I Got an Intel Chat Pad Prototype

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  • Опубликовано: 10 июн 2024
  • #retro #intel #internet This is a quick (for me) video about the Intel Chat Pad protoype or pilot unit I picked up recently for not too much money. Is this the last, or only, remnant of Intel's brief foray into email and instant messaging devices?
    00:00 Intro
    04:54 Prototype or Pilot Unit?
    06:09 Checking out the Chat Pad
    11:53 Conclusion
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Комментарии • 215

  • @TechTimeTraveller
    @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +46

    Didn't quite keep it to 10 min but for me this is a short video heh. Couldnt resist a quick animated skit either. If anyone watching knows more about the Chat Pad please drop a line here!

    • @majinkasi0541
      @majinkasi0541 Месяц назад +5

      Honestly, 15 minutes is pretty good for retrotech vids I think

    • @frogz
      @frogz Месяц назад

      OMG THINK OF THE CHILDREN, WHAT WILL THE CHILDREN THINK??? A RETRO CHANNEL EXCEEDING THE 10 MINUTE RUclips VIDEO LIMIT?!?!?!?!!!oneonequestionmark1?!

    • @me-gl6mf
      @me-gl6mf Месяц назад

      I'd love to get my hands on that. I would carefully disassemble it, replace battery, capacitors, etc, restore it to new, find a way to get it working, and then auction it off for charity (women's and infants hospitals, which are still suffering after the whole covid thing). You are so lucky to have that, please take good care of it, and if you can restore it for charity, please do.
      Edit: Oh, I see, no motherboard, well I would install one to make it work.

  • @iroll
    @iroll Месяц назад +215

    The seller didn't mention that it's missing the entire logic board? Classic eBay.

    • @Flofutz
      @Flofutz Месяц назад +32

      dind't had batterys at hand so i sell it as untested.

    • @GINGER_KING_
      @GINGER_KING_ Месяц назад +8

      @@Flofutzthen clearly state that you dont.

    • @Flofutz
      @Flofutz Месяц назад +39

      @@GINGER_KING_ I didn't sell it! just "for fun" citing the usual ebay phrases that should make you run away.

    • @WhatALoadOfTosca
      @WhatALoadOfTosca Месяц назад +1

      @@GINGER_KING_Yawn

    • @drdos4
      @drdos4 Месяц назад +32

      The motherboard will mysteriously be listed a month later by the seller.

  • @ryanpeck3377
    @ryanpeck3377 Месяц назад +74

    It wasnt just intel making colored translucent Rounded/bubble/organic shaped prducts. That was the whole 2000 aesthetic. The futuristic, almost Alien vibe.

    • @cloudycolacorp
      @cloudycolacorp Месяц назад +2

      Imagine how cool this look could be with some more modern materials

    • @pikadroo
      @pikadroo Месяц назад +1

      @@cloudycolacorpmight be cool to 3D print one.

    • @macelius
      @macelius Месяц назад +2

      Pretty sure it started with the iMac

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +1

      I worked in Intel team doing these products. We intentionally followed the blue translucent candy color thing that a lot of tech was doing at the time. Also the Intel logo was blue and that was another reason for that color. All of the actual industrial design was done by Ideo in San Francisco.

    • @mikescholz6429
      @mikescholz6429 Месяц назад

      Those CRT iMacs were the coolest thing in the world at the time.

  • @emilianotechs
    @emilianotechs Месяц назад +71

    🎵🎶"From the chatpad to the PC to your ISP"🎶🎵

  • @lelandclayton5462
    @lelandclayton5462 Месяц назад +48

    There are many levels of prototyping. Could of been the prototype to show off to the marketing team.

    • @brentgoeller8257
      @brentgoeller8257 Месяц назад +9

      Or for people to play with at a conference. These dummy devices are incredibly common at those. You might have 1 that actually works and it's strapped down so it can't walk off, then you have a few more that people can pick up and play with, but you don't have to worry if they are stolen.

  • @dosgos
    @dosgos Месяц назад +23

    The tooling for the case must have been very expensive. I think development was far along before the plug was pulled.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +7

      I'm thinking so too. I'm really hoping someone from Intel or associated in some way with this project sews this video and gives us some answers!

