So is the CrunchPad still alive? More importantly, will it still come out? Don’t ask me; I’m just as in-the-dark about the CrunchPad as the average man on the street, but the public relations agency behind Fusion Garage (the company TechCrunch teamed with to make the device) has said that the device will make an appearance before reporters in San Francisco on Monday.
There also seems to be a personal element to this, with the Fusion Garage CEO, Chandrasekar Rathakrishnan, aiming to give his side of the story vis-à-vis the public bust-up with TechCrunch.
Again, I have zero insight as to what happened with the CrunchPad, I’m just going by what I’ve read, the same stuff that you have read.
The good news, I guess, is that this may prove that the CrunchPad isn’t quite dead yet, especially since Rathakrishnan will show the device off to the press.
And while Biggs argued that the CrunchPad mattered—and it’s safe to say that it did/does—but I’m more of a power user. I’d rather have a giant desktop with a beefy monitor than a whiz-bang Internet tablet. Personal preference, that’s all.

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