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Hardware

Are Smart Display's Worth The High Price? 14

Anonymous Howard writes "I've never understood the need for smart display's. It appears I'm not the only one. Here's an article that agrees with me, but even goes as far as calling smart displays a dumb idea. The only use I see for smart displays is in a business setting. But I still see better options, like laptops that connect to projectors, etc. What are the markets for smart displays and what are the targeted uses?"
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Are Smart Display's Worth The High Price?

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  • by ggwood ( 70369 ) on Wednesday March 19, 2003 @09:00PM (#5549051) Homepage Journal
    The (brief) article makes a couple really good points why not many people are going to adopt this now: first, you can use this *or* the computer it is connected to but not both. Second, it is really darn expensive. One could just buy a laptop.

    However, when something like this costs way, way less, it might be nice to bring to the kitchen with a recipe from the internet...or when take it to the store to buy the ingredients...or use it as a remote control for the TV or to program the VCR or into the garden to see if those worms look like the ones which eat tomatoes or just help the soil.

    All of this is predicated on a few things (which I would focus on if I were designing something like this): one it is light weight (and thus portable), cheap or, if not cheap at least very, very sturdy.

    Obviously it has to allow you to use your darn desktop as well - and it should have a long battery life and it should probably have really nice handwriting recognition and a very nice display (otherwise why not use something like a palm pilot form factor with 802.11b?).

    Sounds like it has a ways to go, but I could definately see using something very similar to this in the future.

    (Oh, of course it would have to be able to display equations properly which my palm never did. Ideally it would recognize all the greek alphabet as handwriting but I'm not holding my breath.)
  • by sketerpot ( 454020 ) <sketerpot&gmail,com> on Wednesday March 19, 2003 @10:06PM (#5549446)
    Sometimes it is better to do something and fail than never to have tried at all. One such area is science, in which any blind alley is one less that someone will have to go down. I think this is similar. Smart displays may or may not pay off, but there's a good chance that they will yield something worthwhile. Who knows?

    Anyway, there may be some applications....

  • The article mentions that you'll likely need a winXP desktop. Wouldn't a *nix desktop along with a laptop with wireless network running any OS with an X server work better for many?
    • I'm going to go off on a limb and mention that Microsoft's RDP performs way better over low bandwidth / high latency connections than X does. This seems to be in large part because applications under RDP are not stalled by round trip messages as they are with X. X applications exhibit extremely long load times and are for the most part totally unusable except on a fast low-latency local network. VNC doesn't even come close to the same level of responsiveness under the same network conditions. It tries v
  • Doh, if the smart displays had VNC [att.com] support, they could be pretty cool tools. Cross-platform, with unices - non-blocking for the desktops, a neat thing to have in a company plus if the prices were lower - Welcome back old times of one big server plus multiple terminals :) A good way to miniaturise your box is to put everything you don't need to carry around on some shelf and connect the rest wirelessly :)
  • I'm very tolerant of furriners who don't write the language so well. But when someone who calls himself "Editor" puts an apostrophe into a plural in a topic title, I despair at being surrounded by illiterates.

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