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +7

      They got to the point of building a bunch of them that were nearly fully functional. Then they pulled the plug. I was the Intel UX designer for this thing.

  • @10p6
    @10p6 Месяц назад +30

    Interesting video. The reason it wasn't released was in 2000/2001 you could by a cheap Nokia cell phone that not only could SMS, but could do T9 Yahoo and AOL messaging too, and was stand alone, and small.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +7

      Thank you. I'm trying to remember when I got my first smartphone. It would have been an Ipaq I think, followed by a Jasjar, in the early 2000s. I did have basic messaging abilities on my Nokia as far back as the late 90s but it was painful not having a proper alphanumeric keypad. Had to hit each key multiple times to get the right letter. Ugh. I wish I could remember when I got the ipaq. People looked at me weird when I talked into my PDA and didn't understand why I'd want internet on such a small device. It was wifi internet only though.

    • @10p6
      @10p6 Месяц назад +2

      @@TechTimeTraveller I think I got my Nokia cell phone early 2001. I had an IPAQ too, but I had the non cell version; I actually still have both of them, but the batteries after all this time are iffy lol.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +2

      @10p6 I went to power up my jasjar which I still have but it won't run without a battery, and the battery that was in there had blown up to half the size of the jasjar itself lol. Really would like to see whats left on there.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +3

      Intel didn’t kill it due to competition from phones, anyway at the time few if any phones did chat services like AIM or MSN. They killed it because they didn’t want to compete with PC OEMs and peripheral manufacturers. They liked creating tech that helped those companies create demand for PCs but they didn’t want to go so far as to compete with them.

  • @JeSuisUnePatate
    @JeSuisUnePatate Месяц назад +23

    I bet it would be amazing with a little Pi Zero 2 W, and someone that could find out how to link that keyboard, buttons, and this screen. Great vid.

    • @antlers1305
      @antlers1305 Месяц назад +4

      I suppose you could make a pi work, but the goto embedded device for eg. a hand-wired keyboard or kb-matrix is an arduino. A bet I could figure out the KB if I had the oppertunity, but wouldn't know where start with the rest of it :p

  • @Sashazur
    @Sashazur Месяц назад +10

    I was the UX designer on the Intel team designing this. I have one. It boots but shows an error that it can't find the base station. The back has a sticker saying Beta 0 S/N 0080. There is also an engineering prototype sticker. FCC ID screen printed on the bottom is EJM123117389. They were functional (alpha or beta software) and started sample production but never made it to market, because Intel killed the wireless series family of products it was going to be a part of (the only ones that shipped besides the base station were a keyboard, mouse, and game controller). It was supposed to work with email & messaging from big services like AOL, MSN, Yahoo etc (but AOL was the only one that was under development). The industrial design and some UI design was done by Ideo in San Francisco. I think there were several reasons it was killed, it only would have launched with AOL and no guarantee that other services would be coming, also Intel started moving away from consumer tech products (they’d only gotten into them to help build the market to drive demand for PCs). Happy to answer any other questions but it was over 20 years ago!

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +5

      Yay! Thank you. I was hoping someone with first hand knowledge would see this. I wonder if mine here ever had a board in it or was just a case that never got fully assembled? Do you know if these could do more than just email and chat? I'm curious what sort of chat service it used. Also if the PC software for it ever got to the public. Many thanks for your msg!

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +1

      @@TechTimeTravellerThey were never intended to do more than email and chat and would have been compatible with only specific services such as MSN or AOL etc. - whoever Intel could make a deal with; the first version would have been AOL only. Nothing compatible with that cone shaped base station ever was sold to the public. Whatever was built Intel gave away to employees whether it was functional or not. My recollection is it mostly wasn’t fully functional.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 26 дней назад +5

      These were intended only for email and messaging and only with big services like AOL, MSN, and Yahoo (AOL was the only one under development). I don’t think the PC software ever got released, I never even saw one of these working. I don’t know if your specific unit ever had a board in it - other than a design model which was solid plastic, the only ones I saw were like mine; functional prototypes.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  26 дней назад +4

      @Sashazur Thank you for writing in on this. I suspected there were more of these out there. So the units that produced to that point were for internal use and testing then? They weren't going to be sold to the public? I wish I knew more about mine.. it seems to be missing 2 screws in the bottom so perhaps someone removed the board from it for whatever reason. I wonder if any schematics etc still exist for the screen, etc.. I'd love to make it functional somehow with another board. Really appreciate your comment!

