IBM's Colorful Notebooks 111
Jacek Fedorynski writes "This Yahoo article says that the new ThinkPads will have swappable snap-on covers - something like Nokia 5110 meets the iBook. :) Initially there will be seven colors to choose from, they will probably introduce more later. Another company realized that many people are more interested in how the machine looks that what it has inside. " Slashdot Green please. The interesting thing is that PCs have reached a point where most PCs are "Good Enough" and manufacturers need to get mindshare by doing something, anything special. Pre-Install Linux? Multi-Colors? Internal Wireless Networking?
Vanity Computer Colors (Score:5)
10 Least Appealing Vanity Computer Colors
10. What-the-hell-is-that-gunk Green
9. Cubicle Beige
8. Barbie Doll Pink
7. Aging Plastic Yellow
6. The Color Formerly Known As Purple
5. Pepto-bismol
4. Encrusted Black
3. Alien-skin Grey
2. Spewed Puce
1. Screen of Death Blue
10 Most Appealing Vanity Computer Colors
10. Palladium-card Chrome
9. Justalil-Too-Overclocked Red
8. Slashdot Teal (thanks Hemos)
7. Mountain Dew Lime
6. Circuit Board Green
5. PNG-not-GIF Transparent
4. Geekier-than-thou frost aqua
3. Penguin Foot Orange
2. Isotope Blue
1. Darth Black!
Re:Where it they get that idea? ;) (Score:1)
And hey...atleast its not a total rip off of apple's style.
Re:Slashdot Green (Score:1)
Re:good? at least from a business standpoint (Score:1)
Actually, Dell is on the bandwagon, too. The Yahoo article briefly mentioned that Dell was releasing their 3700-series laptops in two colors. I checked their website, and it's true: "Tahoe Blue" and "Storm Grey".
My question is, how is "Storm Grey" any different than "is-that-my-notebook-or-yours" grey?
~~~~~~~~~~
Re:Vanity Computer Colors (Score:1)
Re:What about clear? (Score:1)
good enough (Score:1)
Re:good? at least from a business standpoint (Score:1)
IBM taking Mac's ideas??? (Score:1)
My advice: Stick to the old grey and black and you won't risk the humilation at work.
Translucent plastic is hardly "innovative". (Score:2)
- A.P.
--
"One World, one Web, one Program" - Microsoft promotional ad
ahh the future.. (Score:1)
Re:Slashdot Green (Score:2)
Re:Uhhh... (Score:1)
Re:the iBook for the rest of us (Score:1)
Yes, $400 is great for wireless LAN connectivity. Yes, it's also overkill for the 800KB background or 1MB screensaver or 40KB term paper or 5K HTML page you wanna take over to
Your G4? Nope! Try again.
Re:What's next? Free lollypops with purchase? (Score:1)
Re:good? at least from a business standpoint (Score:1)
But....college kids that could care less about computeres (think English/Biology/Chemistry/PolySci/History/etc.) will buy something that looks cool before they bother with something that looks boring.
Re:What's next? Free lollypops with purchase? (Score:1)
Re:Yet another Apple rip off. (Score:1)
A better analogy might be the 4 door compact sport utility vehicle. (AMC, mid-80s.) It's been ripped off by just about everyone, but Jeep still has a pretty big market share.
Re:... or wood ? (Score:1)
Aesthetics (Score:2)
Anyway, I seemed to have two considerations that no one else listed:
There's a much longer list of things we all look for, but I'm surprised that so many people forget those two.
The iMac packs plenty of power for its size/cost, and so will the iBook. The colors aren't for everyone, but most of Apple's target audience falls pretty much into three categories--
Artistic Integrity? (Score:2)
Apple has popularized the notion of "computers as Art/Industrial Design," where the computer is designed to look attractive, as opposed to being more purely functional.
It may represent a movement towards "computer as appliance," although the complexity of running a computer still largely prevents it being truly treated as such.
So long as I can still get ThinkPad Black. (Score:1)
To me the thinkpad has always been the ideal model of what a laptop should be. (In particular the 570 series is my favorite, powerful, yet ultralight...)
