My Totally Biodegradable Gadgets
Ed from IT drops by with a new phone for me. It looks a bit like a pen but snaps apart into an
earpiece
and a
section I can put in my pocket. There's no
keypad
; instead I "dial" it by tapping out mini codes. I program it to
call my wife on two short
taps
. A
tap
, brush against the surface, and two more
taps
put through a call to my
best friend. I take the new phone and drop my old one into the desktop grinder. All my
gadgets
are now totally
biodegradable, so I expect it'll end up fertilizing someone's garden.
Just as I'm about to start transcribing that interview with Rory Gates (Bill's 33-year-old son and the
CEO
of
Microsoft), I notice a red glow coming from my left
arm
. It's my RF chip. Red means my son, Daniel, is in the
building and probably coming up for a surprise visit. He works in Broadway's VR Theater, playing 15 separate
virtual characters on a 360-degree stage. The audience is both local—people who attend the show in person,
putting on the VR goggles and Bose noise-canceling
headsets
—and global. I've seen 26 of his performances
from the comfort of my desk. He's very good.
5.
I'm halfway through August projections when an instant message pops up. I pull out the
flexible
screen
addition from the side of my 8-by-10-inch roll-out screen, which gives me a 2-by-2-inch extra bit of screen
real
estate
, and dock the message window there. It's my buddy John, asking me how I'm
feeling
. Yesterday I had a
little medical procedure: 16 computer-guided
nanobots
scrubbed their way through my 65 -percent-occluded
arteries. (I only passed the final ones this morning-that was a bit uncomfortable.) I tell John I'm
feeling
fine
and log off.
This Acer/Gateway/Lenovo (they merged in 2017) ThinkFold is running a bit slow today. It's not the memory; I
have about 128GB of available RAM and the 2-
terabyte
, solid-state drive has more than enough room. Perhaps
it's the remastered 1977 miniseries Roots I'm downloading in the background? I pause the download and the
ultralight system speeds up.
I make an appointment to see Intel's latest CPU
innovation
. A few years ago, Intel partnered with HP to create
the first printable CPU. Now they're printing out entire
circuit boards
. It should be a fascinating meeting
6.
Daniel's visit is nicely timed, since an e-mail is just arriving from my daughter, Sophie. She's dumping her
latest boyfriend. On my 180-degree, 3,048-by-1,028-pixel, curved ViewSonic screen is an alive mail, with a
video of her and Brad walking on the beach. While we watch, Sophie uses Liquid Resize to remove Brad and
seamlessly stitch the beach back together. It's as if he was never there. But wait, she's not done. She has
another clip of her dog on the beach and, as Dan and I watch, she's added Scruffy to the shot so it looks as if
he's walking alongside her. Nice.
Dan heads out, but before I can get back to work, another interruption: My wife's calling with the news that
our new HP system arrived this morning. It's an all-in-one with a sleek, ultrathin-though bright-21-inch screen.
The motherboard and 2-inch optical HD drive are in the base. I ask her if she needs help setting it up. "No, it's
already running," she says. "This is so much easier than my old computer." I ask her how she likes Macintosh
OS Ultimate. "It's great! I put my Epson photo printer, digitizing tablet, and Canon all-in-one printer within a
couple of feet of it, and it instantly recognized everything and set it up for me."
Lance Ulanoff
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2243716,00.asp
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |