A recent blog entry by Michael Arrington has stirred up some discussion around the web. Basically, it's a plea that someone design and build a $200 open-source web tablet: minimal specs, Linux, booting right into Firefox, that you can just pick up and use to browse the web with.
The idea isn't precisely new; I proposed something similar in Web Worker Daily a few months ago (though, personally, I'm no fan of touchscreens). And you can already buy similar devices like the Nokia 800 internet tablet. But somehow Arrington's idea has sparked more interest that most attempts in this area. Why?
I suspect it's because the specs are so perfectly geeky that geeks find it irresistable; it even has that open source special sauce. Anyone who's both internet-savvy and on the go can see the appeal of a real browser that you can cart along, that uses great software, WiFi, and a few extra amenities (like VOIP use). And on top of that, the price will be cheap.
I admit it, I want this fantasy machine. I'd buy one. But I want a private jet and a freezer stocked with Kobe beef and lobster and a pony too. It's easy to design dream machines when you're waving your arms, but trying to bring them to market at an attractive price point has proved consistently difficult.
Still, don't count the TechCrunch tablet out just yet. Arrington claims to already be discussing the machine with a "supply chain management company" that can turn them out for a few hundred dollars each after the machine is specced and the software is written. So perhaps in six months or a year, you'll be able to buy one. And perhaps the pony will come along with it, too.