What If
You Could Have?…
What if you could have a laptop computer that was ready to use
the moment you turned it on? What if this laptop used so
little power that it could operate for several days with no recharging? What
if this laptop had a display that you could easily read outdoors
in full sunlight? And what if you could buy such a product
for around $150?
And what if all this wasn’t just idle speculation? What
if such a product was within a month or two of reality? Now,
do I have your attention? Sounds intriguing, doesn’t
it?
At this year’s SID Business Conference, I had invited Mary
Lou Jepsen to present the luncheon talk. She is the Chief
Technology Officer at One Laptop per Child in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. The goal of this organization is
to develop computer-aided education for parts of the world where
there are few financial resources for purchasing currently available
high technology devices. This is a wonderful goal and deserves
the support from all of us. However, as I listened to her
luncheon talk at the Business Conference, the thought kept popping
into my head that the laptop she was describing would be a very
nice electronic appliance to have for my own use. At the
time that seemed like a rather selfish way of thinking, but isn’t
it even more wonderful that those in greater need are not being
relegated to something that is of less value than the rest of us
would wish to have?
Since then I have had occasion to follow up on how this product
is coming along and my convictions are growing that there is something
here that goes beyond the admirable goal of supporting the economically
less fortunate children of the world. And for the very selfish
reasons stated above, I want one of these laptop computers all
for myself. I’ll even buy two and send one to a needy
person if I can keep the other one for my own use.
Frankly, I am tired and frustrated of having to sit on an airplane
or in a gate area while waiting many minutes for my laptop to get
itself ready to do something useful. And then of course having
to wait for another several minutes at shutdown. I’m
tired of having to rush to finish what I am doing when the low-battery
light begins to flash -- invariably while I am in the middle of
a really important thought that I want to capture before it evaporates. That
happens after less than two hours of operation on my current top-brand-name
computer. The LC display that I have on this machine
is really not all that bad, but it is still not adequate for use
in most outdoor environments.
Then today, in our local paper, I read what I consider to be the “last
straw” in all of this unhelpful complexity that has beset
our computers. This article quoted a representative from
Dell who stated that the upgrade to the new Windows Vista would
most likely require more that the one Gigabyte of memory that is
currently being recommended. His conclusion was that Vista
could require as much as two Gigabytes to operate properly. And
I thought that 512 Megabytes was a whole bunch! And that
is just for the operating system!
Is all this complexity necessary for the simple tasks that I typically
do such as reading e-mails, searching the Internet, writing word
documents, and occasionally preparing a presentation? What
is happening here? Why do I need an operating system requiring
two Gigabytes of memory to do these straightforward tasks? I
could do almost all of them in the “good old days” using
DOS. And even if I do more involved projects such as image
manipulation shouldn’t those be a controlled by whatever
software I am using? Isn’t my operating system supposed
to just let me load programs and execute them when I wish to do
so? And what effect will this extra complexity have on how
long it takes my computer to boot up? Will I now have to
wait for more than ten minutes?
This unbounded rush to add ever more features and complexity clearly
needs a balancing influence. Perhaps that is why I
am so enthusiastic and supportive of the One Laptop per Child effort. It
will help all the really needy children of the world but it may
also give the rest of us not-so-poor and not-so-childlike users
something that will be as exciting and become as popular as cell
phones and iPods. I for one am going to keep close
watch on the development of this product. I want to be among
the first in line to buy one if and when that becomes possible.
If you would like to enlighten me on your own wishes and predictions
for the next generation of laptop computers -- and the displays
they will have -- you may contact me directly from this site, by
e-mail at silzars@attglobal.net,
by telephone at 425-898-9117, or by fax at 425-898-1727.
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