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The "Not Quite Amiga but still computer related category" => Alternative Operating Systems => Topic started by: asian1 on July 22, 2005, 05:15:01 PM

Title: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: asian1 on July 22, 2005, 05:15:01 PM
The official name of the latest version of MS Windows 64 bit: Windows Vista

Is this name derived from "Terminator"?
("Hasta La Vista, Baby")

From Reuters:

Microsoft Corp. said on Friday it named the next version of its operating system "Windows Vista" as it prepares to release a trial version of the flagship software that already runs on nine out of 10 personal computers worldwide.
Windows Vista, formerly known by its code-name Longhorn, is scheduled to launch in the second half of 2006, five years after Windows XP, the longest time lag between releases of its Windows operating system.
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Dan on July 22, 2005, 06:39:48 PM
Uhh, just call it DRM!
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hyperspeed on July 22, 2005, 08:21:00 PM
It's about time they slowed down their releases - look at the confusion and disgust at Windows ME!

It still confuses me the Windoes ME vs 2000 vs XP vs NT thing...

Why don't they have one reliable bit of software that can handle home and network environments!?

Each one of their new operating systems has tablet edition, home edition, student edition, professional edition etc. it's about time Microsoft's competitors stopped whining like sick dogs and fought back with a 'Firefox' for the operating system world.
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: blobrana on July 22, 2005, 09:14:50 PM
Hum,
i believe the name `vista` is derived from microsofts blurry vision of their desktop OS.
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hyperspeed on July 22, 2005, 09:31:47 PM
Maybe it's a mis-print and it's gonna be called Windows:VISA. You'll need a hefty Credit Card to buy it and you'll need to use Microsoft Passport just to open your e-mails.

:-D

I still can't believe Apple are ditching PowerPC for Pentiums...   just when things were looking up and Microsoft starts using Mac development kits for XBox-360... Apple goes and starts using Intel chips!

Idiots!
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Samuar on July 22, 2005, 09:42:11 PM
Either way, its a very poor operating system "designed" for the (l)user classes.


I get the feeling my Intel Pentium 4 3.0Ghz with 1GB RAM and 160GB HDD won't be enough for it; in the same way people laughably install XP on Pentium IIs.
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: mr_a500 on July 23, 2005, 01:05:50 AM
Great, Microsoft poisons another word forever.

Vista was a word that had great feelings for me because of Vista, the Amiga 3D landscape program - an amazingly great piece of software. Now, it will stand for an amazing piece of sh...
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Waccoon on July 23, 2005, 08:57:09 AM
Quote
It's about time they slowed down their releases - look at the confusion and disgust at Windows ME!

And to think, Apple made a big deal out of the fact they release a "new" version of MacOS X every year (and make you pay for updates), while XP is just XP year after year and all updates are free.  :-D

Quote
Why don't they have one reliable bit of software that can handle home and network environments!?

Windows networking is the worst I have ever seen.  It's virutally impossible to set up properly and the new XP networking "wizards" are a hell of a lot more confusing than the old control panels in Win2K.  This is my biggest beef with Windows, at least from a non-programmer's viewpoint.

Quote
I still can't believe Apple are ditching PowerPC for Pentiums... just when things were looking up and Microsoft starts using Mac development kits for XBox-360... Apple goes and starts using Intel chips!

Idiots!

What's the big deal?  It's still a Mac.

Besides, Apple didn't have much choice.  I'll leave it to some rare, non-prejudiced Mac expert to dish out the details.

Quote
I get the feeling my Intel Pentium 4 3.0Ghz with 1GB RAM and 160GB HDD won't be enough for it; in the same way people laughably install XP on Pentium IIs.

With the eye candy turned off, XP on a Celeron 400 isn't really that bad.

Now, Mandrake Linux or WinME on said hardware is an entirely different story!  :-)
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: PPC on July 23, 2005, 11:02:07 AM
Quote

Hyperspeed wrote:
Maybe it's a mis-print and it's gonna be called Windows:VISA. You'll need a hefty Credit Card to buy it and you'll need to use Microsoft Passport just to open your e-mails.


