By
John G. Spooner
Monday, October 25 2004 10:50 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39198600,00.htm
Advanced Micro Devices plans to unfurl next week a blueprint for
building a low-price computer aimed at providing Internet access to
people in so-called emerging markets.
Dubbed the Personal Internet Communicator, the machine is geared toward
families who make the equivalent of between US$1,000 and US$6,000 annually.
Three companies in India and Latin America will be among the first to
market versions of the machine, an AMD representative said.
The Personal Internet Communicator, or PIC as AMD calls it, will cost
about US$249 without a display. To reach that price, AMD selected several
standard PC components, including one of its own Geode x86 processors,
128MB of Samsung RAM and a 10GB Seagate hard drive. The company also
specifies a version of Microsoft's Windows CE operating system, fitted
with Windows XP-extensions, allowing it to provide consumers with a
graphical interface, e-mail, Web browsing, instant messaging and word
processing. The PIC machines will also be able to play multimedia files
and show PDF and PowerPoint files, AMD said.
"The performance (of a PIC machine) is very robust," said Steve
Howard, an AMD spokesman. "It boots in 25 seconds, and, once loaded,
the browser performance is very snappy and word processing and
spreadsheet is equivalent to what you'd see in a PC today."
AMD will introduce the PIC as part of an effort it calls 50x15, which
aims to raise the percentage of the world's population that has Net
access to 50 by 2015. Right now, only about 10 percent of the global
population can access the Net, the company says. Reaching the next large group
of computer and Internet users--people in countries such as China,
India and Russia--has become a major focus of many of the big names in
computer technology. Most of those companies appear to agree that
lower-price personal computers will help them sell more products.
Microsoft, for one, is aiming to help create lower-cost PCs by creating less-expensive versions of Windows XP. The company has produced so-called starter editions of XP for several markets.
Intel has also discussed creating low-price processors
for emerging markets. Sources say the company has been selling a
special low-price processor and motherboard combination as part of a
project code-named Shelton.
Although it intends to steward the low-price PIC into the market, AMD
isn't getting into the business of manufacturing computers. The company
drew up the plans for the PIC, but tapped Solectron to build the first
run of the machines. The chipmaker plans to go forward by essentially
licensing the PIC design to local companies, including
telecommunications or Internet service providers, allowing them to use
local contract manufacturers and control distribution, marketing and
pricing of their PICs. Thus the companies will sell PICs under their
own brand names and be free to subsidize the machines' cost to lower
the price consumers pay. AMD is targeting companies in Brazil, China,
India, Mexico and Russia, initially.
When it came to choosing the individual parts that make up the PIC,
AMD aimed for Windows and Web software compatibility, but also low
price. The AMD Geode GX500, an x86 chip that powers the PIC, consumes
only 1 watt of power, meaning it can run without a fan, which lowers
component costs for the PIC. Aside from 128MB of RAM and a 10GB hard
drive, a PIC machine will include a modem and four Universal Serial Bus
ports for adding peripherals such as a keyboard.
Still, there have been numerous efforts to deliver low-cost Internet access devices in the past, most of which have failed.
Although the PIC is similar to the Internet appliances that were unsuccessfully marketed as inexpensive Internet access devices, AMD says the PIC costs less and is more useful.
Unlike Internet appliances, which were essentially terminals for
Internet access, the PIC be used both online to surf the Web, watch
streaming video and read e-mail, and offline for word processing and
viewing documents, similar to a traditional PC, Howard said.
AMD will officially announce the PIC and unveil its first three customers on Oct. 28.