Concept PC 2001 273
Rami Kassab writes: "Check out this sweet PC developed by HP. It runs on the Intel P4 and features a wireless keyboard, mouse, even a wireless 18" flat screen LCD monitor. The wireless mouse and keyboard run over RF. All of the components are connected to eachother via Bluetooth technology. Included with this PC is USB 2.0 and an ATI 7500 AGP card." The screen looks a little strange, but I always love seeing interesting new designs for these boxes since I spend so much time in front of one.
Non-Wireless Monitor? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Non-Wireless Monitor? (Score:2)
Re:Non-Wireless Monitor? (Score:2)
I thought the same thing -- very retro look. Which I think is kind of cool.
Re:Non-Wireless Monitor? (Score:2)
The mouse and keyboard are bluetooth, and that is a good idea, if it doesn't cost too much. Oh, and put a beeper in the mouse so I can hit a key and find it under the piles of paper. 8-)
The Cats Will Be Very Upset (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The Cats Will Be Very Upset (Score:1, Informative)
Re:The Cats Will Be Very Upset (Score:3, Funny)
Then I brought in the first monitor with a tilt/swivel base. Scared the piss out of her the first time she tried to settle on top of it. Not IN the monitor, thank God.
With a flat screen she won't even be able to warm up by lying *next* to it.
By the way, the best definition of a cat that I've run across is:
"God's way of letting you know your furniture is too good."
KFG
Wireless isn't that cool (Score:1)
PCjoker (Score:1)
Re:Wireless isn't that cool (Score:2)
Oh, really? It was slow (but then so was it's bigger brother in those days). If memory serves, it didn't include a floppy drive as standard equipment and the software available on those cartridges was... no, I take that back; there was virtually no software available in those cartridges. And the keyboard was the biggest problem of all. It probably set a record for causing unanimous negative opinion in the shortest amount of time of any PC product.
Surely ``popular'' wasn't the word you really meant to use...
Re:Wireless isn't that cool (Score:2)
Re:Wireless isn't that cool (Score:1)
Finally... (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Finally... (Score:2)
It is nice to see Bluetooth becoming the standard here though. I just want a PC with USB, Firewire, Bluetooth and 802.11g for connectivity outside the box. I'd be happy. (Ok, and maybe a Gigabit ethernet port just in case)
Re:Finally... (Score:2)
I wish it was the standard, though; Logitech and Thrustmaster are both coming out with wireless gamepads, but every RF device from either company needs its own receiver. A single receiver would save a mess of USB ports...
Not a wireless LCD (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Slashdot tip of the day.... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Slashdot tip of the day.... (Score:1)
Dammit! Right when I'd gotten that Irene Cara song out of my head! Tell me, are these more like the West Side Story dancing gangbanger wars, or the "Thriller" dancing zombie wars?
Re:Not a wireless LCD (Score:2)
Re:Not a wireless LCD (Score:2)
Re:Not a wireless LCD (Score:2)
True, because the thought of a compressed monitor connection is too bizarre for my brain to come up with on its own. I doubt you can compress 944 Mbps down to 6 Mbps (99.4% efficiency) without loss. And I really, really do think a monitor connection should be lossless. Also, as you say, "eating up" all available wireless bandwidth just for the monitor connection seems a bit stupid with today's technology.
and power? (Score:3, Offtopic)
Maybe someone can beam the power into the machine with lasers or something, but I wouldn't want to have to reboot every time a cat runs under the desk!
Re:and power? (Score:1)
Re:and power? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:and power? (Score:1)
Re:and power? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:and power? (Score:3, Offtopic)
Wheeled batteries will work just fine.
Re:and power? (Score:2)
Every time???? (Score:2)
Maybe someone can beam the power into the machine with lasers or something, but I wouldn't want to have to reboot every time a cat runs under the desk!
Every time? I suspect each cat would only be able to do this once. How many cats do you have?
Re:Every time???? (Score:2)
Every time? I suspect each cat would only be able to do this once. How many cats do you have?
