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Origami: the Microsoft handheld


EchoDesiato

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Much like everyone else, I’ve been wondering what Microsoft’s Origami Project is. The speculation runs rampant but it appears that you might not have to wait a few weeks to find out what Origami truly is. Marketing firm DigitalKitchen must have the ad campaign on this one because if you hit their site and enter, click Work and then BrandTheatre, guess what you’ll find. Not just pics of the device, but a Flash-based video showing the various uses. I won’t add to the speculation fire that’s burning and tell you what I saw. Instead, I’ll let you spend a few minutes viewing the revealing show so you can form your own conclusions. I will say this: as a new WMCE user, a TabletPC and WindowsMobile user for several years, I’m hoping what I saw in the video becomes available very soon. I’ll still be getting a new WM 5.0 phone that you can pick for me (so don’t forget to vote), but Origami is next on my list! There’s another pic after the jump.

orig1.jpgoirg2.jpg

21623s_New_Picture.jpg

http://creativecoremedia.com/mso.swf

http://bink.nu/Article6288.bink

 

Wow, I don't know what to think. Looks like we have another competetor in the handheld market.

EDIT: official site

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Looks a bit silly, not really portable, at that size you may aswell have a lap-top, which would probaly be a lot more usefull. Not that pda style functions don't impress me, i am considering getting one of those pda phones with msn and all that, but there just a bit bigger than a normall phone, and not the siz of a breeze block.

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Thats not gunna play Halo... if it does jesus i hate to think about the battery life. Either way, this could turn out to be simply a media device... or it could really be a another step up for Microsoft towards games domination.

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its hardly handheld. in my opnion its f-u-g-l-y-!

Ever considered that it is in early development, but even if im right or wrong, that thing really is fugly at the moment.

 

Cant see this being a handheld competitor, but as a more efficient way of a portable computer rather than a laptop.

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origamiscreen0015mq.jpg

 

New info from gamespot.com

 

Microsoft confirmed widespread reports that the Origami Project was indeed an "Ultra-Mobile PC" (UMPC), not a portable version of the Xbox, as some had thought. Touting it as "a new category of mobile devices for consumers and businesses alike," the Washington-based software colossus unveiled the first UMPC models at the Cebit technology expo in Hannover, Germany.

 

Initially, three hardware partners--Asus, Founder, and Samsung--will manufacture UMPCs. The general form factor will weigh in at around two pounds and will have built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth functionality. Each will come with an internal hard drive of between 30GB and 60GB and will sport a 7-inch touch-sensitive WGA screen. According to GameSpot sister site CNET News.com, the only price point announced was for Samsung's first-quarter UMPC, which will have a 900MHz Intel Celeron processor and will retail for around $1,200. However, another News.com report hinted that other UMPCs would retail for around $800.

 

As for gaming, Microsoft's official UMPC site does tout the UMPC's media capabilities. It says the devices can "synchronize with your primary PC and take your music, photos, and TV shows anywhere you go." It also hints that Microsoft is planning some sort of premium download service by saying that consumers can "buy music and movies and download them wirelessly." Indeed, one of the partners on the UMPC site is Movielink, the pay-per-view movie download site cofounded by Paramount Pictures, Universal Studios, Warner Bros., and, ironically, Sony Pictures Entertainment.

 

Microsoft also makes much of the fact that UMPCs offer "a new way to play" games. "Enjoy PC and Internet games in new ways with touch, stylus, or hardware controls," boasts the UMPC site. However, the only game the site displays appears to be one of the puzzle games embedded into Windows XP, which UMPCs run the tablet PC variant of. No mention is made of a graphics processing unit or what kind of games the first batch of UMPCs can handle.

 

Inquires sent to Microsoft about the various UMPCs' gaming capabilities were unanswered as of press time. But given that budget-priced, GPU-less Windows XP laptops from several years ago can run less graphically demanding games such as Civilization III, it is well within the realm of possibility that even basic UMPCs can as well.

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Sounds like a really nice thing, but it's waaay too expensive! Too bad that MS won't make a 'real' handheld, one that's more a gameconsole than it is a laptop... As soon as this thing (or actually only the Samsung, the others are ugly) drops below €400,- , I might buy one, but I don't think it'll be that cheap for a looong time :P

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