Hi,
I'll get back to you with the size, but it will use flash memory.
Thanks for listening,
Alex,
On 17-Nov-08, at 8:21 PM, Ryan Mann wrote:
A couple questions:
1. What would be the advantage of this over the Macbook Air? I
thought the Macbook airs were really small.
2. Other notetakers such as the Pacmate or Braille Note don't have
hard drives. Instead, they use flash memory and it's not nearly as
much storage space as a modern hard drive. Would this notetaker be
using flash memory? If so, how would Mac OS 10 even fit on this
memory?
Thanks.
On Nov 17, 2008, at 10:15 PM, Alex Jurgensen wrote:
Hi,
Would you buy this?
EyeMac -- The next generation of sleek notetakers
The EyeMac features aluminum housing, weighing in at under a pound.
This sleek and shiny notetaker is based on the state of the art
technology, featuring wireless and bluetooth. The six-key input
provides Braille users the ability to legally access the world's
most user friendly and advanced operating system. Built on the
foundation of Mac OS X, the EyeMac is the bleeding edge in
affordable portable computing technology. Costing around $500 us,
the EyeMac is an easy pick for the user with a tight budget. Its
portability make it ideal for not only end users but the
professional who needs a lightweight, portable solution. The EyeMac
measures less than 20 CM long by seven CM wide, and about 3 cm
high. Durable, powerful! Take full advantage of the world wide web.
The EyeMac Pro has wireless anywhere capability. Need a Braille
display? EyeMac Plus models feature built-in Braille displays that
make reading Braille text messages and documents a breeze. The
EyeMac is built on a actively developed Operating System, that
features a well documented programming guide that will ensure your
EyeMac can be customized with the applications that best suit your
needs. Designed for ease of use, this revolutionary device will
change your portability experience.
Project status: Planning
Thanks for listening,
Alex,