Heh. I dunno 'bout you, but I always have V cats running under mine!
Broadcast power (Score:2)
As for it being safe, large amounts of RF radiation will turn you into a crispy critter.
All of the earth return work he did also looked very weird - apparantly he planted a light bulb in the ground near an AC generator and it lit up.
He has a reputation for being a crackpot, which mostly came from Edison calling him names over the DC (Edison) vs AC (Tesla) debate, and from a few psuedo-documentaties that came out in the 1970's (you know the sort- "What are these mysterious roads into the sea, are they proof that Easter Island was once part of Atlantis?" when twenty years before someone with scuba gear has proved that they were BOAT RAMPS!). All of those pencil sketches that are shown things like airships generating power by the potential difference in the atmosphere and broadcasting it were never published (that's why they are in pencil), and just get dragged out when someone wants to make Tesla the pin-up boy of the conspiricy theorists.
If a component goes bad (Score:2, Insightful)
Other than that, this thing looks nifty. It would make a great in-car computer if it doesn't draw too much power.
Re:If a component goes bad (Score:1)
Re:If a component goes bad (Score:2)
wireless kbd and mouse (Score:1)
Slashdotted! (Score:2, Funny)
-----
p4! wow! (Score:2, Funny)
Wireless monitor! (Score:2, Funny)
RF (Score:1, Troll)
1. There is the Cancer aspect. It's obvious that no one understands the issues that may arise from having a radio transmitter around you all the time (Cel phones) let alone multiple ones around you all the time at your computer.
2. Interferance. The FCC regulations for RF devices at these frequencies state that you have to accept whatever outside interference there is. Getting bad input on an RF mouse, display or keyboard would blow.
Those things said, my mother had an RF remote for her C-band sat dish, and it was really neat.
Re:RF = Sniffable? (Score:2, Interesting)
3. How secure is this?
I have already heard tales about being able to spoof/sniff logitech wireless mice and keyboards. Like much of wireliess tech, this just adds another layer of vulnerability. Why go through the trouble of getting a trojan onto a system, when you can do it remotely, w/o using a network? Add this to a wireless LAN, and it seems like it opens a lot of doors.
Re:RF (Score:2)
Of course, you're much more likely to get cancer from the toxins in the air or the toxins in your food or radiation from your glow-in-the-dark alarm clock that some low-energy RF emissions.
Re:RF (Score:2)
Remember Tempest [google.com]? Who needs ultra-senstitive EM gear to pick up blips in your monitor timing, when you can broadcast everything you do on radio...
Re:RF (Score:1)
Although it (appears) true that RF energy can cause problems with cells in the body, the amount of power in an 802.11b or Bluetooth antenna is FAR less than cellular equipment. A microware cooks food at 1000 watts @ 2.5 GHz, but long term cell phone use at 1 watt is debatable (probably not good for you, anyway), and long term use of 802.11 equipment at 0.05 to 0.1 watts is most likely insignificant. Plus, RF signals degrade at 1/(n^4), so even 1 foot away from an antenna is significantly less power (though I won't debate how much radiation my left leg receives from my Lucent PCMCIA wireless card in my laptop - still, the convenience to me is with the miniscule risk).
Re:RF (Score:2)
Bluetooth is low power/short range, even less of a cancer risk (if there actually is a risk) and last time I checked I don't put my mouse and keyboard up to my head when I use it.
The FCC regulations for RF devices at these frequencies state that you have to accept whatever outside interference there is. Getting bad input on an RF mouse, display or keyboard would blow
It says that on every electronic device that falls under FCC regulation wired or wireless, like your monitor, computer, wired mouse and keyboard, sound card, etc... These protocols are designed to handle interference. One point I do worry about thought is having the batteries run out...now that sucks...
Re:RF (Score:2)
Sssseeeerrrrvvvveeerrrr lllllaaaaagggg (Score:1)
Prettier outside, same junk inside (Score:4, Interesting)
Still to this day, upgrading a hard drive or a graphics card is an unnecesarily obfuscated process, requiring the PC guts to be cracked open and laid out on the kitchen table.