Then again, maybe there's just something wrong with me.
Re:Vanity Computer Colors (Score:1)
don't forget the inimitable Douglas Adams' colors:
infra dead
ultra violent
gang green
Lovely!
Re:Geez Rob (Score:1)
Re:Kids funny stuff (Score:2)
I can see it now . . .
How to jump on the color bandwagon and make $$$$ (Score:3)
The first is Apple which was smart in realising that you could take a normal computer, put it in a new case, add a splash of color, and voila - rampant sales.
But Apple only had a limited vision. After all, one does not always see red, or feel green with jealousy, or feel grape colored.
Along came IBM, and swiping an idea from Nokia, decided that swappable colors would be even better. Now instead of deciding what to wear in the morning, you also had to decide if it would coordinate with the colour panels you had for your laptop.
So what is the third company? The third company is mine. I'm going out and manufacturing swappable color panels for everything under the sun. There is no way I cannot make a couple of billion based on peoples past purchasing habits.
Don't like the color of your car? Let me introduce to you the strawberry Ford - oh! you're wearing a navy suit, well just give me a couple of seconds ... there we go, please step into your blueberry car.
KER-CHING!!
You mean they didn't look good before? (Score:1)
Re:Painting plastic (Score:1)
This is also why you see many knock-off iMac PC cases, but none of them are translucent. The components have to be shielded.
Re:the iBook for the rest of us (Score:1)
Ethernet.
What? No home network? No worries, your iBook and your G3 or G4 have built in ethernet. Get an ethernet crossover cable for $5 (or whatever).
Problem solved (with no 1.4mb size restriction to boot.) Maybe it's not FREE, but you'd still have to buy diskettes if you wanted to use floppies. (Since you don't get them in the mail anymore from AOL. Well, I don't anyhow... they send CDs now.)
\//
Re:What's next? Free lollypops with purchase? (Score:1)
The point is that pretty soon, chip speed will be an arbitrary number in most cases, with only the most insanely demanding consumer applications actually showing any performance differences from a 3.5 GhZ chip to a 4.2 GhZ chip. At that point, the only real reason to buy a computer will be to augment your home network or replace that crappy 800 MhZ computer you've had for the last few years :)
Re:This is just wrong. (Score:1)
Only one cover needed... (Score:2)
In large, friendly letters, it says "Don't Panic!"
-Chris
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
Actually, the analogy holds a lot better for operating systems than PCs (esp from you know who). And the competition for them is here...
Even the most bland and grey PCs are built for functionality (I can't see any fins on my Celeron).
-
Re:Aesthetics (Score:1)
We get the G3s and now, the G4s. In fact, I've got a G4 on order right now.
Yeah, the colors are cool, but the silver G4s are also cool. (nb there's a silver iMac coming out rsn) For my personal case preferences though I'd want one of the following: A nice cherry or mahognony wood case (with lots of brass hardware, ornamentation, etc.) or a something reminisicent of a CM5. Gotta have blinkenlights. Lots of blinkenlights. Hook 'em up to MACAST's vu meter, or something.
Re:What's next? Free lollypops with purchase? (Score:1)
maybe that is a good thing after all.
Re:Tartans? Fluorescents? (Score:1)
Speaking of tehcnology to print and dye, you've seen the buses that are completely encased in billboards? Simplified, those are simply really large decals. All we need is a pattern for those labels that we could apply onto the notebooks, and then anyone with a color inkjet and Gimp could have their own custom laptop.
Somehow I can see Avery Laptop decal kits on the shelves already...
Re:Any color you want, as long as it runs Winduhs (Score:1)
Funny, Henry Ford's line is almost exactly what came to my mind... I was wandering the Dell site, though (they offer colours two [dell.com]), and it had a bit more frightening twist. Any colour you want so long as it runs Winduhs, aka any choice you want as long as it's not an important one.
I found the "We're thinking university logos" line kind of ironic - possibly even Freudian. I can guess the alleged university of Acadia [acadiau.ca] will be one of the first to jump on that. "Any colour you want, so long as it's blue and red and Mess$oft all over." Blech... Something wrong with the Tremclad Technique?
