Did you see the amount of money they raised ? They are sitting at over 900k$ out of 200k$ needed originally. There is an insane market for these devices that I totally didn't expect. I know their older product which was more of a retro gaming/console thing with analog controllers was hugely successful in S. Korea. Now that thing is probably outdated for a reasonable windows experience. I can easily see this becoming a major success with the added bonus of upgradability. I really think this could work very well to the benefit of the standard. Also given that for freedom reasons we are stuck with older and cheaper SoCs that do not support 3d via f/oss drivers it also makes more sense to make a housing for a market that also has lower power expectations.
2017-02-17 16:48 GMT+02:00 Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton lkcl@lkcl.net:
On Fri, Feb 17, 2017 at 1:35 PM, Vincent Legoll vincent.legoll@gmail.com wrote:
It's on the home page:
laptop-ubuntu-or-win-10-os-laptop--2/pica
okay i know the z8750, there are two variants, the T3 and the T4. the T4 maxes out at 8GB ram and has a vast number of pins - i forget how many but i believe it's like... 1000 or something. the pitch is ridiculously small. it's basically a seriously-complex, very compact design which will need some highly specialist engineering.
they've also used rather deceptive marketing by comparing a 1.6ghz quad-core intel atom to the top-end i3 / i5 / i7 processors used in the macbook pro series. i don't know if any of their backers have noticed that but they're highly unlikely to be impressed with the performance. mind you, the size and look of the device is great, so they may not mind.
yes, it would be awesome for it to be an upgradeable concept. the only thing is: 5mm cards in something that small means that the depth has to be increased to a minimum of around....12mm. 1mm for the case, 1.5mm for the PCB, 6mm for the Card and appx 3-4mm for the keyboard.
the type I cards (3.3mm height) were what i wanted to move to, for this kind of product design. it will require a large order in order to justify re-tooling of the PCMCIA socket to a *mid-mount* low-profile design. what can then be done is that the 3.3mm Card can sit *FLUSH* with the *BOTTOM* edge of the PCB, in a cut-out section. it then sits about 1.8mm above a 1.5mm PCB which is perfectly acceptable.
however this requires either a sponsor, or a lot of backers, or... etc. to get the tooling made.
l.
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