PC in a.... Sphere? 315
clemens writes "A Japanese manufacturer has come up with this spherical PC." I love the concept of your PC accidentally rolling off your desk. Doesn't that lime green one remind anyone else of Gundam?
"The only way for a reporter to look at a politician is down." -- H.L. Mencken
Death Star (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Death Star (Score:4, Funny)
Actually, that's where the DRM-Enforcement Module goes...
Creative. (Score:2)
Whether its tech specs are decent, I don't know. I can't read Japanese!
Re:Creative. (Score:3, Insightful)
It's cute, yes, but that's it. It provides no benefits.
For a better use of space try one of the tiny Shuttle barebones systems. I just built one of these, very nice indeed (SS51G).
Re:Creative. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Creative. (Score:4, Funny)
Brilliant! You showed us that a spherical computer is not efficient use of space. I feel so silly now.
Re:Creative. (Score:2)
I don't know about you, but for me, creating and inhabiting aesthetically pleasing environments is one of the basic goals of life, for which technology is a means.
I don't think so... (Score:5, Funny)
Cute != Aesthetically pleasing.
Bauhaus == Aesthetically pleasing.
Hello Kitty == Ugly and annoying as hell.
Re:Creative. (Score:2)
Re:Creative. (Score:2)
Re:Creative. (Score:3, Insightful)
Beowulf cluster (Score:3, Informative)
)(
and then we could imagine a beowulf cluster of these with out so much waste:
)(O)(O)(O)(O)(O)(O)(O)(
Re:Creative. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Creative. (Score:2)
"This account blacklists people who whine about karma."
Does this mean you blacklist yourself?
Oh, and while I'm at it:
http://www.fivefoot6.com/karma/index.html
Don't Panic! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't Panic! (Score:2)
Don't Panic (Score:5, Funny)
if it vibrated and (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Here you are (Score:2)
Jeez (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Jeez (Score:2)
In english... (Score:2, Informative)
and http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=6830 [theinquirer.net]
Deja vu (Score:4, Insightful)
Talk about an axe to grind! (Score:2)
Hamster Havoc? (Score:2)
Short english write-up (Score:4, Informative)
There's a very short description of this at theinquirer.net [theinquirer.net] found through mini-itx.com [mini-itx.com] where this is old news.
How very 1960's (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:How very 1960's (Score:2)
Call me hopelessly tacky, misguided, a fan of The Prisoner [imdb.com], or simply an (unwilling) product of the 1970's, but I still think those chairs are damn cool.
Having grown up in the "Space Age", all the futurists promised that we'd all get flying [americanroyalarts.com] cars [viewaskew.com], space travel would become commonplace, and we would all get to live on the moon or on orbital space stations. Universally, the images accompanying such prognostications were of sleek, clean, sweeping lines and curves; neo-art deco, if you will. You can see a prototypical example of this vision of the future in last half hour of the film Things To Come [imdb.com]. The interior of Klaatu's spaceship in The Day The Earth Stood Still [imdb.com] is another well-known example. Frank Lloyd Wright's architecture probably evokes this best. (It also probably doesn't help that I grew up in San Rafael, CA, just two miles away from this [greatbuildings.com], Frank Lloyd Wright's last public building commission.)
So I can't help it, but every time I see designs like that, it still evokes within me a vision of a bright future, where people are happy and prosperous, we're going to the stars, and everything looks darned cool.
Schwab
Re:How very 1960's (Score:2)
Note that most of the other examples you give are examples of good design rooted in the 1950's. Now, that I can live with.
Cooler (Score:2, Interesting)
Get a bunch of these.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Get a bunch of these.... (Score:4, Funny)
never mind.
Didn't Apple already do this? (Score:4, Funny)
Just glue together two iMacs [apple.com] together at the base and you have the same thing, plus dual CPUs and two screens (or would they be "legs"?).
Re:Didn't Apple already do this? (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
This may sound strange... (Score:2)
Were you to have the computer itself set near a fan or something and the "skin" of the case was a good material for heat transfer...you'd have a cool, efficient computer that takes up a minimum amount of desk space.
Cute, yes, but not nearly the best. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Cute, yes, but not nearly the best. (Score:2)
Oh yeah, I'm an anal retentive. Move along.
Burroughs Toaster-Shaped PC (Score:2)
Translation... (Score:4, Funny)
...courtesy of the fish [altavista.com]...
"...with spatula drawing formation..."
Re:Translation... (Score:2)
Very Cool! (Score:2)
Warning to Slashdotters (Score:2)
http://www.happyfunball.com/hfb.html
No matching monitor (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No matching monitor (Score:2)
Did you see how tacky it looks
Re:No matching monitor (Score:2)
I've got two cats.... (Score:3, Funny)
Happy Happy Fun Sphere (Score:5, Funny)
No power supply? (Score:2, Interesting)
Also the nice pictures of it on a desk, it's not turned on.. nor are any of the cables connected.
