Softening the Edges of Technology 122
Tired of the generic grey boxes that fill corporate offices? A New York Times piece looks at the efforts by some hardware resellers to soften the edges of the PC with elements from nature. The piece goes over the efforts of places like Suissa Computers, which offers 'desktop computers in cases of oak, walnut, zebrawood, purpleheart, mahogany, maple and leopardwood'. Likewise, Holzkontor of Neustadt and the company Wood Contour offers keyboard and monitor sets that adds a naturalistic touch to the average soulless desktop setup. They don't just touch on commercial options, talking briefly about homebrew case-mods: "Nicholas Falzone, 20, a third-year architectural student at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, Calif., is just putting the finishing touches on the second computer case he's made. 'It's taken me at least a thousand hours,' he said. The case has an aluminum interior frame to support the computer workings. The outer frame is made of koa and maple. Mr. Falzone did the rough cuts with a table saw; after that, almost all the work was done with hand tools. 'Each joint has multiple mortises and tenons,' he said. 'I didn't use any screws or glue.'" Interesting to see the beautification of PC cases in the pages of the old grey lady.
A matter of style (Score:3, Interesting)
I like grey and black computers. I no longer really like beige though. Beige shows dust and nicotine stains too easily.
I respect the fact that some people like for their computers to mesh with the decor of the room in which they are placed but for me, I don't want my computing equipment to be a decorative statement. I just want it to work.
LK
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Oh well. Some people like a car because it is reliable, sturdy, high quality, powerful, fast and handles well. Others like it because it's shiny and red.
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More importantly, what would this cost? Would you prefer a funny shaped PC case, or for your office to randomly get a large box of assorted biscuits from head office with a note saying "good work, chaps". I reckon that the biscuits would cost less.
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Is metal more "plain" than wood? (Score:2, Insightful)
If you really wanted "utilitarian", you wouldn't even have boxes. An empty frame is cheaper, simpler, and easier to work with. Computers didn't use to come in cases, you know.
I like grey and black computers.
Bang, there's your preference. It's about as easy to make a wood frame as a metal one -- they're equally "utilitarian". Do you like grey and black for any particular reason, or simply because that's what you're used to?
I respect the fac
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It doesn't block RFI if your case is open. For some people that's not an issue, for me it is. If I operate with my cases open, I get interference on my TV.
It's about as easy to make a wood frame as a metal one -- they're equally "utilitarian".
Can you stamp wood cases out of sheet wood?
Do you like grey and black for any particular reason, or simply because that's what you're used to?
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Did you miss my point about prefering utilitarian cases?
Even metal frames dont block RFI as much as you THINK.
They block it enough to not interfere with my TV.
LK
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I want you to go back and think about this for a minute...
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However, this doesn't apply everywhere - I'm planning on building my own case soon, and since I don't have the facilities for metalworking it's going to be made from wood.
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They keep kids and pets out. If properly designed, they channel airflow where it's needed so that components stay cool. It's easier to handle a complete system assembled in a case than a hodgepodge of boards and boxes. Those are just a few reasons why a case is
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Maybe, but they don't look as good.
Besides for $5700, the computer had better be fast no matter how it looks.
LK
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But they're so preeeeettttyyyyy
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A matter of fashion (Score:5, Interesting)
Have you ever noticed that all electronics these days are silver? Yet from the early-1980s to the mid-to-late-1990s, everything was black. When I was a kid I remembered thinking finding those late-70s brushed metal hifis old fashioned, because I associated black with the modern stuff that was in the shops. I remember at some point in the late-1980s my CS teacher came across an early-80s computer that we both laughed at because it was so "space age". Okay, part of that was the styling, but it was also because it was covered in spray-painted silver coating. The exact same style of silver coating that covers a lot of modern electronics.
Nowadays, those mid-80s black-with-flat-panel-buttons-and-red-lettering hifis now look... very 80s. I'd have found a lot of the style-conscious brushed-metal digital cameras around now very dated-looking if I'd seen them in the 80s. I saw an Agfa camera from the 1960s recently and briefly had trouble telling if it was really old or really new; but I liked it. And yet 20 years ago, I'd have hated it and thought it looked old-fashioned.
Similar arguments could apply to wood. Sure, wood looks old-fashioned and is less likely to make a comeback for that reason, but that's not really the issue here.
In short, never underestimate the effect long-term technological fashion trends will have on you.
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What kind of car do you drive? A black Element?
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A Gray GMC S15 Jimmy.
LK
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I don't just talk it, I live it too.
LK
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I for one use mine as a stool for my feet so i would not feel comfortable to use a 600$ case for that but, if you like to show off and let people se hoe much money you have, why not.
Yeah! (Score:5, Funny)
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Wood? (Score:1)
Waste of money (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:Waste of money (Score:4, Interesting)
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Don't get me wrong, LCD screens are great in their place like the small one on my Archos AV500 but I'm not yet ready to 'upgrade' my two PC CRTs to LCD because I very
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Only with some kinds (Score:5, Informative)
TN (Twisted Nematic) are the original LCDs. They are cheap and thus common but have the worst image in terms of viewing angle and colour.