Of course easily upgradeable components would cut into PC sales, so its probably hopeless.
Re:Prettier outside, same junk inside (Score:1)
Because it's cheaper .
No, seriously. I love Apple's G4 case for replacing/installing drives, RAM, etc. I showed my PC-loving friends, and they were mightily impressed.
Trying to do that to a consumer PC would necessitate raising the cost $100 or so, and every single dork on /. would scream blue murder because they cost too much. So there's your answer in a nutshell: innovation and convenience are great things, but only if it doesn't cost ME extra. :P
Re:Prettier outside, same junk inside (Score:2)
The problem is that the desktop system market has razor-thin margins, and the extra materials necessary to make good modular interfaces would cost enough to raise the price significantly. Right now it looks like the market is moving in the opposite direction, towards more integrated systems with non-upgradable parts. Otherwise there would be no way to make $600 computers.
I guess most people are cheap bastards, and the industry has to cater to their desires.
Re:Prettier outside, same junk inside (Score:4, Insightful)
No one realises that if the PC is going to be an information appliance, then it's not likely going to be very upgradeable. How many times have you swapped out parts on your toaster, or even your TV? Likely, you just go buy a new, better one that's already the way you want it. Only chipheads like us want an appliance that we can hot-rod for next to nothing. Welcome to the world of disposable goods.
There's also the argument that things like batter memory architectures and CPU-Perepheral interconnects are rapidly improving and changing, and it's WAY expensive to future proof a PC against changes in foundation architectures. A valid argument, it would seem.
However, when you think about it, why would a manufacturer make a PC that someone would want to keep for years and years by getting simple, cheap upgrades? The perpetual upgrade cycle keeps the PC makers (and the toxic waste disposal companies) in business. Supply/demand in action. Meh.
Soko
Re:Prettier outside, same junk inside (Score:2)
Buy a G4 tower then :P (Score:3, Interesting)
Pull a latch and the side of the G4 pops open. Drives sit on the bottom and are connected to a ribbon cable. CPU sits on an easily upgradable daughtercard (or maybe it's in a ZIF socket by now, I own a Titanium Laptop), ram is easily accessable, and all the PCI slots are trivially available because the motherboard lies on the hinged door.
The problem? Most PC buyers don't want to *pay* for the ability to easily tinker with their PC, instead placing higher value on performance and price, leaving design innovation, power consumption, and noise pollution as casualties of their budgets.
Re:Buy a G4 tower then :P (Score:2)
take a Dell case, lie it sideways, the case is hinged so it's easy to open, and in front of you are the hard drives and the cdrom drives, angled out at you because they're on the hinged part. unplug power and ribbon, use the easy tabbed sliders that are a sinch to remove (and install on another drive because of the way that they clip into the screw holes instead of actually screwing in), put on new drive, replace, reattach, done. entire endeavour : 30s.
Or for any normal computer, remove side conver, disconnect, unscrew, remove drive, replace, rescrew, reattach, replace side cover. this is not brain surgery folks. total time : 60s.
the only way to make it easier is to have actual slots where the drives themselves just slide in and out of, so you don't need to screw around with any wires, but you can also get those, unfortunately they are a bit more expensive.
the reason why things are the way they are is because (drumroll please)
Dell has the cases setup the way that they do because their primary customers are businesses (well, these are business cases I'm talking about anyways), and they will have IT departments that are more likely to screw around with the insides and want easy access to things than your mom&pop home users. Most people still refer to their computer chassis as the "CPU" or the "hard drive", and they think it's just a magical box. they couldn't care, and really don't know about what's inside of it, thus there is no demand to create a modularized system. It is cheaper to not, thus things aren't modularized.
Re:Buy a G4 tower then :P (Score:2)
everything inside is on "rails" if you would like to call them, and don't need screws even to attach to the rails, so it's very quick and easy to swap stuff around.
