Story Published:
Mar 1, 2006 at 6:46 PM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:13 AM PST
SEATTLE - Start with what the much-hyped Microsoft Corp.
project code-named Origami is not.
It's not a music player designed to take on Apple Computer
Inc.'s mega-popular iPod. And it's not a portable version of
Microsoft's Xbox videogame console. And it won't - at least not yet
- replace your cellular phone or your regular computer.
Instead, Origami is the moniker for the first iteration of
paperback-sized computers that will run Microsoft's regular Windows
XP operating system, a person close to Microsoft told The
Associated Press. The person, who is familiar with the plans, spoke
on condition of anonymity because the information is still
confidential.
The so-called "ultra-mobile PCs" are being targeted initially
at tech-savvy consumers who want a smaller computer that is easy to
take on vacation, in the subway or anywhere else where a full-sized
PC would seem too bulky, this person said.
Microsoft has confirmed that an ultra-mobile PC is in the works,
but the company has declined to offer specific details. A Web site
set up by the Redmond company, www.origamiproject.com, has been
teasing would-be buyers with tidbits about the project, and fueling
speculation about what the new devices might do.
The early versions are expected to debut at an industry
conference on March 9, and to be available to consumers soon after,
the person familiar with the plans said.
They will be built by a variety of computer makers, this person
said, and are expected to sell for between $500 and $1,000,
although final prices aren't yet available.
The computers will generally be less powerful than full-fledged
PCs, although they will have all the functionality of a Windows PC,
this person said. The small size means they won't necessarily have
a keyboard. Some other small or advanced computer devices let
people use a stylus and a touch screen rather than a keyboard to
input information.
Microsoft is expecting that people will use the small computers
for things like looking at photos, watching movies, finding driving
directions and checking e-mail. For now, at least, they will not
have the advanced entertainment capabilities found in computers
running the "media center" version of Windows, this person said.
Those computers allow people to do things like record television.