PM, ryan wrote: > Now, what about the laptop chassis? EOMA68 currently has a $500 chassis > available. I haven't seen any volume pricing or other options for > reducing the price down to a level more managable for a "normie" who's > used to $200-300 throwaway laptops. $500 for an "empty shell" is really > easy for a behomoth like Intel to beat. Heck, they could do a > fully-fledged laptop casing and include a Windows-capable compute card > for less than that because they have more money to play with, and could > even sell at a loss to build marketshare.
I think one of the videos had Luke saying that it would probably be ~$300 at mass volume. In any case, the current EOMA68 laptop has something else you're leaving out: the fact that it is built of several easily obtainable parts, with everything else 3-D printed. Meaning it's *repairable*. The laptop mentioned for Intel compute cards is just a standard laptop case. Also, I would like to point out that the laptop is *not* made by Intel. It's made by a small company that made a similar product in the past (utilizing things like smartphones) through IndieGoGo. I seriously doubt Intel will directly subsidize them, so they won't be able to sell their laptop chassis at a loss. Unless there's some kind of license fee that needs to be paid out, Intel probably isn't even aware of the project. What's it going to cost, anyway? I don't see any indication of what it's going to cost, or any concrete information, really. It could be more expensive than the EOMA68 15" laptop, for all we know. -- Julie Marchant https://onpon4.github.io Protect your emails with GnuPG: https://emailselfdefense.fsf.org
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