Re:Buy a G4 tower then :P (Score:2)
Drives were then mounted via a system of clips and thumbscrews (could be fitted _so_ easily_) while there was a 3.5" bay for the HDD pointing to the side - which meant that the rear you need to get at was pointing straight out at the hole where the side had hinged down and the motherboard.
Of course, being a cheap case, details were missing. IDE cables fitted when it was out but were tight, but some bright spark hadn't remembered to include a power cable extension, so that stops it with about 30 degrees to go until you remove it. Still, it's a start.
Re:Buy a G4 tower then :P (Score:2)
Find an old IBM PS/2, you can take the whole thing apart and reassemble it in 60s, including bootup times.
Everything is clipped into a casing structure and connects by solid edge connectors, even things like the fans.
They don't make em like they used to
Re:Prettier outside, same junk inside (Score:2)
The real problem is that current computers (or perhaps operating systems) don't allow for replacement of hardware without software. At this point with Windows, the operating system decays faster than the computer anyway, so people don't notice it so much. But it isn't true for Linux, and is less and less true for Windows, and people are going to want to keep their software environment even as they replace the hardware.
How exactly this will be possible, I'm not sure. I suppose I can imagine a piece of software that would mirror the old hard drive over to the new one, over USB or something -- it wouldn't even be a big deal if it took an hour or two to transfer, considering the benefits. Kind of like Ghost or something.
Licensing will make this very difficult on Windows -- anyone who writes that will be asking for trouble. Also, the nature of PC hardware makes this difficult -- you'd have the wrong drivers installed once you crossed over (it would work really nicely on Apple hardware, though).
But hey, maybe this is already available right now...? If it gets included with new computers, then there really wouldn't be much point to upgradable hardware.
Re:Prettier outside, same junk inside (Score:2)
Ohhh, you had a floor?? Why, when I had to go about pulling apart MFM drives to count the platters there was nothing but a patch of mud to work with along the side of the road. You'd just get the case off, then WOOOSH, a truck would come by and splash your components with mud.
Trying telling that to kids today... they won't believe you.
Great!! ..now if only.. (Score:1)
Re:Great!! ..now if only.. (Score:2)
How do you think I'm posting this?
Sponsored by ... (Score:2)
The Monitor is Strange Looking (Score:1)
1. The dials on the right look like something off of a 1960's era tv set
2. No cables are going to the monitor
3. The article does not say anything about the monitor being wireless. That would have to be a lot of bandwidth
Wireless monitor (Score:1)
Hmmm...a wireless monitor?
At 24bpp and a 1600x1200 display, that's 3 bytes x about 2E6 pixels per frame, times (very nominally) 60 frames per second, or ~360MBytes per second.
If they could do that cheaply, they wouldn't be using it just for sending digital video to monitors.
DVI is Digital Video Interface. It's neat (no more ghosting and shadowing), but not wireless.
illegal circumvention device (Score:3, Funny)
What's the point? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
/jhoffoss
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Smells fishy... (Score:3, Insightful)
Looks more like a model to me than a real working PC...
Just Fabulous (Score:5, Funny)
Now I can lose my keyboard, mouse, monitor and CPU. This is definately progress.
Re:Just Fabulous (Score:2)
It's a little harder with your remote, because it doesn't have any kind of receiver on it. But with Bluetooth devices, they'll receive the signal as long as you don't close them into the metal filing cabinet. 8-)
Sweet PC? Bah! (Score:2, Informative)
Expandability? None, internally, to speak of. So that means loads of things hanging out on FireWire or USB cables. Wanna upgrade? Better call HP, as I'm sure this thing screams 'proprietary case design' for the thermal management they mention, let alone that's generally how HP works. Add that DVD-ROM? External, please. CD-RW? Same thing. Hard drive? Replace the existing, while juggling your data, because there isn't space for a second one.