LOL! i totally agree on this  :lol:  :lol:  :lol:  :lol:  :-D
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: bloodline on July 23, 2005, 11:38:40 AM
Quote

Waccoon wrote:
Quote
I still can't believe Apple are ditching PowerPC for Pentiums... just when things were looking up and Microsoft starts using Mac development kits for XBox-360... Apple goes and starts using Intel chips!

Idiots!

What's the big deal?  It's still a Mac.

Besides, Apple didn't have much choice.  I'll leave it to some rare, non-prejudiced Mac expert to dish out the details.




I'll do it Waccon :-)

Ok, lets get the facts straight, things are NOT looking up for the PPC. The PPC has found it's place as an embedded chip, it's placement in the future games consoles only re-enforces that position. In the PS3, it's little more than a controler (remember the 68000 in the Atari Jaguar?), in the XBox360 it is used to provide a small core multiprocessing platform which M$ can hold some IP control over.

In both machines the tight integration of the mid-power CPU with the extremely powerful GFX chips are the key to their performance,

For the Dektop/Laptop (ie general purpose computing platform), IBM would have to plough massive funds into the PPC 970 development... It's getting harder and harder to ramp the speed without the chips getting so hot that they NEED liquid cooling... and given that the future of general purpose computing is almost certainly in the mobile arena (ie Laptops)- or at least Apple think so- someone would need to fund development of cool high performance PPC chips... Apple can't aford to do it, IBM don't need to do it... The PPC is no longer an option for Apple...

Intel on the other hand have a very powerful chip that runs very cool and uses very litle power... the Pentium-M, which IMHO is the best Mobile chip available at the moment. The Intel roadmap shows that in two years the Pentium-M will be a dual core 64bit chip in the high 2Ghz region.

What choice did Apple have?

Ok, right now the Freescale 7447A (or the "G4" in Apple laptop parlance) is just about able to struggle along with the Pentium-M... but again Freescale don't have the money to take it to a dual core, 64bit multi Ghz Chip... it will develop, but at the same slow rate that has crippled the line.



This post was written and posted on a PowerBook G4
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hammer on July 23, 2005, 12:15:58 PM
Quote

Samuar wrote:
Either way, its a very poor operating system "designed" for the (l)user classes.

I get the feeling my Intel Pentium 4 3.0Ghz with 1GB RAM and 160GB HDD won't be enough for it; in the same way people laughably install XP on Pentium IIs.

One may need Intel Pentium IV with EMT64 support (16 register GPR and 16 XMM model) and DX9 GPU** (64MB minimum). Intel has licensed PowerVR Series 5(DX9) for their next base level.
   
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hammer on July 23, 2005, 12:44:10 PM
Quote
the Pentium-M, which IMHO is the best Mobile chip available at the moment.

Note that AMD's Turion 64 already rivals Intel's Dothan.
Refer to
http://forums.anandtech.com/messageview.aspx?catid=51&threadid=1635962&STARTPAGE=2&enterthread=y
 
Unlike Dothan, AMD Turion 64 has support for SSE3 and X64 ISA.  
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: bloodline on July 23, 2005, 06:08:31 PM
Quote

Hammer wrote:
Quote
the Pentium-M, which IMHO is the best Mobile chip available at the moment.

Note that AMD's Turion 64 already rivals Intel's Dothan.
Refer to
http://forums.anandtech.com/messageview.aspx?catid=51&threadid=1635962&STARTPAGE=2&enterthread=y
 
Unlike Dothan, AMD Turion 64 has support for SSE3 and X64 ISA.  


It's good to see AMD getting back on track :-) I hate having to say intel have a good product ;-)
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Legerdemain on July 23, 2005, 08:12:42 PM
Actually I installed Windows XP on my old 350MHz Compaq Presario back in the days... optimized it a bit, ran it with only 192MB of RAM and not only did I have a startup at only 7 seconds (after the BIOS was finished until everything had loaded up and was ready to use) but it ran really fast otherwise aswell. Sure, it did some swapping when using heavy applications, but I was rather impressed, really.

Today I consider XP being complete {bleep}e with really lousy networking capabilites (it is even incompatible with other XP systems at times not to mention how it sometimes changes ones configuration making the local network stop working). Oh well.
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hyperspeed on July 24, 2005, 01:36:45 AM
What about Transmeta? Wasn't it their main objective to produce an energy efficient CPU for portable devices?

