
Most everyone loves Thanksgiving turkeys. But IT industry turkeys? Not so much. We look at 10 examples of 'turkeys' that have disappointed the tech industry this year.
"This next-generation platform is really a step in the right direction," Maser said. "Rich Creek 2 was our first and only attempt to make a notebook similar to a desktop. You could build it from the ground up, there was lots of room for customization, etc... The long and the short of it was that once people got their hands on it, from our point of view, it was a great product.
"But for the average Joe VAR, when you've got 40 or 50 screws that are the size of the tip of your pencil, it was difficult to build out in volume," Maser said. "So for the broad channel, the concept was there but it didn't pan out. I'm actually sad to see it go."
The media were not invited to this year's ISS. An Intel spokesperson explained the decision as a "cost-cutting measure." She also confirmed that Intel is working with Seneca Data on the next stage of the chip giant's whitebook agenda but would not specify the Peggy's Cove platform by name.
Maser said Peggy's Cove comes in two flavors, with a 15.4-inch platform that Seneca is using in both the new Nexlink Carbon 4000 series notebooks and a 13.3-inch variant as well. Intel is also developing a third whitebook platform, code-named Bianca, that is also geared for 13-inch systems, he said.
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| Seneca has added a shock-detecting accelerometer, a fingerprint scanner and other features to its new Nexlink Carbon notebooks. |
The Nexlink Carbon 4200 has a Core 2 Duo mobile processor and Intel's 4500MHD graphics media accelerator. The 4225 is also based on Centrino 2 hardware but swaps out the Intel-made integrated graphics chip for Nvidia's GeForce 9300M unit. Both notebooks have added features to make them stand out from the crowd, Maser said.
"No other whitebook has an accelerometer, which detects a drop or a shock and parks the hard disk to prevent data loss. It also works to detect unauthorized movement of the notebook, as in a theft, and an alarm goes off," he said. Other features include a trap-door Web cam, slot disk drive and built-in fingerprint reader.
Seneca is offering its own partners the choice of a bare-bones, private label, co-branded or Nexlink branded systems. The notebooks have a one-year depot and a one-year LCD warranty out of the box.
Equus Computing, which along with Fremont, Calif.-based distributor ASI was an initial partner in the Rich Creek 2 program, does not seem to be building notebooks based on Peggy's Cove or Bianca. But Minneapolis-based Equus has already released its first netbook, the 8.9-inch Nobi Convertible, based on Intel's Classmate design and built around a 1.6GHz Atom N270 processor.