They mention XP pretty prominently, but I doubt seriously it will run Linux out of the box. They mention the Intel Pentium 4 a LOT. But I can get more bang for the buck with an Athlon. Option for that? Not that I could find...
All in all, the whole thing looked like a commercial for Intel, not a sweet concept PC.
Re:Sweet PC? Bah! (Score:2)
Gee, who did the article say was teaming up with HP to make this thing? Let me check... Oh, yeah, there it is: Intel! What they hell are they doing?!?!? Intel shouldn't waste their money promoting their own products... They should be getting together with HP and developing a product built around AMD chips... Sheesh.
As for the expandability of the thing -- read the first line:
Equipped in their concept PC.
Concept widgets generally never make it to the public as is... Oh, look, it says so right here:
Will we see these new PC's on shelves soon? Not likely..
If you are looking at something other than the link in the article, I am sorry, please post a link, but the way I read the article this is nothing more than what they call it: A Concept PC.
Cost! What about cost? (Score:2)
Perhaps Bluetooth connectivity is an add-on then? I have trouble believing this. HP make good hardware, and they charge a bundle for it. Thats the way it's always been. Even if it does have an intel heart-replacement.
HP? ugh. (Score:2, Interesting)
HP doesn't really even deserve their name anymore. Hewlett and Packard are both dead. All the cool scientific goodies have been spun off into Agilent. HP just killed off ACO after insulting their loyal user community with the 49G. And Carly Fiorina [hp.com] (can you look at her picture and honestly say that she doesn't look like a vulture?) is gleefully turning the remnants of HP into yet another Microsoft whore.
Their printers are the only tolerable product they're still producing, and I hear Epson is rapidly catching up. I have had the worst luck with HP's computer systems, both with the Kayak (their "high-end workstation" that I used at a previous job) and with various Pavilions that I have tried to fix/upgrade for people (oh, and their tech support is useless; try calling and asking what Ethernet card they have inside: "oh, that would be a `10/100' card, sir").
HP has a training program wherein you can get significant discounts on their products if you take online classes. I guess the idea is that retailers will be more eager to sell HP if they have 1) gotten free stuff from HP, and 2) know lots about HP products. Well, the HP PhotoSmart 612 which I got at a nice discount is of horrible quality. The camera design itself is actually pretty decent, but I had to go through 5 cameras before I found 1 without significant CCD defects. What I can tell you from my extensive HP training is this: Don't buy HP, kids. They suck.
Only one problem... (Score:2)
Fanless design, low power design, ease of accessability, ease of maintainance, CPUs on daughtercards, Firewire and USB, easy to access ram, easy to open cases, are all part of the G4 Tower and the G4 laptop.
The majority of PC buyers would rather put up with more noise pollution, cramped and difficult to maintain cases, spaghetti cables, and heat than pay for the design and manufacture of concept PCs.
Re:Only one problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
This can't be the product of a serious HP design effort...
Look at the pictures again and consider ergonomics.
Now let's talk design. Just because this is different from the 20 year old PC form factor doesn't make it `designed'. Look at the display. Why is only 50% of the object's area useful display? Why is there a big handle on the bottom of it? I suspect it serves some other function, but it looks like a handle to me. Maybe I can hang my keyboard on the monitor handle? And no patententing the keyboard hanger HP, thats my idea.
I suspect we are not looking at a design effort, but rather some engineers were tasked to show what a bluetooth maximized PC would look like and produced a minimal vision.
Questions for future consideration...
Re:Only one problem... (Score:2)
Plus the costs of having the DVD drive, etc. in the monitor will drive price probably way up.
Of course if you are going the integration way, why stop halfway? why not have the whole PC inside the display... wooops we get the long rumored LCD iMac, don't we?
Re:Problems with induction - you barbarian! (Score:2)
Another example of the dark side of PCs. The inertia for `the way we have always done it' is immense.
When I got my first iMac I was worried about the no-floppy. It was pointless. I have never wanted a floppy for any mac since then. I still use them on PCs that are too old to boot from CD or net. Got to get linux on there somehow.