VA (Vertical Alignment) panels aren't as common as TN, but still pretty easy to find. New ones (usually called P-MVA or S-PVA) have very wide viewing angles, though you do notice a little colour shift off axis. They also have the best block point of any LCD technology and vastly improved colour over TN.
IPS (In Plane Switching) seems to have kinda fallen out of favor, but you can still find plenty. The S-IPS variants (all you find anymore) have the best viewing angle of all technologies. Their colour is very angle invariant. Their colour is also very natural, though they don't have all that good a black point.
Basically, you just need to get a better LCD and you'll probably be happy. Though no LCD can get as deep a black as a CRT, they do have advantages CRTs don't such as being able to get much brighter with no bleed, no convergence issues, never needing calibration, razor sharp text, etc.
I agree that cheapie LCDs don't cut it but I dumped my CRT for a high quality LCD some time ago and I'm rather happy.
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Computers are too big (Score:1)
iMac
That would be... (Score:1, Redundant)
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Buying an expensive Oak furniture is fine because it's going to be around for probably > 20 years.
And if those people decide yes... (Score:2)
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And should 'your companies' also dump their nice oak desks, and Aeron chairs for Ikea crap?
Many of these custom cases take standard sized mother boards, power supplies, and drives. I suspect that a 10 year life span is reasonable for anyone with even a moderate ability to swap out components for newer editions. The
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Wood? no thanks (Score:1)
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Now, if you can present me with some sort of all-encompassing world in which everything is organic in a Farscape-style, then great. But just making something look like a tacky wood coffee table from 1973 doesn't impress me much.
Substance is more important than style.
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"Elements of nature" other than wood (Score:3, Funny)
My first computer had a wood case .. boy am I old (Score:1)
Wood
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Ever see an wood-cased Apple 1? (Score:2)
Wood cases for computers have been done many times, starting with the Apple 1. Putting a CRT in a wooden box has usually been a dud idea; the result was a bulky box and overheating problems. Some older bank executives used to get such things, but that's died out. A wooden frame around an LCD panel looks fine, and ought to be a cheap option. You can get LCD panels with wood bezels, sold as "digital picture frames", and those aren't expensive.
The wooden keyboard looks silly. There's a stone mouse, but
Won't someone please think of the puns? (Score:5, Funny)
You can read your mail on a computer made of Pine.
You can surf the web on a computer made of Driftwood.
Industrialists can punch the numbers on a computer made of Virgin Rainforest.
Grace Hopper: "Ahhh! It seems the program has a 'termite.'"
Microsoft's New AV line: "Look everyone! Bill's got Wood!"
PS. You have my apologies if you read this far.
Wooden cases... (Score:2, Funny)
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Part of the furniture (Score:5, Interesting)
The Clock [mini-itx.com]
Mantle Radio [mini-itx.com]
Cigar Humidor [mini-itx.com]
Gramophone [mini-itx.com]
Pictureframe [mini-itx.com]
Micro TV [mini-itx.com]
Telefunken [mini-itx.com]
and for the geek, the Windows XP box [mini-itx.com] (as in the cardboard box the OS comes in, but with a sly RedHat trick)
A thousand hours (Score:5, Funny)
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Ultimate Mod (Score:1)
BTW, the creator is also the director of The Call of Cthulhu, an independent film based on Lovecraft's story, which I highly recommend to Lovecraft fans and people who can deal with low-budget effects.
Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these... (Score:1)
Daft... (Score:4, Insightful)
As for wood, it is both a saftey hazard and useless as a computer case material, it won't block any EM interference at all, and it's a fire hazard.
I don't want to think what a few year's worth of heat, dust and static will do to your lovely wood panelled box.
Money could be better spent elsewhere...
Read the article:
The prices for the computers, which include a monitor, keyboard, mouse and some service, start at about $5,740.
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Not everyone has a large office desk for their home PC. Maybe they have a small desk in an alcove somewhere in their living room/kitchen/staircase, or maybe they're just worried about burglars seeing a valuable PC sitting on a table. Having a customised PC in this way can help the PC appear less obvious.
Personal taste (Score:2)
Basically it just amounts to what people want to spend on something that goes with their lifestyle or decor. Kinda like driving a Honda vs a H1 Hummer. Give them a what for.., personal choice works. (kinda like white carpet.. why?)
Another company with wooden cases, mice, etc (Score:1)
http://www.woodacus.hu/ [woodacus.hu]
Apple has been.. (Score:1)
Well I think it looks great (Score:1)
Mahogany (Score:2)
Only FSC wood is used (Score:1)
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I used mahogany 15 years ago to build fullsized models of cars and their panels. Not once did I use rain forest mahogany because, wait for it, it was shite. The quality of rainforest mahogany is fine for cheap furnature but no good for anything else. We used sustainable wood 15 years ago and I'm sure most professionals still do.
