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April 10, 2009 12:49 PM PDT

TechCrunch shows off prototype CrunchPad tablet

by Dan Ackerman

An early look at the CrunchPad prototype.

(Credit: TechCrunch)

It's far from being on store shelves, but some additional details and photos of the CrunchPad, a mobile computing device as envisioned by TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington, have been released. The project's goal was to design and build a thin, light touch-screen PC without a physical keyboard or onboard hard drive. Instead, the system and its custom operating system would be entirely focused on Web browsing and using Web-based apps.

"I wanted something I couldn't buy, and found people who said it could be built for a lot less than I imagined," writes Arrington on his site. "This machine isn't for data entry. But it is for reading e-mails and the news, watching videos on Hulu, YouTube, etc., listening to streaming music on MySpace Music and imeem, and doing video chat via tokbox."

Arrington says the CrunchPad can be built for around $250, with a possible retail price of $300. This is all still very hypothetical, because the design team has just finished its second prototype, and Arrington isn't ready to speculate on a possible commercial release time frame. The current 12-inch prototype runs Ubuntu Linux off of an Intel Atom CPU.

The question naturally arises--in a world filled with $229 iPod Touches and $349 Netbooks, is there room for a $300 product that is essentially a hybrid of the two? The touch screen is an important feature for a portable device to have, but the lack of a HDD or software other than a Web browser makes this essentially a thin client that surfs the Web and does little else (and without a mobile broadband option, it can only do that when in range of an accessible Wi-Fi signal).

Then again, small devices like this are made or broken based on their ease of use and design (see: iPhone versus Blackberry Storm), so if Arrington and his partners somehow manage to nail the user interface and physical package, they could have a very desirable product on their hands.

New York native Dan Ackerman, a former radio DJ turned journalist, has written about technology and music for publications including Spin, Blender, The Hollywood Reporter, and USA Today. He hosts the weekly Digital City podcast and the New York edition of Editors' Office Hours. Dan's new album, Tales Out of Night School, is available now. E-mail Dan.
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by fleurya April 10, 2009 2:51 PM PDT
Sounds good to me. I was actually just thinking about a product like this the other day. I like to sit on the couch and surf the web while watching TV or something, but I really don't like lugging around my rather heavy and heated laptop. I have an iPhone, but it's really not the best web surfing experience on that little screen. I was thinking of something along the lines of a dummy terminal/touch screen concept. This seems pretty close to what I had in mind.

But a "dummy terminal" concept doesn't even need an OS, just a touch screen that can connect wirelessly with another computer. Wouldn't that be cheaper and better?
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by askj113 April 11, 2009 10:54 PM PDT
I love it. I've been following the project on and off for half a year now, and I'm excited they're actually going through with it. I can't tell you how often I'm sitting on the couch or in my house and don't want to use a big laptop that has to wake up from sleep or be turned on. I'm looking forward to this
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by forever4now April 12, 2009 4:02 AM PDT
This could be a very versatile device, if a bluetooth keyboard & mouse can be paired with it.
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