Re:Problems with induction - hmm (Score:2)
Zip - it never entered my mind to use a zip disk. I have no use for cheap, unreliable storge (floppies), I certainly have no use for expensive unreliable storage.
Bootable CDs - my prefered way to install software. Fragility doesn't matter. I lose them or loan them. I just burn a new one each time I need one.
Bootable Network - I use this. If my NIC dies I replace it. I'm using Linux on these machines. I do not have a driver issue to deal with. If I did, I would just use a CD or CD-R to tote the driver over.
Everything is networked. All my valuable data moves around at night using rsync so it is stored on multiple machines. rsync is patient. Most users (image editors aside) don't make enough data that rsync won't catch up in a couple of hours at night, even on a modem.
You use "floppies" and "reliable" in the same sentence. I'll assume that is a typo.
You mention me using a costly horrible to upgrade box. I'm not sure what you mean there. I buy my wintel boxes for $400 (cheapest machine at BestBuy) and never upgrade them (ok, I do add RAM initially if I will be running gimp or such on it). The macs I usually buy low end machines on their 'end of model' sale and get a nice price on those as well.
Other than adding RAM or a new drive now and again I have only upgraded 1 machine in 20 years. I got a clocked doubled P180 for a P90 once. It wasn't really worth it. The rest of the machine was mostly obsolete and the machine just got bus bound. Paying a premium for upgradability is a waste of money in my book. Part of that comes from having multiple computers. I can always just demote all the machine, give away to oldest machine, and buy a new for the machine that needs CPU.
link to non-slashdotted page (Score:2, Informative)
Bigger is better! (Score:2)
What's so special about it? (Score:2, Insightful)
Blind solution - advantage of RF wireless over IR (Score:2)
For those of us that can see and need to be in the same room as the monitor, the range and less dependance on direction or line of sight of RF over infra-red is an advantage. For example, my IR mouse can't quite make it from the lounge to the top of the TV set, so the sensor has to sit on an object at the same height as the mouse about a metre in front of the TV.
One possibility, which I don't think has a commercial solution yet, is to connect a transmitter to the RF-out on a video card, have it tuned to a spare channel and use TV sets wherever you go as monitors. The frequencies for TV are at the top end of the MHz range, so a very similar piece of equipment to the small, low power FM transmitters should do to job. Picture quality will not be fantastic due to NTSC (not the same colour twice) and PAL limitations. For those of us with one TV a cable would be better.
coffee (Score:2, Funny)
RF keyboards? Not in a cube farm... (Score:2)
Intel marketing has been getting on my tits... (Score:3, Insightful)
"'Concept PC 2001' uses the power of the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor platform for future PC innovation."
What does that sentence MEAN?? How can a computer (even a Concept PC) use a platform to achieve future innovation?? Or is it just using a platform that's itself is a platform for future innovation? In that case, since when is a proccessor a platform for innovation? And lastly, what the hell does "platform for future PC innovation" mean in the first place???
Wireless Power (Score:3, Interesting)
So where's the wireless power [braincourse.com]?
Real concept PC would be rackmount for home. (Score:2, Interesting)
Note that rackmount of a 5U unit at least. I want the same upgrade possibilities as I have with my mid tower. The CPU unit does not need to be slim; costs consideration must come before space or even noise (to a limit of course).
Innovation abounds! (Score:2, Funny)
Devolution of the Computer Keyboard (Score:2)
Is it me, or have computer keyboards actually gotten crappier over the years? More keys, buttons, dials, and knobs. Fancy colors, new computer interfaces (USB, IEEE1394, bluetooth). However, the actual performance, functionality, and durability of computer keyboards has gone down hill over the past 10 years. The strange thing is that almost every other aspect of computers has improved significantly over the past 10 years. CPUs are god-like compared to those available 10 years ago. RAM is fast, plentiful, and costs next to nothing. Same goes for harddrives. Video displays have gotten larger, and have better quality.... etc... Hell, even the other major input device, the pointing device has improved (trackpoints, laser and mechanical mice, etc).
