ive read a little about it.
im really wishing for the day that I can come home, plug my phone into my PC monitor via HMDI, boot some "desktop" version of linux, and use a bluetooth mouse and keyboard and use my phone as a desktop pc.
that'd be great. wishful thinking.
That would be awesome.
its not like its not actually doable on modern phones. a phone with bluetooth and HDMI out is capable of it, thats most of the ones on the market today. including the triumph.
full desktop functionality with only the requirement of bluetooth input devices and a larger monitor via hdmi.
no need for a specialized expensive laptop dock like the Atrix
Intel Wireless display would be even nicer.
Personally, phones still lack the power needed for this.
Surfing, sure, no problem, but some things just require more power.
well a more comfortable internet experience for the home while not having to own an entire different device (desktop or laptop PC) would be the main point of this.
clearly the phone isnt going to run major desktop apps like photoshop CS5 or FL Studio. people who want stuff like that will get a machine for it.
itd just be nice to have a phone that has a desktop mode if you have the right accessories around. thatd be cool as hell
The death of the desktop is a long way off. However, the rise of the cloud is definitely pushing it closer to the grave. I remember years ago using WebTV and being able to do 90% of what a desktop could do just by using online apps, ImageMagickStudio for graphics, my own javascript based spreadsheets, and lots of other online tools. This was when the concept of the cloud was in it's true infancy. Now days, with a good browser, you really could get rid of your desktop.
You are working backwards.
It may evolve that way in time, but for now, you are working from a backwards standpoint.
You aren't using a phone and adding a computer, you are trying to augment/replace your computer with your phone.
Trust me, the "death of the desktop" is HIGHLY over-rated. Experts have been declaring the desktop dead since before the desktop was even released. Every so often another "expert:" is in a rush to declare it dead. Gaming systems will kill the PC (Xbox)! Internet TV (MSN) will kill the desktop! Tablets will kill the desktop (Ipad). Phones will kill the desktop! And yet homes get more and more computers every year.
They aren't going anywhere, any time soon.
I get what you are after, and yes, for some it could work. The problem is that it can't fully replace it, and the moment you hit that wall, you realize you could have just been doing it on the PC from the start. The pc is sitting there, and does everything, so why start with a limited device only to have to switch over, when you could just do everything with the one machine. The pc you turn on, the phone you have to hook everything up.