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 25 дней назад +4

      I’m pretty sure you’re correct that the units that exist were never built to be sold, and were only intended for development and testing. But the only concrete evidence I have for that is the one I have says it’s an engineering sample, and the fact that there just don’t seem to be many of these floating around. I don’t know anything about where schematics could be found. The only documentation I have is the UI/UX specification which I wrote.

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife Месяц назад +29

    If it was a prototype, it wouldn't have had an FCC ID.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +14

      It's not a valid ID though.. do they expire?

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife Месяц назад +22

      @@TechTimeTraveller Intel did have other FCC IDs in the EJM-1231 range, for the wireless base station and the peripherals for it which were released. So maybe they applied for an FCC ID for the Chat Pad but never actually submitted it for FCC testing.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 26 дней назад +2

      The one I have that boots has an FCC ID of EJM123117389; that is screen printed on the bottom. It also has a sticker saying it's an engineering sample. I looked up that ID on the FCC site and there was no close match but at least I could confirm it was an Intel ID.

  • @dine9093
    @dine9093 Месяц назад +4

    that looped sample was amazing!

  • @BrentBlueAllen
    @BrentBlueAllen 22 дня назад +2

    I remember really enjoying the Intel USB microscope from this product line as a kid.

  • @elbiggus
    @elbiggus Месяц назад +8

    My stab at decoding the mysterious button on the right is some sort of "switch panes" deal; I'm guessing emails would be presented in a split view - a list of messages on one side, the content of the currently selected message on the other - and pressing the button would switch the up/down keys from moving through the list of emails and scrolling the contents of the selected email.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад

      That’s exactly what it was. I was the UX designer for this thing.

  • @3drakaina
    @3drakaina Месяц назад +4

    I had to get on my main account just to comment on this. I've been building a few handheld computers recently and that would be perfect for a cyberdeck, for lack of a better term at the moment. Making a few assumptions, you could probably squeeze a Raspberry Pi/Orange Pi/x64 Nuck style computer into it, power it from some thin li-ion cells, replace the display with a modern banner style wide display that's maybe 1280x400 (saving the original, of course), and the keyboard is most likely a matrix keyboard, wired up with columns and rows. The keyboard would be super easy to wire up to a Teensy or other similar microcontroller after some simple probing with a multimeter, and then modify a generic keyboards files to add in the special features. I recently did that for an Apple //c keyboard to use it in a portable terminal style machine for programming microcontrollers with a 1920x440 display.
    Just from what I could see, that Chat Pad shell has so much potential, without having to permanently modify the shell in case it is a proper prototype. Just from some assumptions, it looks like there's room and mounting points inside to mount a 3d printed bracket to to hold the guts nicely. Could probably even use that empty port for a barrel jack to charge it. For software you could go with any sort of Linux distro, or even do Win10 IoT and make it a dedicated messaging device like it was intended, but in a modern way with whatever messenger you like as the dedicated program running at boot. Which the latter could get you into the territory of trying to make your own interface for the program to make it match any sort of screen images you can find of it supposedly functioning. It's a rabbit hole that runs deep if you aren't careful, lol.
    Just a thought. Totally down to help out if you want to look into that at some point. I even have a 3d printer, since that's how I make the shells for my handheld computers among other things. I even do cad so making brackets for it wouldn't be too hard to do either.

  • @bjn714
    @bjn714 Месяц назад +4

    8:55 this button was meant for moving between the message list and the body of the message. That is why it has a divider with a 2-way arrow over it.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад

      Correct. I did UX design for this.

  • @timeless.ephemeri
    @timeless.ephemeri Месяц назад +2

    that silver and deep blue transparent plastic really is a look, though. so many electronics from this era were practically modern art pieces with their crazy organic forms and colors. it wasn't always very practical, but it sure does make for a cool artifact of another, perhaps more optimistic, time.

