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wbcliton
05-07-2004, 09:43 AM
I believe the future Pocket PC should combine the perfomance of computer notebooks and the small-size of Pocket PC.
The following article from "popsci" is one such case.
Although the wireless connection it choose is Bluetooth, which certainly can be replaced by better ones. And the handheld-mode display, which is too small, can be made into a convertible one like its desktop-mode display with a size of 3.5"-4".

http://www.popsci.com/popsci/images/computer/comp0504nextpda_A_499.gif
Illustrations by Kenn Brown and Chris Wren


http://i.timeinc.net/popsci/images/computer/comp0504nextpda_B_488.gif
Open up the handheld-mode display panel (top left) to turn the PDA into a videophone (top right). Unfurl the desktop-mode display: Polymers along the flexible OLED edges stiffen when an electric charge is applied, keeping it open and flat.

Illustrations by Kenn Brown and Chris Wren


No. 1: THIS PDA IS A REAL POCKET PC

by Andrew Zolli

The handheld "smart communicator" will have the memory and processing power of today's best desktop computers, and it'll display on any nearby screen. The virtual laptop is pocket-size.

Call it the smart communicator. In a few years, the functions in today's personal digital assistant (PDA)--notebook, to-do list, calendar, contacts--will be the least of it. Thanks to a variant of Moore's Law that says data-storage density doubles every 18 months, tomorrow's smart communicator will hold 250GB--enough to store 55 movies.

Indeed, video--both viewing and recording--will be a killer app. One reason: "There will be phenomenal leaps forward in display technology," says Hank Nothhaft, chairman and CEO of Danger Labs, maker of the SideKick PDA. Say good-bye to your PDA's power-greedy liquid crystal display (LCD). Say hello to the smart communicator's energy-efficient, organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display. OLEDs use organic materials that emit light when electrically charged, so there's no need for a backlight. Already found in some cellphones, OLEDs offer a wider viewing angle and faster refresh rate than LCDs, improving the look of everything from games to business graphics.

Another leap: high-speed wireless connectivity. As data-transfer speeds of 400 Kbps become standard, high-quality streaming video will become a reality. The potential of Bluetooth, a wireless technology with a range of about 30 feet, will also bloom on the smart communicator, giving it the ability to connect to remote keyboards and displays. "You'll carry your whole life in your PDA," says Scott Summit, designer of the award-winning Tapwave Zodiac PDA. "And any device next to it--a computer, a TV--will reconfigure to run from it." Business travelers will be able to use it with screen-and-keyboard combos in hotel rooms and airports, where the device's expanded mode, complete with projected keyboard, might be awkward.

The smart communicator will have its own nervous system: sensors that assess the outside world and adjust the device's behavior accordingly. A built-in RFID (radio-frequency identification) reader will pick up data stored on RFID tags in nearby objects, so the PDA will automatically embed identification labels in the photos it takes. The onboard eye scanner will let you navigate pages with a mere glance at the menu bar. Light, heat and motion sensors will enable the device to know whether it's in your pocket or your hand, and pump up its cellphone's ring tone if needed. A tilt sensor will trigger the display to shift between portrait and landscape mode, and it'll offer finger-free scrolling. The microphone will measure ambient noise and adjust the volume to compensate in a loud restaurant. The GPS will detect when you're nearing home, and the communicator will signal ahead to turn on the heat or AC. Once you arrive, the Bluetooth network will automatically synchronize data between your communicator and your PC.

With so much personal information packed in it, you'd think your smart communicator would be worth 10 times its weight in platinum to an identity thief. And it would be, if not for the combination of software encryption and biometrics it will employ to keep criminals out. If you lose it, the thumbprint-sensing power switch will cause the screen to display a message asking the finder to return it to you. It'll also secretly transmit its location via any available wireless network, so you can track it on a Web-based map. Don't be surprised if the map's blinking green dot is over your house--it just means you need to retrieve your smart communicator from under the sofa cushion.

Battery Blues

Whatever the super PDA looks like by 2010, everything in it will be smaller, faster and stronger. Everything, that is, but the battery. It'll be incrementally better than today's standard battery. You'll have to wait another five years for a real pocket-size power revolution. That's when membrane technology should increase the surface-area-to-volume ratio of fuel cells enough to make them practical for mobile use. And better fuel-flow management will help solve one of fuel cells' most stubborn problems: handling variable power demands. Another possible solution is combining a fuel cell with a battery. The battery would supply power to the device, while the fuel cell would keep the battery juiced.

--Mark Frauenfelder


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Aerestis
05-07-2004, 10:34 AM
I would give batteries a little longer than five years :) This idea is cool and all but I have a feeling that this type of technology is a little futher away than we might hope. For enthusiasts like us, it makes sense to pump out tons of high tech junk for us to buy... But we're a really small market. However I think eventually this will appeal to a more massive market.

But the battery thing... I don't know about membrane technology. Like a lot of other technologies, it's really cool. But it's also not really suited for casual use, or it's potential doesn't reach very far, like a lot of cool types of technology. It might be a very long time until we see significantly better batteries. For now I think we will just have to wait for more efficient hardware. Which, ultimately, seems to be much more common than improvements in power supplies.

Zack Mahdavi
05-07-2004, 04:04 PM
Wow, I can't wait for the day when you won't practically ever have to worry about batteries in a high tech device... I want my device to consume battery power like that of a universal remote. I'd pay anything (okay, no I won't.. :)) for a battery that lasts more than a month on a single charge.

Ripper014
05-07-2004, 04:05 PM
Sorry I don't consider this a handheld... it is more like a very portable laptop, that you can't use on your lap... Maybe you could call it a portable desktop..???

The screen looks to small to be used as a handheld device. The concept is interesting... and would be great if it had the processing power of a modern day desktop machine... as it is it would only be viable if you had the desktop space to set it up.

Though my PocketPC is not as robust... I do have the freedom to use it just about anywhere... Just my thoughts...

Duddy
05-10-2004, 01:09 AM
I consider it a hybrid of future technolgies that are unavailable to us at the moment (except of course the OLED displays).

I would not buy this though, if it had everything I ever needed in a portable device, then there would be an end to my passion. :mrgreen:

Steven Cedrone
05-10-2004, 03:41 AM
Consolidating threads, please post here... (http://www.pocketpcthoughts.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=243458)

Steve