On MovieTome: VENOM is moving ahead slowly!
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

November 13th, 2008

Qualcomm's Kayak "PC alternative" pictured

Posted by John Morris @ 11:14 am

Categories: Notebooks, PCs, Peripherals, and Software

Tags: PC, Qualcomm Inc., Kayak, Chipsets, Semiconductors, Desktops, Wireless, Hardware, Components, John Morris

Qualcomm Kayak

Here’s a picture of Kayak, the “PC alternative” for emerging markets that Qualcomm announced yesterday. It looks pretty much the way the company described it: sort of a cross between the Apple Mac Mini–bring your own monitor, keyboard and mouse–and the OLPC’s XO laptop with its rabbit-ear antennae.

Kayak has received a lot of coverage in the past 24 hours (here’s the Kayak press release), but it’s a bit misleading. Qualcomm isn’t going to start building netbooks. This device is a prototype that Qualcomm is demonstrating today at its analysts’ day in New York. The company hopes PC manufacturers, or more likely wireless carriers, will use this Kayak design to quickly build their own low-cost devices for markets such as India, China and South America using Qualcomm’s chips.

Nevertheless the concept is interesting. Qualcomm is essentially betting that expertise in wireless will trump expertise in PC hardware and software when it comes to connecting the rest of the world to the Internet. Given the number of handset and the growth of 3G in all parts of the world–709 million subscribers growing to 1.6 billion by 2012–they could have a point.

So what exactly is the Kayak? The design is based on Qualcomm’s MSM 7000 series chipset, which is a highly-integrated chipset currently used in many smartphones such as T-Mobile’s G1 with Google’s Android. Obviously one key difference compared to the XO laptop or Intel Classmate PC is that Qualcomm’s chipset includes wireless wide-area networking–both on CDMA2000 and WCDMA networks. It also uses Qualcomm’s Brew software platform and a version of the Opera browser for running Web-based applications. Kayak devices will also be capable of digital music playback and some level of 3D gaming.

The chipset uses an ARM application processor so it can’t run Windows applications, but like Linux-based netbooks, Kayak devices could run existing productivity suites and support some Office file formats. “Long-term we would welcome the opportunity to port any of the Windows applications and we’ve had numerous discussions with Microsoft on this, but we don’t have anything to announce at this point,” CEO Dr. Paul Jacobs said at the meeting today. He added that Qualcomm has worked with Adobe to support Flash applications on Brew, which should make it easier to quickly develop applications.

Inventec, a contract manufacturer in Taiwan, will manufacture initial Kayak devices for trials in first quarter of 2009 in Southeast Asia. Qualcomm says Kayak-based devices will cost less than $400, but carriers could also subsidize the cost with a contract–a trend that’s already emerging with netbooks in Western Europe and Japan. Eventually Qualcomm may shift the Kayak design to its more powerful Snapdragon processor, which is primarily designed for netbooks and should start showing up in a few devices next year.

John MorrisJohn Morris is a former executive editor at CNET Networks and senior editor at PC Magazine. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

Email John Morris

Subscribe to Laptops & Desktops via Email alerts or RSS.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 6 Talkback(s)
Your preaching to the converted
It wont be Nokia or another large company like them who will first adopt these new chipsets, as they have their own, and their own market agenda. The problem isnt with unit sales, but infrastructure t... (Read the rest)
Posted by: HexHammer67 Posted on: 11/14/08  (Edited: 11/14/08 @ 04:28) You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Good to see innovation  Comnenus | 11/13/08
And they don't consider Africa as a viable market ?  timiteh | 11/13/08
Try reading the article.  HexHammer67 | 11/14/08
Perhaps you should learn first how to answer to a post on this board  timiteh | 11/14/08
Your preaching to the converted  HexHammer67 | 11/14/08
Isn't the Kayak brand name...  914four | 11/14/08

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here