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To: Woz who wrote (5861)11/11/2000 8:48:24 PM
From: Charles A. King  Respond to of 6180
 
Gateway is trying their own web appliance. Meanwhile Virgin is pulling the plug on theirs. I have a Virgin appliance in my home.

By MAY WONG, Associated Press

SAN JOSE, Calif. (November 10, 2000 12:15 a.m. EST
nandotimes.com) - Gateway Inc. is betting that
the next appliance consumers buy for their kitchens will
be a computer.

The company is introducing a sleek, touch-screen
device Friday called the Connected Touch Pad,
designed to offer easy Internet access from a kitchen
counter or anyplace else where bulky personal
computers usually are shunned.

Gateway's Touch Pad, which works only with Internet
service provided by America Online Inc., is the latest
entry into the emerging market for so-called Web
appliances. It comes with a new interface called
Instant AOL, complete with e-mail, instant messaging,
a family "Notepad" and other Web features, such as
recipes, shopping information and TV listings.

The Touch Pad has a 10-inch display that can stand
alone or be mounted under a kitchen cabinet. The
device comes with a pointer for the touch screen and a
wireless keyboard.

The Web appliance market is in its infancy, but
computer makers believe it could grow fast.

Compaq Computer Corp. unveiled its iPaq using
Microsoft's MSN Internet service in August. Last month,
3Com Corp. unveiled the Audrey, which can connect to
the Web through any Internet service provider.
Competing appliances are expected also from Sony
Corp. and Intel Corp.

"We haven't had a big success in this area yet, and
we'll see how this goes. But with the strength of the
AOL brand name, Gateway certainly has the best
chance yet," said Martin Reynolds, an analyst with the
Gartner Group research firm.

Gateway officials would not disclose the Touch Pad's
price until they make the official product announcement
Friday morning in New York. The San Diego-based
company originally had planned to unveil the product
next week at the big Comdex trade show in Las Vegas.

Like other Web appliances, Gateway's device will
target consumers who want Web access without having
to operate a PC, which for many seems too complex or
time-consuming to weave into their everyday lives.

The Touch Pad simply needs to be plugged in and
connected to a phone line. Gateway envisions users
checking the Internet for traffic, stock or news reports
while brewing a cup of coffee in the morning.

The device, which will use the energy-saving Crusoe
microprocessor made by upstart chipmaker Transmeta
Corp., can use either a traditional dial-up connection
or, when networked with a PC, a high-speed Internet
connection.

Gateway also has a strategic partnership with
chipmaker Broadcom Corp. to jointly develop products
for delivering audio and video content between music
players, TVs, PCs, cable modems and Internet
appliances.

The Touch Pad appliance will be the first among a
series of Gateway's Connected Home products to use
Broadcom technology enabling all the devices to
interact via existing telephone lines.

Gateway plans to offer demonstrations of the Touch
Pad, along with the Gateway Connected Music Player,
at its Gateway Country stores beginning next week - in
time for the Christmas season. It will begin taking
orders on Dec. 1 for shipments by Dec. 15 to
customers' homes.

Market penetration will be a challenge, Reynolds said.

"The Web appliance is entering a difficult market
because 60 percent of American homes already have
PCs and may not feel they need another device," he
said. "And the homes that are left either don't want to
own a PC or can't afford one, or they think a PC might
be too complicated."

nandotimes.com



To: Woz who wrote (5861)11/14/2000 1:26:47 AM
From: Woz  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6180
 
Samsung advertising its TVNet at Indiatimes and giving it away in weekly prizes...

203.197.64.228:88/Samsung.htm

indiatimes.com