Create a case mod out of rain forest mahogany and watch it split with the heat.
Origin of 'beixe box'? (Score:2)
Computer for unabomber! (Score:2)
Correlation between asthetics and seriousness (Score:4, Interesting)
There are actually merits to having a computer look like a piece of equipment and not an office ornamant which seem to escape the media these days. There are also several examples of where a piece of equipment made "too friendly" has been to the detriment of the person using it.
When a computer looks like equipment it's taken more seriously. If a computer makes noise when it's on, demands interaction with a prompt and has a consistent, unornamented interface it adds a level of seriousness to the business of using it. It says take me seriously because performing operations with me is serious business.
When a computer looks like candy it's "played", not "worked" with. It's left in a corner showing something flashy and useless on the screen. It's an expensive DVD player. According to the Apple ads, this is the direction we "want" to go. I disagree.
A computer can call the people you have appointments with and tell them you will be there. A computer can operate your entire home's systems. A computer can allow an intruder into your home if you are careless with it. This is a piece of equipment, not a video gaming conduit. It ought to be taken seriously.
I believe this because of an existing counterexample of candy-coated machines gone wrong: The automobile. Interactive video, cell phones, leather interiors, a million and one shapes and sizes - these are strongly correlated to the careless nature with which we see people driving. Driving into schoolbusses, driving into other drivers, and driving drunk are easy cases to cite. A group of people who treat their cars like toys is the same group that drives their cars like children, not adults. These people get hurt with their cars because the mindset that makes them want candy coatings is the mindset that makes them drive outside the limits on the environment they are in. If your car is plain, stiff and hurts to sit in for to long, you take it seriously.
A computer can do damage to you just like your car can. Take it seriously.
Re: Seriousness (Score:2, Funny)
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That you can write a few paragraphs making *any* argument and get at least a few people tagging it interesting or insightful.
Slashdot is dead.
The Steampunk Workshop has a few good ideas. (Score:2)
Check out this old-fashion keyboard modification with early 1900s brass features [steampunkworkshop.com].
Time Better Spent on Other Projects (Score:5, Interesting)
For me, woodworking projects fall into two types: "quick and dirty" and "furniture".
The "quick and dirty" are things that don't need to last more than a day, a week, a month or even a year. They aren't pretty, they are fast, and they are only as sturdy as they need to be to get the job done. They are generally made from plywood, and other cheap, strong, leftover scrap wood.
"Furniture" projects are things that should last Decades. If I did my job well, they will outlast me. Tables, chairs, and cabinetry fall into this category. Pretty woods, weeks of effort, and lovely finishes highlighting the natural colors and grains of the woods. These projects honor the trees that gave their life so I could have pretty things. Not always sustainable forest-grown, but that's getting better over time.
Back to computers... They have an average life-span of 1 to 5 years... Maybe they'll last 10, but seriously, how many of us have a computer around that is more than 5 years old? So why build "furniture" for Today's Computer. The shapes and sizes and plugs and interfaces and monitors and power needs change every few years. Why would you expect that to not continue? Think about it from this perspective: if you has spend 3 months building the perfect computer case (out of rare Koa and Ebony) for your Commodore 64 twenty years ago, would it still be occupying deskspace in your home? Probably not.
So building "furniture" that fits today's computers is just short-sighted. Beautiful and rare hardwoods should be used and enjoyed in artistic creations whose lifetimes should be measured in decades, not months.
This goes for computer cases and furniture custom built around technology (stereos, home entertainment systems, computers, monitors, etc.) How well does that 50" Plasma screen fit in the "entertainment center" you bought 10 years ago?
We could learn something here... (Score:1)
If Apple has taught us anything in the last few years, it's that people are not happy with just a plain old engine block computer sitting under the desk. They made their salt from designs that made everyone else's efforts look like ... *ahem* ... 'merde de torro'.
Personally, I hope more people with such obvious skill would take up the case design calling. I know that I have dreamed of building a system into a desk, and the thought of having it built right into the infrastructure of the house has crossed my
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Troll Alert! Save the forests! (Score:1)
I am no tree hugger but wooden PC's are a bad idea.
What a waste of beautiful wood (Score:2)
I can't see this selling too much. I can't see anyone who values mahogany, oak, and walnut wasting precious wood like that. There are always a few of the wallpaper-with-money type folks looking for a new way to shock and awe, but I can'
Wooden keyboard and mouse (USB/optical) for $30 (Score:1)
The defect is that the left SHIFT key prints a greater than or less than character. The easy solution is to pry off the left shift key and remove the contact bumper from the right-most contact hole. This restores
FCC part 15 emissions? (Score:1)
ecological (Score:1)
I fiNd it the most anti-ecological thing.
wood can be functional (Score:1)
I used a tree branch that was about three inches in diameter, cut a long piece to attach to the metal connector in the middle back and hold it at t
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That also didn't take me any 1000
And for all you SNL fans out there with pr0n... (Score:1)
What? (Score:1)
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Some guys will do anything for a bit of box.
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