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Corpus Callosum is written by a psychiatrist at a small community hospital somewhere in midwestern USA. Email to cc.scienceblogger at gmail dot com.


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« Consumer Safety Does NOT Equal Homeland Security? | Main | The Next Presidential Candidate Debate »

Pico Projector

Category: ComputingEnergy
Posted on: October 31, 2007 12:33 PM, by Joseph j7uy5

pico-projector.jpgThis is a pico-projector from Texas Instruments.  The idea is to have a device that can project an image onto a screen, using a very small device such as a PDA.  Right now the usable image size is about 15 to 20 inches.  They hope to scale it up to 40 inches.

I suspect that they envision this as a solution for small sales presentations and the like.  Personally, I'd like to see it investigated for use in mainstream computing.  Imagine the typical usage of an office computer: word processing, email, maybe a small spreadsheet.  Why fire up a desktop machine that will use 300+ watts, when all you really need is a PDA?  


Right now, I am using a laptop computer that is on a roll-top desk.  The back of the recessed area of the desk is in shadow.  I could slap some white glossy contact paper in there, and project an image on it.  If the resolution were sufficient, a 15 or 20 inch image would be sufficient for pretty much anything.  The contrast ratio probably would not be sufficient for image manipulation, but most people don't do that at the office.  

It probably would even be sufficient for casual watching of those little YouTube videos, although it probably would not be good for watching bigger or lengthier videos.  But in an office setting, most people probably shouldn't be doing that, anyway.  

Does this matter?  It matters a lot.  To illustrate, let me tell a story.  In the 1980's the University of Michigan  needed a new hospital.  They had a monster building designed and built.  It was nice.  However, from the time that it was designed, to the time it was ready for operation, computer became much more commonplace.  The heat production from these machines was not accounted for it the original design.

The first summer the hospital  opened, they had a serious problem keeping the place cool.  As I recall, they even had enormous blocks of ice shipped in to help cool it.  Even now, they sometimes have problems cooling the main data center in the basement.

Computer manufacturers are making an effort to decrease power requirements, but the marketing departments are not doing enough to educate consumers and promote energy saving attributes of the products.


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The U of M Hospital also used little wheeled robots to make deliveries down on the first sub-basement. Unfortunately, I couldn't ride on them, because they would stop moving whenever I tried.

Posted by: stumpy | October 31, 2007 1:37 PM

Add this to an all-in-one keyboard, and you have a full computer.
http://www.cybernetman.com/default.cfm?DocId=602

(I'm not associated with that site, but I'm willing to point them out for the simple reason that they sell their machines also without Windows.)

Posted by: Lassi Hippeläinen | October 31, 2007 1:50 PM

Remember Zardoz? The central computer interfaces were a ring that projected the display on any handy surface nearby. In 1974. Yes, fictional, but like the trek data cards that became 3 1/2" floppies, or trek communicators that became cell phones, or the roll-out screens from (insert name of TV scifi show here ? anybody remember it?) that are now being shown in Germany, monochrome at first but color to come - it certainly seems that scifi visual dreams do lead to realities when the youngster grow up.

So what is in our movies now that we can look forward to? Ideas anyone?

PS: I want one...

Posted by: david1947 | November 1, 2007 7:37 AM

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