My PC dependency really hit me hard when my home desktop and my laptop simultaneously decided to go belly-up. While I'm pretty beholden to our
IT experts at the office, at home, I'm the help desk. I've been scrambling to
try to resuscitate both machines, particularly since my kids completely rely
on the PC and the Internet for school
projects. Things were so unstable, I
nagged the kids to save frequently onto
USB sticks. That way, anticipating the
next crash, at least their current work
would be salvageable.
As much as I hate to throw in the towel, I'm ready to take the machines into
the shop and plead for help. But when it
comes to hard-disk recovery, I'm afraid
the prognosis won't be bright. In fact, my
errant PC experiences have got me
thinking about Digital Technology Editor
Daniel Harris' recent article forecasting
PCs without hard drives (see "Mainstream Magnetic Storage Gets The
Boot").
MYONE LAPTOP—NO HARD DRIVE
Laptops without hard drives have been in the news as the One Laptop Per
Child project (OLPC, also known as "the $100 laptop") becomes
reality, bringing computers to kids in the developing world. Prototypes of the laptop, the "XO," are now up and running, with production runs expected later this year.
OLPC chairman Nicholas Negroponte has marketed the XO
directly to ministries of education, which will "distribute them like
textbooks." He has said full production will begin when orders hit
5 million units. Libya's recent order for 1.2 million XOs follows on
1 million-unit orders from Brazil, Argentina, Nigeria, and Thailand, bringing that magic number into view.
Negroponte, former head of MIT's Media Lab, says low costs
are achieved by the high volumes and by "getting the fat out of
the systems. Today's laptops have become obese. Two-thirds of
their software is used to manage the other third, which mostly
does the same functions nine different ways."
According to specs on the OLPC's Web site (www.laptop.org),
the XO is a Linux-based machine with a 7.5-in. dual-mode display—a full-color, transmissive DVD mode and a black-and-white
sunlight-readable reflective option. It has a 366-MHz processor
(an AMD Geode GX-500) and 128 Mbytes of DRAM, with 512
Mbytes of flash memory and three USB 2.0 ports.
The laptop also has built-in 802.11b/g
Wi-Fi as well as mesh networking capabilities (developed at MIT) so each laptop can
talk to its nearest neighbors. It has multimedia capabilities too, with an Analog
Devices AD1888 audio decoder and a
640-by-480 resolution video camera.
Negroponte says the XOs can "do most
everything, except store huge amounts of
data." This might be a good thing in the
long run. Considering all the music, photos, and documents I haven't backed up
on my sickly PCs, I'm thankful for the
decentralized backup I do have, like the
gig in the Gigabeat music player and the
1-Gig card in the digital camera.
The storage paradigm is certainly shifting away from the PC. Video can be stored
on a hard-disk recorder, music on the
portable music player, and documents on the Internet via Google
documents. Even business applications can "pay by the drink"
and be hosted off site by Amazon Web Services.
ENGINEERING TV
Still, the PC remains the hub for all
our digital systems, and nothing yet matches its ability to bridge
applications and to multitask. If you want to take a break from
your engineering design work and click over to check the price
on your stock options (or, barring that, sports scores or perhaps
some online shopping), the PC provides our window to the world.
To add a new option to your multitasking, and to further our
mission as engineering educators, Penton Media's Design Engineering and Electronics OEM magazines present Engineering TV.
You can access the latest episode from our home page at www.electronicdesign.com. Or, go straight to EngineeringTV.com
to view episodes of your choosing or subscribe to an RSS feed.
With new segments produced semi-weekly, the goal of each 5minute episode is to take you "under the hood" for an engineer's
perspective on projects like the OLPC (watch for an interview with
Nicholas Negroponte) and other newsworthy technologies. This
month, look for our reports from CES, including segments on
Honda's ASIMO robot, the NextGen digital home, the latest
Whirlpool connected refrigerator, and more.