Seems to me it's a nice 'would be, could be' computer, but nothing that actualy functions
Is a fun concept though.. imagine the new generation of computer mods that could spawn from this
Re:No power supply? (Score:2)
They still forgot the blinking lights and cool glowing surface. Wonder if they could partially integrate a PC into a big lightning ball without it frying (touch, zap, on)?
a .5 inch hole saw and 10 minutes later... (Score:3, Funny)
It is Mini-ITX based (Score:2)
From the photos, it looks like a Mini-ITX based system, and the story is linked from the home page of min-itx.com [mini-itx.com]
Mini-ITX boards are produced by VIA, and generally have one of their low speed C3 CPUs. Many don't need active cooling. The motherboard also features the usual RAM, IDE, USB, and PCI slots, and will run most x86 operating systems. They are also substantially cheaper than conventional setups, because everything is integrated and they lack a CPU socket or expensive CPU.
There appear to be a great number of Mini-ITX based case moding projects out there, many linked from mini-itx.com. Enthusiasts have housed their systems in Toasters, bakerlite radios, Sun Boxen, Playstations, etc. The sphere was only a matter of time.
Pyramid due out next year (Score:2)
Having Heavy Metal flashbacks... (Score:3, Funny)
If you refuse, you die; she dies; everybody dies! (Score:2)
New slashdotting term? (Score:4, Funny)
Translation (Score:5, Informative)
-------------
It looks just like a soccerball? Display of spherical PC sample has begun.
Sculpting technology used to form aluminium into sphere; utilizes Mini-ITX motherboard
It seems that a shocking new type of PC is about to be released, the first for a while. This time, it's a spherical PC, named the "Sphere PC (ZxL Artemis series)".
Leading up to its release, it is on display at PC-Shop Wakamatsu (Translator's note: A shop in Akihabara that often deals in slightly unusual items) from the 20th to the 22nd.
- Formed using sculpting technology
The "Sphere PC" is a product developed jointly by Rupo, a company selling PC cases and parts, and Jion, a company specializing in planning, designing and creating peripherals. The shop is displaying two types, a green model and a silver model. The silver model, in particular, bears a striking resemblance to the mysterious sphere in the movie "Sphere". If you didn't know what it is, you'd almost certainly never guess that it's a PC.
By the way, Jion is a company formed by several members of Technobird's development staff, responsible for the TB-2000 early aluminium case. They have been in charge of development and design of Lupo's other custom cases.
The sphere is made entirely of aluminium. As it is an unusual shape, it was handmade by craftsmen using "spatula squeezing" (Translator's note: Really!), a traditional Japanese method of crafting metal. The unusual shape stands out, but on top of that, the textured surface resulting from it being handmade is also unique.
- It splits into an upper and lower half
Its main specifications are: an EPIA Mini-ITX mother board made by VIA, a 40GB hard drive, and an external 200W power supply. However, these made be subject to change. It also includes a slim optical drive. Pressing a button on the side of the case causes the upper half to rise, allowing access to the drive tray.
The case contains the motherboard and hard drive in the lower half, with the optical drive located in the middle. The upper half is empty.
The price is yet to be decided, but the shop says that, as a barebone kit, it is likely to be priced at around 50,000 yen (Translator: ~$US400). It is scheduled to be shipped in January 2003.
- Gullwing PC also in development
Rupo is planning on releaseing a range of other unique products after this. An announced item is a gullwing PC containing a 400W power supply, also planned to be released in january 2003.
Re:Translation (Score:4, Funny)
If you did it by hand, nice job. I'm learning Japanese right now, and having a helluva time getting all the kanji embedded in my head. If you are non-native Japanese, what was your learning mechanism?
Alrighty, enough off topicness:
The silver one actually looks cool. I wonder how hard of a time it would be to bring one back through customs.
"What is this, sir?"
"It's a computer."
"Right... I need you to follow me."
"Ok, but why did you just hand me vaseline?"
this is where wireless would shine (Score:2)
Heat problem (Score:3)
Well, you don't need to worry about your trendy computer going out of style, because it's going to die soon!
Make it a hanging PC! (Score:3)
Only problem - some fool will go hang up five of them and make a giant Newton's Cradle...
Re:Make it a hanging PC! (Score:2)
Re:Make it a hanging PC! (Score:2)
ROTFLMAO It looks like my BarBQue grill. (Score:3, Funny)
Consequences Thereof (Score:3, Funny)
"Your... Oh! Well, see
[at the lanes]
"Biff, any idea why your ball hit the ten-pin and exploded, man?"
Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball.... (Score:2, Funny)
Pacman (Score:5, Funny)
(No, this is not an "In Soviet Russia" joke!)
Hehehe, you farkers. (Score:2)
both ugly, and stupid. (Score:3, Insightful)
insert (Score:2)
you can use one (Score:2)
Haro Genki! Haro Genki! (Score:2)
A green orb! (Score:3, Funny)
Time to Summon Taarna...
1 point to anybody who gets that refrence(2 if they are under 20)
Just one more problem for System Administrators (Score:2)
You just know it'll get stuck behind the fridge or under the sofa too.
