Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

HP's DreamScreen faces tough competition for holiday spending

By | September 17, 2009, 3:01am PDT

Summary: HP’s latest device - a WiFi-connected screen called DreamScreen - makes it debut today and the company is hoping it will grab some attention this holiday season. In the past, I’ve seen tech companies try to bring some sort of computer technology into different rooms of the house - the kitchen, the living room and [...]

HP’s latest device - a WiFi-connected screen called DreamScreen - makes it debut today and the company is hoping it will grab some attention this holiday season. In the past, I’ve seen tech companies try to bring some sort of computer technology into different rooms of the house - the kitchen, the living room and even the garage. I can’t stop picturing the DreamScreen on the bedroom nightstand.

Maybe it’s the clock feature that displays the time in different time zones, but this device strikes me as a high-tech alarm clock, a device that helps you get your day started. There’s the clock part, of course. But then there’s also weather, a calendar, some music - either streaming through Pandora or HP’s SmartRadio. And don’t forget a quick check of Facebook. When I first saw it, I have to admit that I thought it was touch-screen. It isn’t.

It does have a nice screen, though, and picture playback - either synced to the 2GB internal memory, plugged in via flash memory or wirelessly accessed from a PC - turns it into a nice digital picture frame. But it’s also $249 for a 10-inch screen and $299 for a 13-inch version. And as much I liked it - in the way I like some of those fancy gadgets at high-end electronics stores - I just don’t know that I would spend $250 or $300 on it. There are a lot of other electronic products in that price range, all hoping that recession-strapped consumers will find value in theirs.

With all of that said, the technology is promising and, given the excitement about application development for a number of different platforms, the DreamScreen has the potential to eventually grow into a living room, kitchen or bedroom “computer” that can be customized around the right apps.

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Sam has been a technology and business blogger for more than 18 years.

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Sam Diaz

Sam Diaz has nothing to disclose.

Biography

Sam Diaz

Sam has been a technology and business blogger, reporter and editor at ZDNet, the Washington Post, San Jose Mercury News and Fresno Bee for more than 18 years. He's a member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and a graduate of California State University, Fresno.

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RE: HP's DreamScreen faces tough competition for holiday spending
homeioy3501-24353673204260071837977457723365 5th Nov
dwwtcy,good post!
0 Votes
+ -
DOA
ShazAmerica 17th Sep 2009
When I saw the YouTube video of this I thought they had accidentally linked to
a 3 year old promotional video of a digital picture frame. What an outdated
concept this thing is. No Internet browsing no touchscreen? A $99 iPod Touch
does more than this thing.

I feel bad for HP, A good company stuck selling commoditized Window boxes
trying valiantly to bring something with innovation to the marketplace

I guess looking at Windows all day has clouded their idea of what constitutes
innovation
Would be nice to include a VoiceIP Portable Phone capability along with a Blue Tooth feature allowing for a remote keyboard to communicate out as well.
Home Automation (Security/Thermostat/Video Surveillance viewing) would also add value to the device.
Nice idea that needs Widgets and other capabilties to compete.
Jim A
0 Votes
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RE: HP's DreamScreen Dated Look
GregMaher 17th Sep 2009
for $200 to $300 I would expect to have a modern look to the hardware: zero bezel, no front panel buttons/connections, optional decor trim, HD audio (Bose) and more. Size options would also be nice; not everyone has a large nightstand.

I'll put my money into home network/media. my kids will thank me.
0 Votes
+ -
What I think it needs to be...
shadfurman 17th Sep 2009
I think these devices need to quit being single use. I
don't want something like this with a lot of CPU
power... but I do want it to have decent battery life
and a wide functionality.

I bought a monitor off a guy a while back, he had
replaced it with a wireless touch screen monitor. Even
though the one I bought was 23" (huge for the time)
and the wireless one he had was only 13" I still
thought it was the coolest thing ever.

I think a device like this needs to be a digital
picture frame, and ebook reader, a remote for your
computer, a wireless monitor/ internet browser, a
portable movie viewer, and needs to do all these
things equally well and I don't see why not. It
doesn't need to be extremely high resolution if its
only 6-12", it doesn't need EXCELLENT video playback,
it just needs to do it. It needs to effortlessly hang
on a wall or stand on a night stand. It needs to feel
good in your grip and have limited screen glare. Touch
would be nice, but it doesn't really need multi-touch,
more so it needs to be affordable.

No more single function computers (it's what it basically is, it's really only limited by form factor
and software, the hardware is usually all there)

My realistic dream spec for such a device...

screen:
1024x768 or even lower to keep it cheap
anti-glare coatings

input:
touch screen
a few discrete hardware buttons, perhaps on the sides

hardware:
flash card reader
Atom/ARM/low power CPU
512mb-1gb memory (enough to decode video)
dedicated video decoder
wireless-n

appearance:
discrete screen bevel
no front facing hardware buttons
comfortable had grip area

software:
custom linux (i.e. moblin or andriod)

Cost: $100-200

You basically have two types, fast refresh backlit LCD
and low refresh eink. The biggest costs are in the
display and processor anyway.
0 Votes
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RE: HP's DreamScreen faces tough competition for holiday spending
homeioy3501-24353673204260071837977457723365 5th Nov
dwwtcy,good post!

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