Linky
Personal computers could soon fit entirely on a key ring. Researchers at IBM in New York, US, have developed a way to carry a powerful, personalised virtual computer from one PC to the next, without losing the user’s work.
The trick is to store the virtual computer on a USB key, or any portable device with substantial storage space, like an MP3 player.
The virtual computer’s "soul" - as the researchers dub it - can then be uploaded to a new PC simply by plugging the portable device in. This host machine needs no special software or even a network connection to take on an entirely new personality.
The SoulPad system does not provide an instant switch, however. A user must typically wait a couple of minutes while the software configures the host system for use.
It uses three separate layers of software - a base operating system that automatically configures the host computer's various components, a layer of encryption to keep sensitive data secure, and a "virtual machine" containing the user's portable computing environment, for example, their web browsers, word processing or music software.
Mobile goal
"The ability to walk up to any computer, personalise it, and use it as one’s own has long been a goal of mobile computing research," write IBM researcher Ramón Cáceres and colleagues in an award-winning paper outlining the work presented recently at the Usenix 3rd International Conference on Mobile Systems.
"With this approach, the computer boots from the device and resumes the virtual machine, thus giving the user access to his personal environment, including previously running computations," the researchers add.
A video clip of SoulPad in action is available, courtesy of the IBM researchers, here (14 MB, wmv format).
The IBM team expects other types of device, such as cellphones, to be launched with large storage capacity in the near future which would be able to carry SoulPad – making it an even more practical solution, they say.
Pocket-sized computer 'soul' developed
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- GrandMasterTerwynn
- Emperor's Hand
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Dude! This belongs in Gaming and Computers!
Still cool though, take your user environment with you and run it on any number of blank-slate terminals. End of the personal PC, here we come?
Still cool though, take your user environment with you and run it on any number of blank-slate terminals. End of the personal PC, here we come?
Tales of the Known Worlds:
2070s - The Seventy-Niners ... 3500s - Fair as Death ... 4900s - Against Improbable Odds V 1.0
2070s - The Seventy-Niners ... 3500s - Fair as Death ... 4900s - Against Improbable Odds V 1.0
- wolveraptor
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Isn't saying "personal PC" redundant?
Anyways, some of the safety of having a PC is that much information can only be accessed if someone actually goes to your home. Having your whole computer on a simple USB key ring could let hackers steal info the old-fashioned way. Only an idiot wouldn't keep a backup on his PC. So I don't feel it'll erase the PC completely.
Anyways, some of the safety of having a PC is that much information can only be accessed if someone actually goes to your home. Having your whole computer on a simple USB key ring could let hackers steal info the old-fashioned way. Only an idiot wouldn't keep a backup on his PC. So I don't feel it'll erase the PC completely.
"If one needed proof that a guitar was more than wood and string, that a song was more than notes and words, and that a man could be more than a name and a few faded pictures, then Robert Johnson’s recordings were all one could ask for."
- Herb Bowie, Reason to Rock
- Herb Bowie, Reason to Rock