How is it all this "today's technology" (ya right) has to rely on the tactics from the previous fin-de-siecle?
Custom? (Score:1)
Re:How to jump on the color bandwagon and make $$$ (Score:1)
IBM's PC-110 palmtops had these color panels years ago.
Re:Custom? paint it your self (Score:1)
why not notebook?
Re:Yet another Apple rip off. (Score:2)
It's as ridiculous as saying that Apple invented the windowing GUI (which, of course, they did not, therefore nobody else should ever come out with a windowing GUI.
If Apple did it "years ago" and isn't doing it now, what the #$#*(& do they care if IBM does it with Thinkpads today? This isn't art class. This is business. There are no extra points for originality.
The Apple Baking Soda Company comes out with a baking soda box that has a shaker built into the top. International Baking Soda (IBS) sees that this sells well and designs their own shaker for their own box. Does Apple BS Co. then have the right to say that IBS cannnot have a box with a shaker? or do they only have the right to say that IBS's box can't look so much like the Apple box that there is no "consumer confusion"?
The answer, at least the LEGAL answer, is the latter.
And in a couple of years everybody's going to forget that the Apple BS Co. was the "innovator" behind the built-in shaker. The consumer is simply going to expect that any baking soda they buy, except maybe the store brand, is going to have that built-in shaker.
Apple may have done the very first laptop with translucent panels, but legally, big whoop. They didn't invent translucent panels. They didn't even invent translucent computers for Jesux's sake, they just came out with the first brand computer using the concept.
The URL (Score:1)
http://www.pc.ibm.com/us/think pad/iseries/cover.html [ibm.com]
its not as cool looking as one would think
Geez Rob (Score:1)
What about clear? (Score:2)
good? at least from a business standpoint (Score:3)
I know that people who use computers as tools for word processing and email will think this is a great idea.
Finally, isn't this hitting Apple where it hurts a little? I mean, some peole still buy Macs for the OS and the name....but an increasing number of people are buying IMacs (and probably IBOoks) because they look cool. This could be an interesting saga in the evolution of computers.
Re:Geez Rob (Score:1)
Re:Geez Rob (Score:1)
Let's try this </U>
Re:What about clear? (Score:1)
Dunno if I'd paint over it... having what appears to be a random collection of electronics under your arm or sitting on your desk can occasionally look neat. (I want internal parts that look like they're steam-powered, dammit.
Re:Geez Rob (Score:1)
--
Been there, done that. (Score:1)
Re:What about clear? (Score:1)
The Powerbook 1400 had something that Apple refered to as the 'BookCover'. See the Apple TIL for more detail:
PowerBook 1400 Series: Description [apple.com]
IBM is brilliant (Score:1)
With computers becoming ever more a consumer product, and laptops often the choice platform, IBM has taken a page from other successful companies, such as Apple and Nokia--give the customer something that looks COOL!
These machines are bound to be a success, given the quality of IBM's machines in addition to a nice-looking exterior.
Apple has a patent on this... (Score:1)
Anyone know where that article is?
sjohnsonAT@smart.net (remove AT to reply).
Re:good? at least from a business standpoint (Score:1)
-- The word "woman" is not politically correct any longer.
Re:Slashdot Green (Score:1)
Slashdot Green (Score:2)
What would be cool is if they(or someone) came out with the "Slashdot" commemorative laptop. One that had the slashdot green cover, emblazoned with the "/." on it. Only make 5-10k of these and have them all hand signed by CmdrTaco and Hemos!
Ooo, collectible laptops...the next "beanie baby."
I bet even Nitrozac would buy one of these.
Is it Fawn with the "/. Me" T-shirt? She'd probably even be toting around on one of these.
Of course, they'd only be REALLY valuable if they came with the Nitrozac@home screensaver. >;)
-Vel
Re:the iBook for the rest of us (Score:1)
usb is usb, a hundred bucks gets you a zip drive, which has for the most part replaced floppies in a lot of situations, included schools and colleges. and the ibook has built in dual mode ethernet....
you by the way have no idea what is up w/ air port as well.... why would you need another usb mac? the air port hub has 10/100 ethernet and a 56k modem, usb has othing to do with it.... all you need is a cross over cable. geez, read the specs before you go flaming a product....
and your really silly if you think 400 bucks is a lot of money for 11mbit wireless lans.....
