I think the strength, and angle, is that it doesn't do everything a laptop does. Kind of like the Kindle of netbooks. Kindle does one thing well, and seems to be selling alright. By removing complicated functionality, it's the perfect device for my mom or aunt. Is $700 the price for simplicity? I dunno. All this is based on watching a video and reading through their web site. An accurate critique would come only after demoing the actual product.
A good point- no matter how high quality it is, without enough advertising to establish a premium brand, hardly anyone will be willing to pay a premium price.
I really like where it's heading and what it does already. I wouldn't spend $700, but for $500 you MIGHT have me buying it for my mom. Odds are, this is just the first version and costs will go down over time. It's good to see others building tight software+hardware integration for purpose specific computing.
[+] [-] Joe_Bananas|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] picasso81|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mudge|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rbanffy|16 years ago|reply
Reminds me too much the Palm Foleo for me to bet on its future.
[+] [-] teralaser|16 years ago|reply
Regardless of what you find appropriate, there are people, that spend 100000$ on,say, a home stereo without blinking an eye.
Designed products, that do not hit the mainstream, still has a market. If you doubt it, try sneaking in at DCOTA and find any item under <$5000 ?
[+] [-] krakensden|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jasonlbaptiste|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] tom_fb|16 years ago|reply
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