It seems that there are other possibilities beside MPC5123 for a PPC netbook. ChinaChip seems to be cooking a 800Mhz handheld gameconsole chip and Verisilicon demonstrated 2011 that it can produce netbook/pad suitable chip with PPC460 core (+integrated 3D core).
So... 800Mhz netbook is not impossible with PPC after all. But so far existing PPC netbook HW use the MPC5123 at 400Mhz. (IIRC, the AOS4 netbook was said to be a already existing HW)
On the other hand... did friedens say that they had a prototype of the netbook? It would hint that the netbook will be a new one.
UPDATE: Verisilicon PPC specs "Power PC-based SoC for x-Pad and Media Tablet Custom Silicon turn key service from specification. CPU (PowerPC 460) Android 2.3 and Flash Player 10.1. 1080P HD video playback, including WebM. HD audio: DTS-HD Master Audio, Dolby TrueHD. 2D/3D GPU with OPENGL ES2.0 and OPEN VG1.1. 1080P HDMI output. Wireless access: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, 3G. Up to 1280x800 TFT panel with multi-touch." I have no idea if it will ever be produced in volume.
Edited by KimmoK on 2012/3/17 21:00:27
- Kimmo --------------------------PowerPC-Advantage------------------------ "PowerPC Operating Systems can use a microkernel architecture with all it�s advantages yet without the cost of slow context switches." - N. Blachford
@Chris I believe that the Dyson's "bladeless fan" still has a small fan hidden in the base, but then uses a physics trick to multiply it's air flow by 15 or so times through the ring itself. (I could be wrong, but I don't see how else an "electric motor" can generate the initial (small) air flow, before it gets multiplied.)
A fan, even an Amiga fan, by definition has moving parts - otherwise it'd be challenging to get the air moving.
you don't say! But my cousin told me there are fans without moving parts which connect through a freezing wormhole where every particle is just completely stock-still! He is a physicist! He must know!!! :^)
(well, ok, technically there are moving parts, but not as we know them)
OT I actually tried one of those, really smart idea. Unfortunately they are a 'little bit "amiga-style" or "Apple-style". By that I mean they are pretty expensive and you could get 3 or 4 nomal fans instead, but well those other 4 would also last less..
They are bloody noisy, too. The fan in the base sucks air in through the cylindrical stand, then blows it out axially around the periphery of the ring.
A friend showed me one that he had bought. I wasn't impressed by the noise or the volume of airflow.
My impression was that a slowly-spinning fan with large diameter blades would have done the job a whole lot better and more quietly, for the same electrical input.
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