Hey, give me a Sandbender! (Score:1)
[1] Read Idoru by William Gibson. (Portable machine with sea-shell cover and other designs.)
Re:here it is... (Score:2)
There was a ThinkPad with a removable cover some years ago too. You could pop it off and then 'invert' the transparent screen for use with an overhead projector. Kinda cool, but probably not that practical in real life because of all the rigging necessary to hang the thing off the overhead.
(Model number was 755AV or something.)
... or wood ? (Score:1)
Re:Slashdot Green (Score:1)
Re:Yet another Apple rip off. (Score:1)
I guess if Apple has a good idea, nobody else is supposed to try it, ever?
So GM comes out with a sports car and nobody else is ever, ever, supposed to make a sports car because GM did it first?
Steam powered computer - the clear case (Score:1)
Not sure how you'd simulate motion - maybe a "holographic" effect with different sight angles showing the pistons and gears at different positions.
Could be kind of cool. If you do this, call it Industrial Seattle for me, ok?
Re:Tartans? Fluorescents? (Score:1)
I'd do it in the clan tartan, but it's got a lot of purple in it, and I'm not a fan of that.
but love the day-glo option - would buy that.
Re:Yet another Apple rip off. (Score:1)
- Scott
------
Scott Stevenson
Re:Easy covers, Dell (Score:1)
- Scott
------
Scott Stevenson
Re:Do it yourself! (Score:2)
Die Floppy, Die! (Score:1)
That's just odd. What's the point of having the cards? Furthermore, what's the point of having HTML classes without internet connectivity? You could bring your iBook to school and use the crossover cable to get files off it. Or get a USB floppy drive. Unnetworked machines are a dying breed.
Somehow, the damn floppy has got to die. They're slow, unreliable (I've had dozens fail on me), and hold practically nothing. Anything that's small enough to fit on a floppy can be emailed or posted on a web/ftp site.
We've been using floppies for, what, 15 years? The industry just gets stagnant on stuff like this. How did we evolve from 5 1/4" floppies anyway? The process needs to be repeated.
- Scott
------
Scott Stevenson
Transition and trend... (Score:2)
Re:good? at least from a business standpoint (Score:1)
BTW, what ever happened to VA Linux's Laptops, I swear they used to make them.
here it is... (Score:1)
Any color you want, as long as it's black (Score:1)
Pretty colors, but! (Score:1)
Right now I have a Thinkpad 600 (PII 266) and I'm very impressed. Great screen, good keyboard, easy to swap the HD, good battery life, decent built-in speakers, regular updates of BIOS & drivers, no problems with any OS I have tried, even response from tech support when it was needed - the only bad part is that modem.
Kids funny stuff (Score:2)
"What's that?" the teacher asks.
"It's my new lunchbox."
"Okay, put it away for now."
...
Later, he's typing, getting answers for his math pop-quiz.
"What are you doing?" asks the irritated teacher.
"Just getting a snack."
"You're not supposed to eat in class. Put it away... why does it sound like you are typing?"
"Uh, that's the wrapper on my twinkie."
Or something like that.
Re:Slashdot Green (Score:1)
Re:Apple has a patent on this... (Score:1)
Although Paul Allen's company Ticketmaster did sue Paul Allen's company Microsoft over linking and banner ads and the like a few years ago.
If these are plastic panels like the Nokia phones have (just got my 5170 yesterday and my Orange panel is getting here today) as opposed to sliding a panel in a sleave like the PB 1400s, does Nokia have the patent on that (I didn't read the Apple patent that was linked to above.)
This is just wrong. (Score:1)
Making their computers small and in any number of different colors risks further undermining the "Big Blue" monicker, already in serious doubt since the introduction of the PC, a relatively small, black and beige (IIRC, but certainly not blue) computer.
There is exactly one benefit in killing off the "Big Blue" name: its similarity to "Big Brother" may have scared off IBM's potential smaller clients.
