Code-named Origami
The product represents only the latest effort by Microsoft to create a market for a new class of portable computers. Although notebook computers have seen enormous growth in recent years, the market for related products such as PDAs and tablet PCs has been limited at best.
Some analysts say the same will be true for the UMPC, at least in the near term.
The UMPC concept faces a number of obstacles to mass adoption -- and to having a meaningful impact on Microsoft's results -- analysts say. Price, market perception, the lack of major vendor support at launch and the actual physical design of the device all could work against the concept, analysts say.
As sketched out by Microsoft, the typical UMPC device would have a seven-inch touch-sensitive screen, weigh less than two pounds, include a 30GB to 60GB hard drive and a built-in wireless networking antenna, and run on an Intel or Via mobile processor.
Unlike PDAs running Microsoft software, the computer would run a full version of Microsoft Windows. In addition to allowing users to enter data via the screen, some versions would also include a keyboard.
Buzz about the UMPC concept has been building for weeks, centered first on a enigmatic Web site devoted to the Origami project and then on a related announcement by Intel at its developers conferencein San Francisco this week.
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