Apple: iDesk
Making work much more efficient and immeasurably more fun to do
Some
of the most exciting new ideas are built upon old concepts, and
revolutionize the ways in which we utilize things that have been around
for so long that we hardly give them a second thought anymore. Everyone
expects continual technological advancement from computers and mobile
gizmos, but when you can suddenly check email on the bathroom mirror (www.cybertecturemirror.com), entrust your climatic comfort to an intelligent thermostat (www.nest.com), or make the refrigerator the digital hub of your household (http://bit.ly/iobshN),
well, that’s just cool. Improvements to seemingly small and
insignificant things can greatly enhance the quality of our daily lives
(thank you, Sleep Number bed!), and since many of us spend a large
portion of our days sitting behind a desk, it’s the perfect place for
Apple to work its transformative techno-magic.
Illustrations by Adam Benton
- Sync with any iOS device simply by placing it upon the desk.
- You won’t need a mouse when any area of your touch-sensitive desk can be designated as a trackpad.
- Making calls, scheduling appointments, and much more could be done from the surface of a clean, clutter-free workspace.
Imagine an entirely adaptable workspace that doesn’t just hold your equipment, but enhances and interacts with it. As with Microsoft’s Surface technology,
the entire desk would be a touch-sensitive display capable of running
several simultaneous apps, some of which--such as a calendar, phone, and
digital Post-It notes—would replace their physical counterparts
entirely. Notifications, to-do lists, video conferencing, Adobe tool
palettes, and countless widgets such as calculators and weather reports
would all appear right on the surface of your desk, literally putting
your entire working world at your fingertips.
The desk could sync
with your Mac or potentially have a Mac built in, perhaps with a
portion of the desk’s surface angled upward to serve as a display.
Tactile keyboards could likewise be replaced by a digital
touch-sensitive version (endlessly configurable to your preferences for
individual apps), and any part of the desk’s surface could be cordoned
off as a trackpad area. Files could be transferred easily between Macs,
iPhones, iPads, and so on by sitting the devices on the desk and swiping
file icons across its surface from one device to the other. Shared
files could be passed between coworkers via digital inboxes, designated
digital “trays” that collect documents sent from other iDesks. And of
course, the desk would wirelessly sync to your iCloud account to keep
calendars, contacts, and other data updated across all your gizmos.
Desktop
skins could give your workspace a stately mahogany look, float your
desk upon the ocean, or make you appear to hover above the clouds as if
directing the corporate world from Mount Olympus.
Productivity
might take a hit from all the tweets, Facebook status updates, and
YouTube links that we would inevitably configure to pop up all over our
workspace, but the iDesk’s endless array of work-boosting benefits would
surely make us more efficient overall, while making the execution of
even the most mundane tasks as cool as commanding the Enterprise.
Via http://www.maclife.com
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