Oh nice… your family has a Grandfather Computer

Reading this NYT article, it certainly seems that the day will be shortly upon us when one might expect to hear that, desktop PCs, at least in the home will be antiques that a few know how to build and a few more know how to setup. The rest of us will see them as connections to another era. But is this really going to happen? Well I can see the day coming in homes – where there is one static machine handling mass storage, networking and other utility like functions, while netbooks connect into it and the ‘net to get resources, dock to larger displays to edit photos and video and generally do everything that the “desktop” used to do. I can also see it happening in the office, where dumb clients will connect to Terminal Servers, saving space and support time. But what about the classroom?

This is the one place that I don’t hold up much hope. Schools have invested in large spaces to become labs, these spaces could host thin clients, but then they would bear little resemblance to what students see at home, even though it might be what they will one day see in the office. Schools are unlikely to hand out even the cheapest ‘netbook for fears of loss or some other computer related missive (perhaps as much an accounting issue as an admin/policy one), so kids are stuck again with old technology that is neither here nor there.

Granted, this is very pessimistic and there are many teachers and instructors out there who are already making use of laptops, netbooks and handsets, but the majority are not. Between lack of time, interest and training, it will take quite a bit to get teachers to adopt technology en mass.

But … and hold on to your hats for this one… maybe the Smart Board or some similar touch/pen input technology that is a computer but not a computer is what is needed (considering what a doubter I am of current smartboard technology, this is quite the admission for me). If a touch display can take the place of the classroom computer, allowing students and teachers to interact physically with the content that is stored locally or in the cloud, schools may just have a chance. It would be great if teachers, used to using a black/white board could “migrate” to using this touchboard to write out notes by hand, or to display notes that are already prepared without having to use a special pen. It would be even better if the teacher could then send this information out to the students by dragging and dropping, with the materials landing on some personal device.

If something like that could happen, then the classroom has a chance, otherwise, it will end up as the museaum bar none for the grandfather computer.

Comments

4 responses to “Oh nice… your family has a Grandfather Computer”

  1. Ian H. Avatar

    While I love my laptop and my netbook, they’re never going to replace my desktop. I have two desktop machines. One is as you describe, a media server. The other does my heavy lifting – beefy video card, quad core processor and gigabytes of RAM, all relatively inexpensive in a desktop configuration. The same setup in a laptop would be well beyond my means. While prices always come down, in media production, the power required always increases (standard def < high def < 2k < 4k, etc). Because size is not usually an issue for desktops (my video card is about the size of my netbook), engineers can push the limits, then worry about shrinking the result later.

    All that to say, I guess, that it seems like there will always be a niche for desktop computing.

    1. Raj Avatar

      Well put, desktops are going to end up being appliances for those who need them. Not everyone is going to need these power machines, just like not everyone needs a sewing machine or a heavy duty mixer, For most people the patch kit and hand mixer might do well enough.

  2. Rob L. Avatar

    I somewhat agree with you both, and I somewhat don’t. If we look at the trends with technology. In another 10 years, your netbook is going to be a touchscreen device, perhaps with a neural interface (neuro-tooth?). This device will have a terabyte of solid state storage, or close to that. A cell based processor capable of dynamic reconfiguration, running the OS of your choice and communicating with the rest of your devices using the wireless of the future. It will have a nanosheath speaker and perhaps solar or kinetic charging along with a charging plate on your desktop for power streaming. It will be aware of the cloud of devices surrouding it (assuming they wish other devices to be aware of them), and it will be constantly connected. Bring it near your fourty inch display at your desk and it will express itself through that device.

    You see, you won’t have to have a desktop computer the power simply won’t be required. I guess I am just hoping for a paradigm shift. 🙂

    Rob L.’s last blog post..Electronic memes for 2009-04-13

    1. Raj Avatar

      I think 10 years might be a bit soon for all that fancy kit – remember we are supposed to have flying cars or being enslaved by robots or have started creating Khan and his crew by now.

      We are getting closer to the day where all devices are aware of each other, but as this day approaches, we will have to deal with the potential issues that will come with them – cascading failure and keystone systems. I can certainly see the typical home that already has no backup falling over when a central device fails in the future.

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