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Smaller
Objects: Shrinking
The PC
Amidst
the not-very-crowded or exciting (but very hot) floor of TECHXPO
in New York City this week, and all of its accompanying showcases,
demos, announcements, and briefings, one of the strongest
drumbeats was around new form factors for computing devices. On
the theory that smaller is better, one could see mini-sized
clamshell machines everywhere, ranging from lighter notebooks to
bigger Blackberries. Every
business and consumer electronics vendor seemed to have some –
NEC, HPQ, Sony, Toshiba, Sharp, Fujitsu – the list was endless.
All
seem to have three things in common:
The
height of the pricing ridiculousness, from my point of view, was a
Transmeta-based little prototype, about 3 x 4” and less than an
inch thick that was a full Windows XP, 256 Mb computer with a 10
GB Hard drive. It has
nearly every connector imaginable, including USB, Firewire,
802.11b and Bluetooth. It’s
called OQO (www.oqo.com) and it
can work as a touch-screen based handheld or be plugged in to a
notebook or desktop (they think of these as peripherals), with the
full computer always with its user.
I thought of it as the first small, thick client.
The problem (for me) is the price, estimated at $1200-1500.
We’d guess it would have to come in below $1,000 to sell
in any quantity. Of
course there were lots of others possibilities on display.
Flat was in, ranging from flat screens of every size
(preferably large) for desktop systems and notebooks to tablet
designs and hybrids which were both notepads AND tablets, with
swiveling, dual purpose (keyboard to display, or write on tablet)
screens. Architectural
variations were also on view – most of these mobile objects are
designed to be used, as is the Palm, as satellites to a desktop or
laptop computing environment, synching for storage and updated
information. A few,
like the OQO assume you must have your entire (personal) computing
environment with you all the time.
Others, like one of the Microsoft tablet designs, is really
a kind of elaborate remote display – it is simply an accessory
for a PC running applications somewhere else in its physical
environment (Microsoft expects this to be in your home). The message is that choices abound. And that’s a good thing. Comments or Questions: Send Email to
opinions@wohl.com
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