Hi, after a few months of latop-only computing (my good old P4 1.8Ghz is now - after 7 years - a Windows machine in our household), I plan to switch to a normal computer again.
My requirements are the following: o Low power consumption (< 10W; 25W upper limit) o Support for major Free Software operating systems (no strange, custom GNU/Linux distributions), especially GNU/Linux or NetBSD o Fanless and no moving parts o No proprietary drivers, etc. (BIOS and bootloader acceptable) o Standard form-factor or custom case/enclosure (if so, hole for rp-sma connector) o Smallest form-factor that is possible (I don't understand why computers are still the size of a bottle crate) o Standard connectors (USB, VGA/DVI, Ethernet) o VESA mount (if possible) o low budget (< 500€) After I found no RISC processors or SOCs, I looked at x86 CPUs. There three low power architectures: VIA C7 and Nano, AMD Geode and Intel Atom. VIA's technology (especially the C7) seems to be out-dated. VIA offers a mini-itx board with its Nano CPU (VIA VB8001), but it has small fan and its power consumption is slightly above the limit. AMD's Geode is obsolete as well. The Geode LX family has the advantage of low power consumption and small form factor. However, the performance per watt ration is low. Intel's Atom processors are modern and have probably the highest performance per watt ration. However, the smallest affordable form-factor is mini-itx (I talked to several companies that manufacture smaller industrial boards, but the price performance ratio was terrible and buying one of those would be my last option). Similar to the Nano most of the Atom Boards have a power consumption that's a bit above 25W (there are the Z510 and Z530 embedded Atom CPUs, but the come with the GMA 500 graphics chip which has no free drivers). Nvidia's Ion, especially the Acer AspireRevo, seems to be quite promising, but has proprietary drivers. I wanted to ask you (because you very likely use your computers the same way I do) whether you think the Geode is sufficient for the next three years or so, otherwise would buy a cheap Atom mini-itx computer. Usually I use my computer just for programming, typesetting (mainly with groff and heirloom-doctools, but also occasionally with LaTeX), reading and research. I don't need any computing power for simulations, calculations, etc.; I can get access to bigger machines if I really have such special tasks. What bothers me a bit are these multimedia applications (video codecs, etc.) and particularly web applications. I'm really not sure if the Geode would be able to render on of these new JavaScript + HTML = graphics-and-user-interface-API web apps in one and a half years or so. Moreover, I can't imagine the CPU to decode a medium-sized h.264 videos which seem to have become today's quasi-standard. Maybe you know a better alternative. Regards, Matthias-Christian