litl
18Feb/112

Imported from Boston

litl webbook

The other day, we received a call on our customer support line from a woman who wanted to know more about the litl webbook. As our support rep answered her questions, he also mentioned the fact that we are headquartered in Boston. The woman was local, and that sealed the deal.

But we think of our Boston roots as more than just a parochial appeal to New Englanders. We’re proud to be from here, and we think the city plays an integral role in litl’s DNA.

See, we’re not here to peddle a few laptops; we’re here to reinvent the personal computer, to free it from the shackles of complexity. And that’s no easy task.

Sometimes, it takes colonial buildings to foster revolutionary ideas. And when you’re in a city full of history, you know what belongs in a museum.

It was with that spirit that we set out three years ago to hit the reset button on personal computing. We rejected years of assumptions about personal computers, from user interface design to the layout of keys on the keyboard. In sum, we simplified the act of getting online. The result is the litl webbook, the first Internet computer for the home.

The Bay State is full of firsts. We built America’s first public park, public library, and public school. We invented telephones, x-rays, rocket fuel. The J. Geils Band. The first minicomputer, first transistor computer, first computer with RAM. And now, the litl webbook.

We’re from Boston. Revolution is what we do.

Now how do you like them Apples?

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