I seem to remember when Gateway were talking about the MMC box that the Transmeta `Crusoe' CPU was extremely powerful and could process different machine code. I've seen this CPU on Sony Vaio laptops (I think with the widescreens) so why Apple are going for Pentiums is beyond me. The Transmeta CPU was supposed to sense when power wasn't being used and almost completely switched itself off, surviving on a little trickle of power for hours worth of mobile work.

Where's SUN, DEC, Toshiba, NEC, Motorolla, Hitachi, Panasonic?

Apple are just flying the stars & stripes and are going to isolate their own diehards...

As for Windows XP, what exactly can it do with 200MB+ that AmigaOS3.9 can't do with 32MB or less?
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Waccoon on July 24, 2005, 05:25:50 AM
@bloodline:  Sweet.  :-)

PowerPC *is* a good architecture, but not as good as fanatics want us to believe.  They also do NOT run cool when pressed into serious desktop usage.  I still remember the 200Mhz G3 used in the PowerMac Tower at work.  It had a heatsink larger than a stock P4 with a 120mm case fan blowing down on it -- and it still got frickin' hot.

Still, I'm not falling for Apple's new "units of performance" catch phrase.  More fake-world benchmark B.S. -- just like Sony's "twice the performance of XBox 360" claims.

I wonder what will happen to Windows PPC, now.  :-)

Quote
Legerdemain:   Actually I installed Windows XP on my old 350MHz Compaq Presario back in the days... optimized it a bit, ran it with only 192MB of RAM and not only did I have a startup at only 7 seconds...

NT is infinitely better than 9x.  My brother-in-law was afraid how much slower his laptop would run after I offered to upgrade it from 98 to Win2K.  Turns out, it works several times faster, now.  I'm impressed, given how much his old Dell laptop sucks to begin with.  :-D

Quote
What about Transmeta? Wasn't it their main objective to produce an energy efficient CPU for portable devices?

Yes, but they are slow.  There's a reason it's recongnized only as an "also-ran."

Transmeta probably wasn't anticipating Intel getting their act together and starting to make their processors more efficient (thanks to AMD and the rise of portable devices).  Given Intel's manufacturing capacity, it looks like Transmeta is in serious trouble, now.

I wonder how fast a Crusoe would be running "native" code, rather than trying to emulate x86.

Intel does also have the very efficient i960, but it's not x86 compatible and I've only heard of it being used in arcade games, specifically, Sega Model 2.

Quote
Where's SUN, DEC, Toshiba, NEC, Motorolla, Hitachi, Panasonic?

No chipsets for their CPUs.  Those guys make workhorses for CGI renderers, heavy machinery, and network routers.  I'm actually quite surprised how quickly the whole gaming industry dumped non-PPC chips, given how console developers always custom-engineer their own chipsets (usually on the CPU die).

Quote
As for Windows XP, what exactly can it do with 200MB+ that AmigaOS3.9 can't do with 32MB or less?

Most memory used by an OS today is for caching to speed up the system, and in this respect, XP blows away OS3.9.  Contrary to popular belief, Windows can be run in low-memory situations quite well.

It's also worth noting that if the OS doesn't suck up all the memory available, it is simply wasting memory.  My system idles at 200MB usage, but if I start loading up lots of apps, memory usage doesn't really increase that much.  Unless I'm running games, of course.  Painkiller tries to allocate more than 900 MB of memory, even though my system has 512.

Games are really stupid when it comes to memory.  They just tell the OS, "GIMME ALL YOU GOT", and the OS has to decide if the game really needs it, or whether it's just being greedy.  That's why when you quit a game, it takes a minute of hard-drive swapping to return to the desktop.  It's not Windows that's using all that memory, it's the game being a memory-hogging b*stard. :pissed:
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hyperspeed on July 24, 2005, 06:07:38 AM
If Windows XP is good in low memory situations and the mark of a good OS is one that fills up all the memory it can eat...  why then does Windows XP require 128MB just to boot and still uses virtual memory?

