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Snot in spanish is moco, not moko.
Once they include WiFi so I can use VoIP at home and work, and as long as it syncs with my address book and calendar on Mac OS X, I'll buy this thing ahead of the iPhone. Great project.
It is a cool design, but, as Kevlar alludes to, it's a solution to a problem that doesn't exist. The current problem isn't the bulk of the stove (in fact this design makes it bigger), but the bulk of fuel storage. When I go tramping I use the Titanium Stove KB0101, which is about as small as you get, but I still have the problem of carrying a large fuel canister.
Just give me a quad-band GSM, WiFi, and Skype/Gizmo enabled mobile I'll buy it.
Man, when is somebody going to release a cell phone with WiFi and VoIP capability? Whoever releases one first is going to make mega bucks!! I was going to wait to purchase Apple's iPhone but it doesn't have VoIP, so bugger that.
He's right. Apple can shoot inself in the foot sometimes with unecessary restrictions (done in the name of "it just works").

As a longtime (exclusive) user of the Macs it's this tendency of Apple's that is the one thing that's bugged me over the years. DVD region restrictions, lack of support for other formats in iTunes (e.g. FLAC), etc. There are more and it's this sort of thing that's pushed me recently to learn how to use Ubuntu Linux, just for a bit of security incase I have the urge to jump ship.
I must say, it really sucks how Engadget doesn't include links in its text to relevant websites.
iPod Phone. Not Applephone. Betcha.
KL, as per http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/01/02/business/NA_FEA_FIN_US_Hundred_Dollar_Laptop.php

Nicholas Negroponte ... said he deliberately wanted to avoid giving children computers they might someday use in an office. "In fact, one of the saddest but most common conditions in elementary school computer labs (when they exist in the developing world), is the children are being trained to use Word, Excel and PowerPoint," Negroponte wrote in an e-mail interview. "I consider that criminal, because children should be making things, communicating, exploring, sharing, not running office automation tools."
Well done to them, I think they've done a great job. Sounds like groundbreaking technology to me, and something for-profit organisations could never have achieved.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I am looking for a 12- or 13-inch ultraportable that can also play modern games at a reasonable level, for less than $1,000. I know the brainiacs out there can help me out. Love the site, thanks!"
 

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