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COMPUTING Small Wonder |
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HEY, SLIM:
The Wearables Lab developed a web server as
powerful as a laptop using off-the-shelf parts.
It's no bigger than a matchbox. Courtesy News
Service The tiny computer -- assembled from off-the-shelf components -- is less than 1 3/4 inches high and 2 3/4 inches wide but performs all the basic functions of a typical desktop computer. "We could have set it up for a number of different uses," Pratt says, "but, because most people think of servers as mysterious boxes located in dark basements, I thought making it into a web server was particularly dramatic." Since going online in January, the tiny server's website has received nearly 190,000 visitors. There people can read about the machine's impressive technical specs: it consists of an AMD 486-SX computer with a 66 megahertz central processing unit, 16 megabytes of random access memory, and 16 megabytes of flash read-only memory. It connects to the Internet through a parallel port and runs a slimmed-down version of Linux, a popular version of the unix operating system. Pratt created the server in Stanford's Wearables Lab, which is developing computer technology so portable it can be sewn into a piece of clothing. A person "wearing" a computer will be able to see what the device is doing through special eyeglasses that double as a computer display. If you hooked the wearable device into a wireless modem, you could e-mail or check stock prices from anywhere. Next for Pratt? He's designing a more powerful server using an Intel Pentium chip. |