  • @yeninja
    @yeninja Месяц назад +3

    “Over the internet to the internet.” 😂😂

  • @RacerX-
    @RacerX- Месяц назад +8

    Cool! but also a bummer the seller did not disclose there was no guts to this thing, I don't see how he could have not noticed it was an empty shell. Shame on the seller but what do you expect from eBay these days I guess. Anyway, cool video as always.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 25 дней назад

      The one I have that does have guts, it’s not quite transparent enough to easily see inside or to make out what is in there. So it’s possible the seller didn’t know.

  • @moonsattic
    @moonsattic Месяц назад +2

    I used to have an iphone 3G pre-production unit, I think at one point it had an asset tag on it or something but it was lacking a serial number but no other identifying marks

  • @WarlordMoA
    @WarlordMoA Месяц назад

    The Intel Chat Pad looks exactly like Apple egg shaped laptop eMacs and now the Apple Vision Pro, this makes so much sense where today’s technology is coming from, and when Steve Jobs described the iPhone3G with - internet - the phone - Mac all in in one is the same delivery tone to the Intel chat pad, internet, wireless, pc, isp. Etc. same tone!

  • @tcaldwe
    @tcaldwe Месяц назад +39

    LGR just did a video on that camera :)

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +15

      Yep. Bit of a trip down memory lane with that one. I don't know what happened to ours. I guess we tossed it.

    • @markusjuenemann
      @markusjuenemann Месяц назад +3

      My very first thought, too... 😂

    • @pikadroo
      @pikadroo Месяц назад +4

      Good for LGR.

    • @MachtNixPasstSo
      @MachtNixPasstSo Месяц назад +2

      ... who cares ...

    • @thenotoriouspie
      @thenotoriouspie Месяц назад +7

      @@MachtNixPasstSo you and @pikadroo sound fun at parties!

  • @mfree80286
    @mfree80286 Месяц назад +3

    I was in electronics sales when these internet appliances started to come onto market, and I can tell you they arrived and they bombed out FAST. Moore's Law bit them pretty hard, I recall things like this appeared and disappeared within the space of 8 months or so, with smarter phones and "pocket PCs" taking over very quickly (things like the Compaq iPaq) for not all that much more.
    The FCC ID for this thing never even made it through submission... there's one for the base and one for the joystick though.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +2

      The FCC ID is what kind of had me wondering if this really was a prototype. I would have thought if this was a canceled production unit the ID would have been submitted. I thought pilot production unit.. but I'd assume they'd have a valid FCC ID since those could potentially be sold.

    • @mfree80286
      @mfree80286 Месяц назад

      @@TechTimeTraveller Could be a molding/assembly line test, it should be easy to discern whether or not a motherboard was ever actually fitted.

    • @uhohwhy
      @uhohwhy Месяц назад +1

      tl dr

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 26 дней назад

      The one I have that is bootable has a screen printed FCC ID on the bottom but also has an "engineering sample" sticker.

  • @laurensnieuwland4657
    @laurensnieuwland4657 23 дня назад +2

    This reminds me of the Intel microscope I've got...

  • @justovision
    @justovision Месяц назад +3

    Normally I'd bet the LCD is one of the same standard chips everyone uses but this is Intel. If you can find a datasheet on the display driver that would be key. But that's all time you could spend doing other things. "I'm not an electronics engineer" shouldn't stop anyone from trying.

  • @HeadsetGuy
    @HeadsetGuy Месяц назад +1

    From the Chat Pad to the PC to your ISP over the Internet to the Internet.

  • @pptemplar5840
    @pptemplar5840 Месяц назад +4

    If this doesn't have a mainboard and the only other evidence of it's existence is basically photos and presentation, this is a display model, not a prototype.
    Really cool looking, would be nice to make a mock up using the shell in some non destructive way

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +1

      There were prototypes. I have one that boots up.. I was the UX designer for this product.

    • @pptemplar5840
      @pptemplar5840 День назад

      @@Sashazur Why would someone remove the board of a prototype and sell it though? Even if prototypes exist surely selling a whole prototype is more lucrative than selling a shell and board separately just hoping two crazy people have broken prototypes that specifically need one of each of the separate components.
      It would be hard to convince me this wasn't only used for a photoshoot or something because I could think of no reason to remove the main board besides repairing a non working prototype, and if this one had a functional mainboard then why would someone disassemble a working prototype just to fix a broken one?

  • @pikadroo
    @pikadroo Месяц назад

    I was watching stargate sg-1 today and they had something that looked just like this in the episode… and there is no shortage of old computer stuff in that show.

  • @50shadesofbeige88
    @50shadesofbeige88 Месяц назад +2

    Oh, I'm super jelly. I love anything intel from this era.

  • @cypherian2
    @cypherian2 Месяц назад +1

    This thing is giving me an Apple Newton E-Mate vibe, for sure! It's funny, I worked for CompUSA back in that time period, and I do not recall any of these products! But then it was a busy time, and A LOT new an old companies seemed to coming up with stuff DAILY, so it was hard to keep up!

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +1

      For sure.. there's so many things I've forgotten from that period of time. The only reason I remember the Intel cam is I took a heck of a lot of pictures with it when my kids were young.. before we could finally afford a real camera. :) Tech moves so fast and so many companies came up with these niche ideas during the early broadband internet era.

  • @MrKelaher
    @MrKelaher Месяц назад

    Very cool :) I love intel prototypes, used to work in a lab where we where given them to test and code for, though I have never seen that one !

  • @bubblegumgun3292
    @bubblegumgun3292 Месяц назад

    00's tech really liked its round transparent designs

  • @jkohutiak
    @jkohutiak Месяц назад +4

    I'm wondering if they were just prototyping the housing.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +4

      Possible. Only reason I think they may have had a working unit is the newspaper photo I showed in the video.. that showed what looked like a BIOS POST screen, and was different from the screen shown in the color CES photo.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +3

      I had one that booted up but didn’t do more than that without any base station or software. I was the Intel UX designer for this product.

  • @otopico
    @otopico Месяц назад +1

    I used a 14.4 version of that modem, It was a slick little unit. Many good hours of dial up Internet and BBS fun were had.
    I almost miss those days when the world of the Internet was new.

    • @imark7777777
      @imark7777777 22 дня назад

      I am in an area with frontier DSL and it's 50-50 whether you happen to be in a neighborhood with good service or a neighborhood with bad service. Half the time I'm thinking I wish I had something to compare to but I swear dial-up was faster than this.
      Well they're finally bringing fiber through and we're finally getting an upgrade but meanwhile we're also getting a bypass to route traffic out of town and around and the construction crew has decided that they're going to continue to cut the lines I guess we can't have nice things.
      At least I am a semi-happy customer with Comcast for better or worse. But there was a time when I was at somebody's house working on their printer and it took an hour to download the driver update I was actually able to start in download it on my phone faster five years ago in the last five minutes of the download should've done that to begin with.
      Oh the dial up days living in the middle of nowhere in a valley. I can't say it was fast but it always connected at the same rate. 28.8

  • @zfluffernutter
    @zfluffernutter Месяц назад +1

    Wonder if it would be worth taking measurements and building something around a rp2040 to make it do what it was always meant to?

  • @user-yg2mx3pr1i
    @user-yg2mx3pr1i Месяц назад

    woohoo! Been hoping for this since I saw the thread!
    Reminds me of the Intel dot station

  • @user-nd7rg5er5g
    @user-nd7rg5er5g Месяц назад

    That's a lovely looking device. I miss the colorful designs of 2000s tech. Shame there was no logic board inside, but thank you for showing off this little beauty.

  • @MegaManNeo
    @MegaManNeo Месяц назад

    This device, how it looks and how it interacts with hard and software screams early 2000's and I love it!
    I know I would have loved it, especially as laptops were still super expensive back in the day.