The mark of a good OS to me is one that does what you tell it, when you tell it. Surely even with memory protection a Windows machine is susceptible to memory leaks/fragmentation? Surely virtual memory reduces the lifespan of the magnetic medium?

I'm not arguing that Wordworth 7 can compete effectively with the latest Microsoft Word, but if things are become more compact, more portable, then surely such a resource hungry piece of software should become dinosaur? After all, it's the lean bipedals that inherited the Earth, not the gigantic diplodocus that ate tonnes of leaves and had a brain the size of a walnut!

As for slow Transmeta Crusoe, I saw a 1GHz model and Sony obviously approved of it for it to be in the flagship Vaio laptops! And wasn't it well reported that the Dual-G5 Macs were outperforming even the highest rated Pentium machines? Apple ran an advert proclaiming the PowerPC G5 Mac to be the most powerful computer in the world! Isn't RISC producing much less heat than a comparable speed CISC chip?

:-)
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: DonnyEMU on July 24, 2005, 06:08:16 AM
Considering all the "eye candy" I have been creating with visual studio beta 2, XAML, and the WinFX beta "RC1" lately (it's too bad I can't enter one of the Euro-Demo contests with it).. XAML is pretty cool and coding is very very fast (even for 3d)...

I have developed in C/C++ on the Amiga up to 3.x environments and really I can't see anything currently that is there that really matches the graphics performance and ease of coding..

I think Vista will have very rich uniform user interface which might even be nicer than the Macs.. I just can't understand the continual "Amiga does better" discussion when it's really not in the same ballpark for programmers etc.

I love the Amiga for what it is, even the AmigaOne, but you guys really need to seriously look at what's changing here and evaluate this on a different scale. The world's changing again..

And FYI if I programmed mostly for the Amiga I'd never make a living.. I tried believe me..
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hyperspeed on July 24, 2005, 06:26:26 AM
I'm not trying to say AmigaOS is better, Windows has had time to catch up now. What I am saying is AmigaOS is more efficient.

It's like German vs Italian, Mercedes Smartcar vs Ferrari.

One is fast and pretty, the other is small, stumpy and generally resource efficient!

And you should be programming for AmigaOS 4 young man! To the dunce's corner with you!
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: DonnyEMU on July 24, 2005, 06:45:52 AM
AmigaOS really isn't *THAT* efficient (if I was writing for the biggest audience of installed machines out there), memory management (keeping track of memory), semaphores and interprocess communication, things like object linking and embedding (OLE) isn't there. I am forced to look after things that the system should be handling for itself. I hear they finally have better memory management in OS/4 but how many installed machines is that really??

The Amiga forces me to write in a very memory conservative way that doesn't always let me add features to software. I hate things like Bptrs and stuff like that.. It does yet still have some "rock star" features but honestly if OS 4 ran on the old CPU then there would be so much more opportunity for the installed base to have "improved" application performance.

If you consider how much stress it is to port a product like FireFox or Open Office to the Amiga platform, I think my point is made very elloquently.. I am not anti-Amiga I love it, I wanna see more "classic" machine expansion, because with that hardware it's still possible with cpu's such as coldfire..

By the way, I will be laughing all the way to the bank ;-)
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hyperspeed on July 24, 2005, 07:40:09 AM
For criticising the Amiga's memory management on it's 20th birthday you're going to laugh all the way to the dungeon!

GUARDS!

:-D
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: bloodline on July 24, 2005, 11:03:51 AM
Quote

Hyperspeed wrote:

As for slow Transmeta Crusoe, I saw a 1GHz model and Sony obviously approved of it for it to be in the flagship Vaio laptops!


IIRC the crusoe was only used in Sony's ultraportables... Anyway, the crusoe was never really about performance, it was about power consumption. It could never really compete with even the slowest x86 mobile chips from AMD or Intel in terms of performance. Now ARM have won the power consumption race.

Quote


And wasn't it well reported that the Dual-G5 Macs were outperforming even the highest rated Pentium machines?


Steve Jobs reality distortion field taking effect there... Perfromace per $ of the Dual-G5 Mac was much worse than x86 machines*. Though you do get multiprocessing, MacOS X and a beautiful case with it...



