Slashdot Mirror


Concept PC 2001

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.

5 of 273 comments (clear)

  1. Non-Wireless Monitor? by bwindle2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Maybe its just me, but I didn't see anything about a wireless monitor..."DVI Interface LCD monitor" "and an 18" flat screen LCD monitor to top things off".

  2. The Cats Will Be Very Upset by Quarters · · Score: 5, Funny

    No cables to play with and/or chew to bits. If I can't offer my computer to them as a sacrifice they'll make a beeline to the A/V gear cables.

  3. Re:and power? by MindStalker · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well you can easily beam it through microwaves, and run a battery for times when the beam is crossed. Though the cat would QUICKLY learn not to cross the beam. Anyways untill we learn how to do subspace power transportation. I think the fun way would be to have 2 how swap batteries in it, and make the batteries with robot legs which are smart enough to walk over to their recharge station when they get low. And walk back and redock with your computer once filled. Get a bunch of these put the recharge station across the room and put up obstacles for it to cross. And you could have a fun time watching your pet batteries do their little labor walks. After a while it will start to feel like warcraft gold miners in your own home :)

  4. Just Fabulous by Francis · · Score: 5, Funny

    I have enough trouble with finding my remote.

    Now I can lose my keyboard, mouse, monitor and CPU. This is definately progress.

    --

    --
    #include <malloc.h>
    free(your.mind);
  5. Re:Only one problem... by victim · · Score: 5, Insightful
    First off, design is cheap. Divide design cost by 1,000,000 computers and it vanishes. Second, problem is that PCs are designed. They are designed to minimize production costs while still being marketable. When people say paying for design they frequently mean paying for better usability, longevity, or aesthetics at the expense of low cost.

    This can't be the product of a serious HP design effort...

    Look at the pictures again and consider ergonomics.
    • In the first picture (tall skinny) your right knee is going to be bashing into the CPU.
    • In the second picture the helpful model has turned to face his cpu box which has no user interface funcations at all and will be twisting his head to the right all day to see the monitor.
    • 3rd picture, not enough context to tell. Looks like it is back in knee bash position. Why is this cpu box taking up my desk? The CD is in the screen after all.

    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...
    • Why isn't their a bluetooth headset there. Integrate my music grade headphones, my voice control mic, and my telephone. Give me voice dialing while you are at it.
    • Why isn't my PDA sitting there syncing through the bluetooth? Aren't we trying to sell a vision? show me!
    • Why am I looking at the same old cubical design? You just took away 16" of monitor depth yet you are showing me a cube designed with a corner desk to hold deep monitors. This monitor is incompatible with corner desks! Revisit that. Shrink the cube or use the space. $20/sqft/year. Use it or lose it.
    • I don't want to hassle with batteries. My freaking electric toothbrush charges inductively by sitting on a special base. Wacom powers their pointers and mice by wireless power transfer. Give me a little power mat I can place my keyboard an mouse on that will charge them. Make sure their battery can go a couple of days so I can forget once in a while, but let them recharge when idle. Consider solar power. It works for calculators in offices. Do my headset too while you are at it.
    • Where is my video conferencing camera? Stick it in my display like a little pointable eyeball. you've got enough room! and give me a little shutter I can flip over it so I don't feel watched all the time. maybe one of those round things in the display is a camera and one is a speaker?