  • @tom611
    @tom611 Месяц назад +1

    I think the mystery button on the far right is likely a 'sync' button. Longer rectangle on the left representing the chat pad's internal display and the smaller right rectangle representing the PC, with an arrow going between the two. Kinda similar to other sync buttons I've seen. It should be no problem storing a fair number of text-only E-Mail messages inside it even with relatively cheap tech in 2001, which I'm guessing would be a large usage. Perhaps could also work as a 'pair' button or 'ready'/'available' button for realtime chat clients.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +2

      Nope it was to switch focus between the two panes on the display. The smaller pane was a list of items (such as inbox) and the larger one was the item you were currently viewing (such as an email message). I was the UX designer for this thing.

    • @tom611
      @tom611 Месяц назад +1

      @@Sashazur Oh, neat. Interesting way to go about navigation.

  • @wastelandwanderer3883
    @wastelandwanderer3883 Месяц назад +2

    Cool design for a cyberdeck! 🤔

  • @SierraSierraFoxtrot
    @SierraSierraFoxtrot Месяц назад

    The shape is very cool.

  • @DouglasWalrath
    @DouglasWalrath Месяц назад +2

    sounds like a great project for sticking a pi zero w into

  • @mattmers
    @mattmers Месяц назад +1

    Another device like this one that missed the mark but on ther other side of the web period was the Sony Mylo comm. I had a sony Mylo Comm 2. what a cool device at the wrong time. A bit too modern for you but might be worth a lookup.

  • @garthhowe297
    @garthhowe297 Месяц назад

    Cool. I love these early oddities. I have a 3Com Audrey, which did make it to market, but not for long.

  • @JessicaFEREM
    @JessicaFEREM Месяц назад +4

    I'm sure if this sold someone would turn these into desktop keyboards and have the display be for things like CPU usage and it could be a decent little keyboard for the pc

    • @MegaManNeo
      @MegaManNeo Месяц назад

      If more of those were around, people would have probably already thrown Raspberries and micro controllers like the Pico or ESP32 at it.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 25 дней назад +1

      @@MegaManNeothe one I have is stickered “Beta 0 S/N 0080”. So likely at least 80 were built. But since they never really worked, I guess they mostly just stayed at Intel and ended up in employee’s junk boxes.

  • @Adam-jw3uz
    @Adam-jw3uz Месяц назад

    It reminds me of the AlphaSmart typing pads that I used in school as a kid, but wireless. I think This Does Not Compute did a video on them a year or two ago.

  • @andresbravo2003
    @andresbravo2003 Месяц назад

    Fascinating.

  • @imark7777777
    @imark7777777 22 дня назад

    8:16 I like the look of the transparent screen and basil thing but I can't help but think wow it makes the screen look small. In some ways if they just combined it to the keyboard and a flip down screen the same size it seems like it would've been a nicer design right now it looks like it's a little big to be like oh yeah I'm gonna drag that with me all around the house. Then again I'm using an iPhone mini which is still bigger than my iPhone 4s.

  • @pikadroo
    @pikadroo Месяц назад +1

    Dig the sunday morning video at any length. It’s bigger than i thought from the picture you posted.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +1

      Yeah I thought it was going to be tiny myself.. but. Yeah. Intel was doing what Chrysler did with fins in the late 50s. :)

    • @pikadroo
      @pikadroo Месяц назад +1

      @@TechTimeTraveller I think Apple caused a lot of that with the egg shaped imac. Cause I remember seeing a lot of conceptual designs back then with the term "internet appliance" used a lot. A great example was when Gateway bought Amiga they drew up some designs for a new Amiga and it was pretty much like that, that bar of soap kind of shape. Remote controls had that problem for a while where they were tear drop shaped and could pop right out your hand like a bar of soap.

  • @briandecker8403
    @briandecker8403 Месяц назад

    Sounds like a competitor for General Magic!

  • @JoelReesonmars
    @JoelReesonmars Месяц назад +2

    Hey, you could put a RasPi in there!
    Kidding. Sort-of.
    But there are people around (including me) who could help walk you through figuring out how to connect what's there.
    (Wondering if the LCD is real, though.)

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +3

      It looks to be pretty real. I should open this thing up and see what exists in the way of cabling.

