Future Computer


It seems to many of us these days that the peace of technologies change is so great that it outstrips our imaginations-just as soon as we can concieve of the next nifty electronic gadget we'd like to have, we find out that somebody has already built it.

Miniaturized devices such as cameras and telephone are examples of now-common technologies that just a few years ago most of us rarely encountered outside the ficitional world of spy thrillers. Miniaturized personal computers are the next logical step, but many readers might be surprised to learn that a plan for PC components housed in devices the sizes and shape of ballpoint pens was showcased by a major electronics company over two years ago.
At the 2003 ITU Telecom World exhibition held in Geneva, the Tokio-based NEC corportion displayed a conceptual prototype of what they dubbed a "Pen-style Personal Networking Gadget Package," or P-ISM. As NEC described the P-ISM:P-ISM is a gadget package including five functions: a pen-style cellular phone with a handwriting data input function, virtual keyboard, a very small projector, camera scanner,and personal ID key with cashless pass function. P-ISMs are connected with one another through short-range wireless technology. The whole set is also connected to the internet through the cellular phone function. This personal gadget in a minimalistic pen style enables the ultimate ubiquitous computing.

The P-ISM system was based on "low-cost electronic perception technology" produced by the San Jose, California,firm of Canesta,Inc., developers of technologies such as the "virtual keyboard".We've dubbed this item"party true" beacause, as far as we know, no functional prototype of P-ISML system was built or displayed. The items shown in these pictures were more on the level of props created to show off a concept for something that might be built.

May 19, 2008

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