*Note: I still want a Dual G5 Mac with Tiger :-D

Quote


Apple ran an advert proclaiming the PowerPC G5 Mac to be the most powerful computer in the world!


Apple had to remove the claim in the UK, as after an investigation by the "Avertising Standards Agency", Apple were unable to prove their claim.


Quote

Isn't RISC producing much less heat than a comparable speed CISC chip?


Don't fall into that trap, the terms RISC and CISC haven't really meant much since the late 80's.

The PPC is not a RISC chip (look at the MIPS chip if you want to see RISC), the PPC is better described as a Load-Store chip with a neat architecture. But the Modern x86 and the PPC both borrow as many features from both RISC and CISC designs as each other (though not necessary the same features ;-)).

It is true that the x86 ISA does incur penalties, like instruction decoding and lack of architectural registers, which does add to the transistor count when trying to correct (one of the reasons why a basic PPC core can be much smaller than an x86 core). But it turns out that the archtiectural improvements made to the x86 to overcome the limitations, actaully actually improved execution by several factors... notable out of order execution and branch prediction, which is a vital speed boots to current single core CPUs.
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Dan on July 25, 2005, 12:18:05 AM
Say welome to our new robotic trashcan overlords!
(http://www.mobilerobotics.org/robots/images/stories/review.jpg)

Imagine the destruction if they are loaded with Windows Vista  :lol:
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Ikasu on August 22, 2005, 04:19:56 AM
With all of the so-called "Enhancements" of XP turned off, I can neatly run XP on a 600Mhz computer. Although it seriously needs all of my 128Mb of ram, it still runs.

Now Vista requires (if I recall correctly) 1.3GHz. Since that particular computer is outdated, I cannot add another CPU. So on top of about $700 to $1000 for the Operating System, I'd need to spend an absolute minimum of $200 for a motherboard-CPU combo (according to anyone who knows me, I'd definately spend more then that, actually.). NOt only that, But I'd need to spend another $400 on the peripherals that were embeded on the first Mainboard. That's already around $1500!

Vista is already cr{bleep}.
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: on August 22, 2005, 12:42:30 PM
@Ikasu

Sorry.  I'd have to disagree with you here.

What you're saying is absolutely no different than what we saw when Commodore went from 1.3 to 2.04 and we had to modify our Amigas to get it to work correctly.

The basic principle -- REGARDLESS of what OS we're talking about -- is, the right hardware for the right software.  Vista  isn't designed to run on 5 year old 600mhz hardware, so don't expect to put it on such hardware and have it run smoothly.  If you do put it on such crap hardware, don't kvetch when it doesn't work.  

Also.  Don't kvetch when you go out and spend the absolute minimum you can to buy crap hardware to install it on either.  It's not the fault of the OS that you're a cheap {bleep}.. :)

I mean really, what you're saying is tantamount to calling AmigaOS and MorphOS crap because you can't install them on your stock Amiga 500.

Wayne
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: on August 22, 2005, 12:48:28 PM
I hate to say this, but I actually like that trashcan case.

Wayne
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: adz on August 22, 2005, 01:20:44 PM
Quote

Wayne wrote:
I hate to say this, but I actually like that trashcan case.

Wayne


Scary... :nervous:
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: CLS2086 on August 22, 2005, 02:23:53 PM
I have seen lots of people who downloaded Vista (aka : Virus, Instability, Spyware, Trash, Adware), and make it works on old machine but i did not see any "real" benchmark ... My last try with XP Pro (K6-3/500 + 256mb) did not last longer that 2 hours : huge missing frame in video capture (all in wonder AGP), littles short freezes in games, huge time to start a programm, strange TCP/IP unasked traffic, but very smaller boot time time ...  So I quickly switched back to Win2K that take very long to start (3-4 min also for my TB1.4 !!), but works so much well and faster.

Just a question about VISTA, if this "label" was deposed for a previous software, do you think there will be a huge process :lol:  and what about the SUN technologies used for the 3D virtual desktop showed 2 or 3 years ago...

