Wow... your Google Alerts must be working overtime. This was only announced
today at EELive! Bunnie Huang is held is considerable reverence at MIT for
being one of the early guys to reverse engineer game consoles. IIRC his first
O'Reilly book got recalled as part of a MS lawsuit and then re-released with
some redactions. Apparently you can now get the original e-book from his
website...

Quoting Tom Metro <[email protected]>:

The Almost Completely Open Source Laptop Goes on Sale
http://mprod.wired.com/2014/04/novena/

 Earlier this year, the two Singapore-based engineers fashioned a
 laptop made almost entirely from open source hardware, hardware whose
 designs are freely available to the world at large. They called it
 Project Novena. Anyone could review the designs, looking for bugs and
 security flaws, and at least in theory, that meant you could be
 confident the machine was secure from top to bottom, something that's
 more desirable than ever in the post-Edward Snowden age.
 ...
 Starting today, you can order your own pre-built Novena laptop through
 the crowd-funding site Crowd Supply, and it will ship out in the
 coming months.
 ...
 The project is part of larger movement towards open source hardware.
 ... If you share designs, others can make them better. The new,
 commercial version of the Novena does include some parts that are
 closed source, such as the processor, but Huang and Cross have tried
 to minimize these as much as possible.
 ...
 ...designed so that you can readily expand the hardware that's inside.
 "Half of it is empty," Huang says of the machine. "It's designed with
 the thought that you would add to it yourself."
 ...
 You can purchase a version of the machine, including the aluminum
 case, high-definition display, and motherboard for $1,195. For $1,995,
 you also get a battery and a 240 gigabyte solid-state hard drive.
 ...
 You can also buy just the motherboard for $500 and use it with your
 own case.
 ...
 All versions of the Novena run the open source Linux operating
 systems, and they're powered by an ARM processor... Yes, these
 machines are a bit underpowered by today's standards, and they're even
 more expensive than a premium laptop...


It's less of a laptop and more of a portable:

 The aluminum version of the machine is unusual in that the display
 sits on the outside of the case. When you lift the case lid, you see
 not a keyboard but the insides of the machine. That makes it easy to
 add new components. You then attach your own external keyboard, as you
 would with an iPad or some other tablet PC.

See the photo, but basically it is a "pizza box" configuration, where
the display makes up the lid. You open the box and prop the display at
the desired angle with an easel stand. Exposed in the base of the box is
the motherboard. I guess it is up to you to tote around a keyboard
separately.


The pitch is that this is open design for improved security, "...it's
open source, for people who care about the security, privacy." But the
article doesn't explore any of the specific of how they accomplished
that, such as all the usual proprietary binary blobs that would need to
be replaced.


 Lifton also emphasizes that if you purchase one of these laptops, you
 shouldn't think of yourself as an investor in company. You're simply
 getting a laptop at a lower price than others will in the future.

As crowd funders of the Oculus Rift recently were reminded, when the
company cashed out to a Facebook acquisition, and the original
supporters were left out of the windfall.

The SEC has changed some of its investment rules to potentially
accommodate taking an equity stake in a business through crowd funding.
I wonder when we'll see sites designed to facilitate that, instead of
these pre-sales online stores.

-Tom
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