    • @JoelReesonmars
      @JoelReesonmars Месяц назад +3

      @@TechTimeTraveller You know, thinking about the ARM processors in the PIs, ...
      That battery compartment would not have been big enough to power any of Intel's x86-based CPUs, especially the Pentium class, for very long -- definitely nothing powerful enough to do more than primitive pre-HTML markup. So, ...
      This would have been about the time Intel was developing and then abaondoning the XScale architecture ARM CPUs they developed from DEC's StrongARM stuff. So, when Intel got into the not-invented-here snit in the early 2000s and divested XScale, that might also have been part of the reason these products disappeared.
      It would have been pushing XScale a bit, too, performance-wise, but the HTML back then was also a little more primitive.

  • @NortonAntiVirusSupport
    @NortonAntiVirusSupport Месяц назад +1

    I have a mother board for it, my father worked for them a while ago and has a bunch of extra stuff by intel including a old mother board for it

  • @uhohwhy
    @uhohwhy Месяц назад +1

    so when they decommissioned it they trashed mb and some garbage hunter snatched the shell.
    open it up, is there any traces of the missing components?

  • @seth8629
    @seth8629 Месяц назад +1

    I had that gamepad and the base!!

  • @dumbcatposter
    @dumbcatposter Месяц назад +1

    Looks like it's about to give birth to a litter of Sega Genesis controllers

  • @vjcodec
    @vjcodec Месяц назад

    This is peak 2000’s plastic

  • @silver965
    @silver965 Месяц назад

    My own crackpot theory: It may have been a sort of mockup prototype? Something that is fit to take pictures of for media and press release, or pass around a room so people can get a feel for it, but not meant to be a functional prototype like an Engineering prototype.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад

      These got to the point of being almost functional. I was the UX designer for this. For years I had one that would boot up but didn’t do anything since it couldn’t connect to anything.

  • @4verageYTuser
    @4verageYTuser Месяц назад +1

    lgr did a video on that intel digital camera

  • @rbus
    @rbus Месяц назад

    have a similar weird somewhere from Intel from around this era but more tablet form factor.

  • @galen__
    @galen__ Месяц назад

    USB 1.1 was likely the driving force for Intel to show what was possible with a new PC that was Y2K compliant 😅

  • @ENNEN420
    @ENNEN420 Месяц назад +4

    Really forward for Intel to make a chat device that enabled wireless connectivity to your pc over the internet that enabled connectivity from the chatpad to the internet to your ISP from the chatpad to the internet to your ISP from the chatpad to the PC to your ISP over the internet to the PC and over the internet from the chatpad to the internet to your ISP over the internet to the internet. You really only had a couple of devices like that and they all required a SIM card and a cell subscription contract.

    • @imark7777777
      @imark7777777 22 дня назад

      That line had me thinking my computer crashed! it has a habit of hard crashing if I look at the USB-C cable going to my docking station followed with a hard crash with a haptic feedback on the trackpad stops and the screen freezes and the audio loops just like in the video over and over until the kernel panic watchdog kicks in. I'm getting so fed up with Apple.

  • @TheColinputer
    @TheColinputer Месяц назад

    You know i can totally see the use case of this because i used to do something very similar. I would remote desktop into my desktop PC from around the house on my eeePC netbook. This being before the days of cloud everything it was a much better experience than having 2 lots of out of sync data on your desktop and laptop. Plus, those old eeePC netbooks with their crappy atom CPUs, unless you were trying to watch like video or something it was way snappyer to just use remote desktop than use the netbook itself.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 25 дней назад

      The use case was that you could be doing email and chat from this while someone else used the PC for other stuff. Made sense before smartphones and cheap laptops.

  • @rockmanx2002
    @rockmanx2002 Месяц назад

    Store display model, perhaps?

  • @Nilboggen
    @Nilboggen Месяц назад

    My thoughts are multiple different teams are working on this and the design team had the most free time, so they mocked up the casing so a higher up could confirm it was the right color blue. I worked at a company that made coffee makers we would often get something completely finished from one team while another was behind from other projects. By the time the hardware and software side of things caught up to the design team it was probably already too outdated to bring to market.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +1

      There was only one team for each aspect of this product. The industrial design was outsourced although Intel was involved in all stages of it, and Intel did the interaction design. These almost made it to production. This could have been a fully final production version of the case, long after colors finishes etc were approved. I was the UX designer for this.

