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What happened to the box? Looking at the ViewSonic VPC100
Technology Lifestyle
What happened to the box? Looking at the ViewSonic VPC100 | What happened to the box? Looking at the ViewSonic VPC100 |
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| by David Heath | |
| Tuesday, 22 September 2009 | |
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After a long history in monitors, ViewSonic has expanded their offering to include full PCs. Shipping with WinXP Home edition, this PC-in-a-monitor is definitely for the 'stylish' market. Featured Whitepaper
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Open the VPC100 shipping box and you'll find just three major components – a flat-screen 18.5" monitor, mouse and keyboard (along with a quick-start guide and restore CD). That's it. Plug in the (strangely PS/2) keyboard and mouse, turn it on and you have a fully-functional PC. Just 35mm deep, the display unit houses an Intel Atom-based processor, 1GB RAM, a 160GB hard disk and 1.3M pixel web cam. Equipped with 802.11/b/g wireless and gigabit Ethernet, a writeable DVD unit, 4 x compact camera card reader and 4 free USB ports this wide-screen (1366 x 768) unit seems ideal for a variety of low-horsepower uses. Unfortunately that describes the problem with this unit. Intel's Atom range of processors is intended for low-powered uses – Netbooks and the like are a typical application. The trade-off is in performance – it takes lots of electricity to be a blazingly fast Excel machine. This unit doesn't use much electricity. On the contrary however, a web browser takes very little electricity; and this more than anything else defines the place for this unit – for those organisations reliant on cloud-based computing, this is an ideal solution. This is also a Henry Ford device – "you can have it in any colour you like as long you like black." |
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