However, I think the risks to IBM's reputation far outweigh this nearly insignificant benefit. It therefore beehoves IBM to abandon this short-sighted strategy and focus on making what made it famous: big blue computers.
Painting plastic (Score:2)
I'm not sure why no one makes transparent computer cases right now, but I can make a few guesses --
And, as for the bit about painting your computer,
the problem with painting over plastic is that you then have problems with the paint rubbing against things, and flaking off.
With clear covers, you'd be able to paint the inside (which well, takes some practice, as you have to paint everything as a mirror image, and it has to be done detail-first, so it's at what will then the top-most layer)
Some things, that don't take as much wear, can be painted without too much difficulty (I have a number of friends who have painted leather jackets, etc.), but I know I stack stuff on my portable, it gets bounced about, etc.
The only real reason that I can see for not introducing clear covers is that if you can't specifically design your cover, you'd be forced to buy designs from other people, helping to pad someone else's wallet.
colorful case (Score:1)
Tartans? Fluorescents? (Score:1)
Those of us with "Mc" in our last names might appreciate a custom cover with an authentic tartan pattern. (And how about authentic African tribal patterns while we're at it?) The technology to generate and print or dye this will have to evolve quite a bit, however. But hey, if you can dream it, you can do it, as they say...
For the nonce, fluorescent (Day-Glo) colors would be nice -- maybe screamingly bright International Distress orange or hot pink, for example.
Do it yourself! (Score:1)
So take those removable sides down to your fav hardware store (Hechingers going outta bidness even a better idea) and have them cut plexiglass to the same dimensions. Run home, drill out the holes, maybe a little sanding..slap,bang, wigwam...a see through case. It looks even cooler if you run a short string of blinkin/flashin Christmas lights through it!
Course, I haven't motivated on this yet. HEY! I'm just the idea man...
Or so my boss keeps tellin me.
Uhhh... (Score:1)
Same for your TV, refrigerator, VCR, washing maching and dryer, etc.
What the hell is wrong with trying to make something that people use often, see, takes up space where they work and/or live, etc. look visually pleasing to them? Perhaps you'd like a computer covered in poop, razor blades, and vomit...to show to others or prove to yourself how "hardcore" you are.
Re:This is just wrong. (Score:1)
IBM has over 300,000 employees worldwide, and I don't think one Thinkpad model is going to fuck up the reputation of a company over 80 years old...
katana666
Other shit IBM does... [ibm.com]
Re:Aesthetics (Score:1)
you all just love to bash apple cuz you know there boxes kick your boxes butt.....
Easy covers, Dell (Score:1)
The Optiplex G1 tower is extremely easy to get into. All you have to do is press a button on the front and the side cover pops off. Good idea provided its in the right environment. They even have it set up so that you can put a padlock or 'security cable' so you can lock it down.
--SONET
Peterson Elementary School [k12.ca.us]
Yet another Apple rip off. (Score:1)
Next thing I know DELL will make easy to get into towers...
Food for thought... (Score:3)
Now look at computers today. Most people are unwilling to, or don't need to, spend a couple thousand dollars on a large, clunky, and unreliable box just to surf the Internet and do some word processing. At some point in the next ten to twenty years, one force (maybe Japanese, maybe not) will make computing light and reliable enough for everyone.
That's the future of computing -- computers haven't gotten "Good Enough," they've just gotten more colorful and powerful. I'm waiting for IBM, or any company for that matter, to release a computer which (1) you don't need to boot; (2) accepts new software and hardware upgrades without question or incident, ever; and (3) has an operating system that the user never has to interact with directly.
Many platforms have some degree of this level of usability -- many handheld systems, for example. However, I can only wonder when we'll see this level of simplicity everywhere, in every home and business system.
the iBook for the rest of us (Score:1)
Not sure, but... (Score:1)
Solar Panel (Score:1)
http://til.info.apple.com/tech info.nsf/artnum/n20948 [apple.com]
(I still did like the clear one, though.)
That's too bad... (Score:2)
-- Moondog
Re:Painting plastic (Score:1)