My very personnal stupid record is to install and make works AmigaOS 3.9 on a A1200 (k3.1)with a FPU + 8mb, and also on a A2000(k3.1) + 030+FPU with 4.5 mb  :lol:
Someone told me that he maked it work on an A500+ (k3.1)  with HDD + 4.5mb  :-o
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: on August 22, 2005, 02:38:52 PM
Quote
My last try with XP Pro (K6-3/500 + 256mb) did not last longer that 2 hours : huge missing frame in video capture (all in wonder AGP), littles short freezes in games, huge time to start a programm, strange TCP/IP unasked traffic, but very smaller boot time time ...

But that wasn't the fault of Windows at all.  

XP was not designed to run on such outdated hardware, hence my point that it's inappropriate hardware for the software you're trying to run.

I run Windows XP (have for about two years now) on a stable MSI motherboard with Athlon 2800+, a Gigabyte of RAM and a total of 360GB of hard drive space.  I've never experienced any of these type issues.  The machine I run is basically the same one I've run for years, just with constant upgrades  (which I consider about the same as buying an accellerator card).  

Only difference is, I realize that if you want to major things, you need to plan on a reinstall of the OS.  I almost cry when I hear Amiga users {bleep}ing all the time about "I replaced my motherboard/cpu/whatever with something 10x as powerful and completely different hardware-wise, now the crappy OS doesn't work any more..."

For the record, I am planning to move to the X86 Macintosh as soon as it's available, because I don't want particularly like the increased "overseer" factor of Windows Vista.  I run legal software, but I still don't like the fact that they don't trust me enough and keep spying on me.  

It's just too bad that the new Amiga couldn't get their proverbial spit together by going with the cheap (and actually available) x86.

Wayne
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Dan on August 22, 2005, 06:49:26 PM
Quote

Wayne wrote:
I hate to say this, but I actually like that trashcan case.

Wayne

It´s actually a robot running Windows on a mini-itx board.
http://www.mobilerobotics.org/robots/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=223&Itemid=2 (http://www.mobilerobotics.org/robots/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=223&Itemid=2)
Totally idiotic I know, who needs a robot that just stands around waiting....:lol:
Bad design too, with  those wheels it will just get stuck everywhere and it doesn´t have any arms totally useless. The Robosapien is a much cheaper toy and if you want a computercontrolled Robosapien just ducttape an old pda to it or use one of those universal ir-remote extenders.


Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Cyberus on August 22, 2005, 06:53:00 PM
they should design a case like that bizarre thing that weirdami has in his avatar
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hyperspeed on August 29, 2005, 01:23:53 AM
A robot running on Windows would probably be a bit like ED-209 from the Robocop films - huge, powerful but show it a flight of stairs and it would go arse-over-heels. Then shoot the person controlling it.

:-o

What is Weirdami anyway, a shoehorn with eyes? :-P
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: InTheSand on August 29, 2005, 01:55:28 AM
Quote

Dan wrote:
The Robosapien is a much cheaper toy and if you want a computercontrolled Robosapien just ducttape an old pda to it


LOL! I could just imagine a RoboSapien lurching around with an iPAQ taped to its back! The RoboSapien seems quite powerful, I assume it'd still be able to walk with the added weight of a PDA? Anyone done this?!

 - Ali
Title: Re: Windows Vista: Microsoft's Terminator
Post by: Hyperspeed on August 29, 2005, 03:04:34 AM
There's 3 Robosapien now: A humanoid, a dinosaur and an odd thing that jumps about like a flea.

I like the dinosaur, it has a cheesy grin. At £80 GBP (e140?) though they're still ripoffs of the Sony Aibo robo-dogs at £1,000 (e1.700?).

They're even selling robot vacuum cleaners in the Argos catalogue for £200 (e340) but they look rubbish compared to the Dyson DC15 `The Ball'.

Also, UK TV's Blue Peter show has come a long way from "sticky backed plastic" as the last time I turned on BBC1 they had the Honda Asimo robot in the studio. At about the size of a 5yr old it was taking voice commands from the presenter, refusing commands from the co-presenter, dancing, climbing up and down stairs, waving and talking (though at £5m GBP / e8,5m you'd expect it to!).

:-D

Thinking PDA/Robots though, wouldn't an Amiga laptop be kickin' if it was like the `Calculus' from Robocop 3!

;-)