That site is being blocked by my surf protection filter as being
pornography.  Their prices must be indecent!  ;-)

 

Larry

 

-----Original Message-----
From: tclug-list-bounces at mn-linux.org
[mailto:tclug-list-bounces at mn-linux.org] On Behalf Of J Cruit
Sent: Tuesday, October 02, 2007 7:24 PM
To: tclug-list at mn-linux.org
Subject: Re: [tclug-list] Zonbu

 

Cool beans, just to update you the site is now:
http://www.dataevolution.com/dectop%20info%202.htm as apparently they
bought Norhtek.  And the device is a dectop for only 99$ (or buy 3 get
one free, anybody want to split an order?).  So other than the fact that
it doesn't have a flash drive as a hard drive and starts out at 128MB of
memory thats a pretty good deal.  But you can swap out the hard drive
for a larger one and upgrade the memory too if you want.  Plus the
Norhtek sounds like it uses an AMD chip so there may be better
compatibility than the unknown one in the Zonbu.  Plus the Zonbu is
theoretically "greener". 

But at 99$ versus 249$ I'm probably down with the Norhtek.  Any other
super small cheap systems out there?

--j

On 10/2/07, Spence Morris <spence.morris at gmail.com> wrote:

Zonbu is pretty much a generic unit with their own variant of Linux
tacked on.
The idea of the network being the computer has yet to fully prove
itself>
There are other mini pc builders with fewer hooks and agendas- re again,
Norhtek- 
based in Thailand. Michael C. Barnes sells a lot of his units here- At
last look,
he had four or five nice models to choose from and good ideas about use.
Check out Norhtek.com before investing in Zonbu. 

On 10/2/07, J Cruit < j at packetgod.com <mailto:j at packetgod.com> > wrote:

	So I e-mailed Zonbu and got a quick response, I think this may
be the exact platform I've been looking for to use for a small quiet
Mythfrontend system.  I'll have to figure out some sort of USB remote,
and my TV does actually have a VGA input so I should be good there.  My
other options were a repurposed MacMini, a shuttle  SD02 for 499$
(without memory, HD, Processor, etc but with a remote port). 
	
	This is the response from Zonbu:
	
	"Yes, you are free to do as you wish with the Zonbu hardware.
While we do not and cannot officially support running alternate OSes on
the Zonbu hardware, several users have reported successfully installing
other OSes (e.g. Ubuntu Linux) on the hardware without any problems"
	
	Hey, thanks much TCLUG for putting me onto this.
	
	--j

	 

	On 10/2/07, J <j at packetgod.com> wrote:

	I'm tempted to hit this for their "249$ without service plan"
and wipe 
	it clean with my own distro.  They must be using commodity
hardware and
	many of those SFF PC cases start at 100$ for something 10 times
the
	size.  Small ones like the Zonbu are generally even more just
for the
	case.  So a complete Linux friendly SFF quiet environmentally
friendly
	PC for 249$, while a bit light on the specs I wouldn't mind
running a
	little home web/e-mail/SSH server off of it or perhaps just a
mythfrontend? 
	
	I think I'll do it, buy it and see if I can load my own distro
by hook
	or by crook.  I'm hoping by crook as I haven't had a good
project for a
	while.
	
	--j
	
	Steve Cayford wrote:
	> Chris Frederick wrote: 
	>
	>> G. Scott Walters wrote:
	>>
	>>> Anyone ever heard of Zonbu?
	>>>
	>> [...]
	>>
	>
	>
	>> Looks interesting.  I've been looking at small form factor
PCs for a 
	>> while.  They look very similar to these:
	>>
	>> http://logisysus.com/product/smallest-pc.htm 
	>>
	>> >From the Zonbu site: 
	>>
	>> Zonbu Desktop, Standard plan, Billing every two years =
$412.95
	>>
	>> Thats standard options after all discounts, plus $358.80
after two years
	>> for more support.  Also, their "Cancel anytime policy" warns
that if you 
	>> cancel the membership service, your device will not give you
access to
	>> your data after 3 months.  They do have a free/no support
option, but
	>> I'd probably want to talk to a sales person before I went
with that. 
	>>
	>> I guess it depends on what their support covers, but I don't
see much
	>> there that strikes me as worth $180 a year.
	>>
	>> >From their site:
	>>
	>> Disaster proof storage - Very doable and cheap. 
	>> Free automatic software upgrades - Most linux distros have
this.
	>> Unlimited Internet support - You are reading this on a
mailing list.  ;-)
	>> Remote file access "anywhere, anytime, any browser (no
plugins)" - That 
	>> just sounds scary to me.
	>> Overnight free hardware replacement limited warranty - Nice,
but that's
	>> an extra $60 a year.
	>>
	>> My $0.02 would be that everything looks nice, but personally
I'd rather 
	>> pay more up front for something without a huge service
contract, or
	>> required membership service.
	>>
	>> ymmv,
	>> Chris Frederick
	>>
	>
	> It seems to me that there could be a pretty good market for
something 
	> like this. Not for us on this list, but for the proverbial "my
	> grandmother." Folks who want a web browser, email, office
suite, and
	> some basic games and who don't want to deal with updates,
spyware, 
	> system administration, etc. Considering how much people spend
on
	> services like Geek Squad the rates don't seem too outrageous.
	>
	> -Steve
	>
	> _______________________________________________ 
	> TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota
	> tclug-list at mn-linux.org
	> http://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list 
	>
	
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