Keyboards on the other hand are degenerating into cheap pieces of crap. They no longer have crisp clean tactile feedback, which makes fast and accurate touch typing possible. Keystrokes often fail to register. Keys stick, and even sometimes fail to press. All in all, the modern keyboard fails at its most basic task: typing.
Why are keyboards getting worse?
Here are some of my theories:
So yeah, this Concept PC looks cool, and I am glad that overall, computer technology is improving, but I wish that the "few steps back" taken in the keyboard technology department didn't have to happen from generation to generation. Of course, some people still make and sell good keyboards [yahoo.com] with the high quality and durable capacitive aka buckling spring keyswitch technology.
18" LCD monitor - no way (Score:2)
Sony's 18.1" LCD display [sonystyle.com] is available now. Looks better, too.
Another sad attempt (Score:2)
Maybe they'll get it right in several years, just about on track for the general "PC now is Apple 10 years ago" rule.
Why is it that only Apple seems to be able to pull this off? They couldn't have hired all of the talented industrial designers in the world.
Cube (Score:2)
Re:This is good (Score:1)
Insert Sig Here.
Re:This is good (Score:2)
Re:This is good (Score:1)
HyperTransport vs. 3GIO is a valid comparison. See http://www.extremetech.com/article/0,3396,s=1005&
Bluetooth, on the other hand is in a completely different league. It's a wireless connect, primarily designed for simplicity, bluetooth chips cost something like $5. It's speed is something like 1Mbit/s. Contrast this with up to 10Gbit/s promised for 3GIO. That's a factor of 10000 difference in speed...
Re:Behold the power of the Slashdot Effect! (Score:1)
Equipped in their concept PC:
Windows XP Pro
Bluetooth
RF Wireless Keyboard and mouse
USB 2.0
ATI low profile Radeon 7500 AGP video card
DVI Interface LCD monitor
The new concept is that of wireless keyboard and mouse, and an 18" flat screen
LCD monitor to top things off. But adding to this, of course, is Intel's
latest processor, the Pentium 4. The whole concept is that of a better working
environment with the best technology too, but mainly to get the job done. The 2001 Concept PC uses Bluetooth technology to connect all the components and uses an RF wireless keyboard and mouse. The concept PC does not skimp on graphics either; utilizing a new ATI Radeon 7500 videocard with DVI output.
Will we see these new PC's on shelves soon? Not likely, as Intel and HP are
introducing new possibilities for PC's to the business and consumer, meaning
great things can come in small packages. Although, HP will be looking into
new ways of introducing a friendly computer to the desk at work/home. It's
a great idea in all, but will it be something the people are looking for?
More than likely. Consumers and businesses are always looking for better
ways to sit at a desk and make life more enjoyable for hard working people,
but not leaving out those who enjoy playing around.
What we don't see often in store bought computers is air flow consideration.
The Concept PC 2001 was built on the idea of better airflow by using aligned
airflow for better thermal performance, and validated in industry leading
low acoustics.
Wow, so here's a computer that is small, fewer cables, flat screen, better
cooling, and greater overall performance with Intel's Pentium 4 processor.
This may be something consumers are looking for, what we don't know as of
yet is the cost. Most of us can assume the same prices for most store bought
computers, with a little added cost for an LCD screen though.
Personally it's something I would not mind seeing on the shelves in the near
future. But as for upgradeability, we can expect the same as any other computer
on the shelves today.
By: Scott Mikules from ipKonfig.com
Re:Slashdotted already - Offtopic (Score:2)
-sam
Re:Slashdotted already - Offtopic (Score:2)
The reason the front page loads lightning fast is the same reason you get a static page around 5% of the time, instead of the dynamic one... MySQL's speed (and MySQL's crashing).
Re:Not impressed... (Score:2)
One reason not to is so you can upgrade those components separately. Their assumption is that you upgrade monitors less frequently than systems.