Don't mistake it for a bowling ball. (Score:2)
You could truly keep track of your lifetime averages.
Leave it to the japanese.... (Score:2)
This looks like a case mod project (Score:2)
Like the hemispherical Mac, it looks a lot better with no cables connected.
Those are some big balls, here's the theme (Score:2)
God's gift to ballroom notoriety
I always fill my ballroom
The event is never small
The social pages say I've got
The biggest balls of all
CHORUS:
I've got big balls
I've got big balls
And they're such big balls
Dirty big balls
And he's got big balls And she's got big balls
But we've got the biggest balls of them all
And my balls are always bouncing
My ballroom always full
And everybody cums and cums again
If your name is on the guest list
No one can take you higher
Everybody says I've got
Great balls of fire
CHORUS
Some balls are held for charity
And some for fancy dress
But when they're held for pleasure
They're the balls that I like best
My balls are always bouncing
To the left and to the right
It's my belief that my big balls
Should be held every night
CHORUS
And I'm just itching to tell you about them
Oh we had such wonderful fun
Seafood cocktail, crabs, crayfish...
Ball sucker
I sure hope... (Score:2)
I still don't understand why Amuro would take such pride in building a dumb robot that does nothing more than roll around, bleep "Hello, Amuro... Hello, Amuro.... Genki..." all day and pal around with a bunch of even more annoying little kids....
I also want to know why the heck robotics engineers keep building and rebuilding the damn things in the future, as newer model but equally stupid Haros keep showing up decades later.
(For those who don't know, Haro is a roughly-volleyball sized and shaped, green, semi-sentient robot that flits around on mechanical ear/wings and rolls around spouting inane babble. It (he?) appears in various TV series and movies in the Mobile Suit Gundam Universal Century continuum... and even more bizarrely in the near-totally-unrelated Gundam SEED TV series that began airing this year.... For more info, you can check out this mirror [b0x.com] of the (sadly no longer around) Gundam Project's FAQ.... For more info just do a search [google.com] for "Mobile Suit Gundam" on Google [google.com].
South Park? (Score:2)
MIKE WAZOWSKI! (Score:2)
All this needs is a pair of arms and legs and googly eyes.
This is plagiarism (Score:2, Funny)
Opportunity for Apple! (Score:2)
Cool. Get 2 in 1. Looks ugly AND wastes space! (Score:2)
WHY? (Score:2)
From what I can see, the spherical case increases the amount of volume and incidentally, empty space taken up by the thing.
As for cooling, the sphere has the least surface area for a given volume, so no advantages there.
If one has a mini-ITX form factor motherboard, why not do something intelligent with it?
The hazard of mechanical impact if the thing falls out of its stand is sort of obvious. Did you know Japan is earthquake country?
With a built-in LCD monitor, it might manage cool , but there isn't one.
I don't see this selling even in Japan.
Re:Cute (Score:2)
Re:Cute (Score:2)
No angles - very important! Even the cracks present a problem... Randolph Carter found out about this - the hard way.
Re:Cute (Score:5, Funny)
Humor. Bring back the old bowling jokes.
Re:Cute (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Cute (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Cute (Score:3, Interesting)
A new way of networking, an enhancement on sneaker-net. You pass the whole computer.
[insert segway to semi serious thought]
Which is an interesting concept in itself - you do not send just the data packets, but the computational packages as well. This would not be useful so much on earth, but would be more important in interplanetary civilization.
Re:Cute (Score:2)
Yeah, cause those scooters are really... ah screwit, you meant 'segue', ok?
Re:Cute (Score:2)
well I didn't havwe enough caffeine, and so decided to go with a bad pun.
[cue image of a high tech basketball team on segway scooters]
One tip - Don't Dribble the Ball!
Re:Cute (Score:2)
Nice idea. Until someone not coordinated enough to make a behind-the-back, no-look pass tries one.
Boss: "McDermott! What the hell happened to the Morgenstern account?"
McDermott: "Well, sir, ever since we got these basketball shaped PCs, everyone around the office has been calling Fred Johnson 'Magic', so he figured..."
It's Ornamental! (Score:3, Insightful)
And it makes next year's Jack-'o-Lantern mod trivial.
Re:It's Ornamental! (Score:2)
I'm now free to hot glue various components to a piece of particle board and duct tape it to the wall behind the door. Now all it needs is some cinderblock and it'll fit in just right.
Re:Cute (Score:3, Funny)
I can just see a case mod for this that turns it into a disco ball.
--kalimar
Re:Cute (Score:2)
Though it's a completely worthless addition, it would be better to me if it glowed lightly. Perhaps a series of sub-surface indicator lights (like panels that are dark and completely indecipherable until the light behind them comes on) would be a good addition.
I don't think it would work well with a traditional interface, but you could use a laptop system, put a battery inside with only a few plugs (power and an external port bar, maybe) and put LCD screens on the outside - it would have to be relatively light still.
Anyway, I'm babbling now.
Re:Now that is cool... (Score:5, Funny)