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]]>The Do-Good Imperative
Some of the most innovative ideas today are coming from efforts to address the needs of those most in needby Janet A. Ginsburg
When I first read about the computer designed for the One Laptop Per Child project, I wanted one. Not because it was adorable, cheap, or a means of doing good. I coveted its screen, designed for use in full daylight. Even my Apple MacBook Pro, with all its clever tricks, can’t manage that. ……
We are searching for 5 positions
1) Director of Licensing
2) Regional Sales Director (Taiwan)
3) Senior Product Engineer
4) Senior Optics/Liquid Crystal Engineer
5) Director of Electronics Engineering
If interested please submit a cover letter and your resume to Casey Hsu (casey@pixelqi.com)
]]>Pixel Qi is here at the most important display conference of the year, the Annual Meeting of the Society for Informational Display (www.sid.org). I delivered the opening Keynote Address yesterday, discussing the role that display most play in the future of portable computing, discussing the OLPC project and what it means for display makers, and showing the images of the new OLPC XO2.
In essence, the future of computing is all about the screens.
Pixel Qi will be creating the screens for the next generation OLPC laptop, and we will be making some announcement in the upcoming months about other screens we are creating for other exciting products.
]]>At the very least, we should have extremely low-power, sunlight readable, high resolution screens in these and other laptops. Pixel Qi is working towards this and we will announce some of our partners soon.
]]>see here for the article.
]]>Jaron Lanier asked me these questions while I was visiting him at his home in Berkeley a few weeks back.
I have been asking him (and many others) for advice. I’m trying to figure out how to leverage open design principles at Pixel Qi. Open Hardware is a challenge: This because the development of, for example, a new screen, can cost several million dollars. Worse, there are only about 10 companies in the world capable of manufacturing such a screen, and these manufacturers have their own problems.
I write this from Taiwan - where I have spent the majority of my time for the past few years.
Over here, it’s widely predicted that TFT-LCD factories are headed for tough times by the end of this year. Why: in short - because most people have already bought their big-screen HDTVs and don’t need to replace them yet.
The challenge for the TFT-LCD factories is to try to stay as fullyloaded as possible. An idle factory is extremely expensive. So, the big LCD makers are focused on methods to slash the costs of screens, to try to move more product through despite the predicted slow down. Pixel Qi is working closely with them on this, but our core competence is not just in slashing costs. We believe the way to lower cost is by creating new screens. Screens with different functionality: e-paper readability, vastly lower power consumption, lower environmentally impact, higher resolution. As we push the development of our inventions we are also patenting them. How we use these patents will be determined in the future, but we are progressing on making new screens and new machines that drastically slash current price-points while improving performance - as soon as possible
Given this - How can Pixel Qi be more open in this process (or should it be?) - Your thoughts are most welcome.
]]>By popular request I am now logging upcoming appearances on the Pixel Qi website. See:
for events where I will be speaking - Mary Lou
]]>When asked about the Intel/OLPC break-up by Charlie Rose on his January 23 2008 broadcast, Ken Auletta of the New Yorker Magazine responds:
“They [Intel] looks at it as a busines model, they probably think that if you sell it too cheap you can’t make any money that way, they [Intel] want cheaper computers and laptop computers but not at $100. I’m sure that is the reason, they don’t say that publically but that’s the reason Intel pulled out [of OLPC]. They are, after all, in business”
Link to video webcast of Charlie Rose 1/23/08 broadcast
Did Ken Auletta get it right?
We now have more data from the first quarter of 2008: The new batch of low-cost compact laptops initially were announced in January 2008 with price targets of around $300. This is 60% higher in cost than the XO laptop price from last year (2007) at $188. In electronics, prices are supposed to go down from year to year - not up. More recent announcements this month from large laptop makers move price estimates higher: drifting upwards to $400 and $500 per compact laptop. HP recently announced a compact notebook product with a $500 target pricetag. This comes as several 14″ or 15″ laptops are already being sold below the $500. Could it be that compact laptops will be a premium product and afford better margins than current conventional size laptops? Is Ken right?
Laptop makers are in a bit of a bind.
When they introduce a new product, they don’t know how many they will sell initially. The direct variable costs of laptop production can drastically increase the per unit price if the laptop doesn’t become a hot product. Essentially, the laptop makers have seen an emerging product category birthed by OLPC (and also Asus’s EEE PC) and want to get in on it. Paradoxically this may raise the price by diluting the field while everyone tries their hand at a little, cute, compact laptop: but at the prices the manufacturers are bantering about this month I wonder if any will move off the shelves.
At Pixel Qi we are focused on the working with the high volume customers that are interested in bringing the price of computers down and delivering laptops to all, and if Ken is right, there are still many other companies that would like to see the cost of laptops drop. It’s already happened with DVD players, calculators and many other consumer electronics, why are laptop prices staying high and how long can it continue?
]]>We will be in Europe, Asia and California over the next few weeks are beginning to recruit talent to our headquarters. Pixel Qi is in process of locating its new offices in the South of Market area of San Francisco.
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