    • @Nilboggen
      @Nilboggen Месяц назад +1

      @Sashazur Nice you folks did good work it looks great 👍

  • @devcybiko
    @devcybiko Месяц назад +1

    Were they trying to make it look like the iMac of the early 2000's?

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +2

      Yeah pretty much. I was on the design team for this. Intel wanted to follow the design trend of the time to use transparent candy colors for tech products. I remember going to Fry's with a colleague and we bought like $2000 worth of random translucent tech gadgets on Intel's dime, for "evaluation".

    • @lunarmodule6419
      @lunarmodule6419 29 дней назад

      Exactly

  • @mr.k7457
    @mr.k7457 Месяц назад +1

    LGR just did a video on the digital camera!

  • @lunarmodule6419
    @lunarmodule6419 29 дней назад

    But the big question here is what was the WIFI tech/standard? I checked on the Internets but no mention of it. No mention on the periferals boxes (ebay), nothing on the old Intel webpages. We have to assume it was proprietary not Bluetooth.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 26 дней назад +1

      It was not Wifi, not Bluetooth. Maybe proprietary? The range was supposed to be about 150 feet under good conditions (based on the troubleshooting message mine shows when it boots up and can't find the base station).

    • @lunarmodule6419
      @lunarmodule6419 26 дней назад

      @Sashazur So a proprietary wireless protocol hum?... Look at them no fear of writing code lol

  • @Qyngali
    @Qyngali Месяц назад +1

    The far right button is probably for send/receive?

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +1

      Oooh.. that's a good guess. The button itself is a bit ambiguous to me but that could be it.

    • @senilyDeluxe
      @senilyDeluxe Месяц назад +1

      I've seen a bunch of early 90s TVs use this very symbol for automatic channel search (as in "tuning")

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +1

      It was to switch focus between the two panes on the display. Such as inbox message list vs the current message. You could see both but only scroll one of them at a time. I was the UX designer for this.

    • @Qyngali
      @Qyngali Месяц назад

      @@Sashazur ah ic. That makes sense. :)

  • @mikescholz6429
    @mikescholz6429 Месяц назад

    If you have any interest in getting into electronic engineering even as a hobby, then using some dev boards and open source to make that functional probably won’t be as hard as you imagine and would be a perfect first project to start learning.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад

      I mean I built a TV Typewriter and mostly understand how it works.. but that had plans and very good explanations of the workings of things. I'm not even sure where to start on figuring out the keyboard and display pinouts. But I'd be game to try.

  • @friendlyjapanesebusinesswoman
    @friendlyjapanesebusinesswoman Месяц назад

    Youre well spoken

  • @AiOinc1
    @AiOinc1 Месяц назад

    That's insane that it's missing the logic board. Absolutely insane, why even remove it?
    Also, tells us more about the Cublazer modem! Looks pretty sweet. Is that for a Macintosh?
    11:15 Probably not for USB charging, since that was very uncommon in 2001... And this doesn't use rechargeable batteries. Maybe an IR window or something?

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад

      I was the UX designer for this. The port was for an optional power adapter but it could also use non rechargeable AA batteries. It wasn’t supposed to need any cables. No IR either, it was RF only.

  • @ajax700
    @ajax700 Месяц назад +3

    How much is " not too much money"?
    Best wishes.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +2

      I think I got this for around $150 or so. It had one go around on ebay with an opening bid of $500 or something.. didn't get any takers, so the seller, to their credit, opened it at 99 cents the second time. There was only myself and one other bidder I think. Too obscure and I only found out about it myself when I saw the listing.

  • @MarquisDeSang
    @MarquisDeSang Месяц назад +5

    I would prefer a "shit posting pad"

  • @WoodsPrecisionArms
    @WoodsPrecisionArms Месяц назад +4

    I commented below before I got to this part A that’s what I was thinking it was a manufacturers prototype BUT that can be more valuable - it was to give to the plastic injection molders to duplicate and get their manufacturing site re-tooled
    ****++++ 11:05
    Are you sure it’s a for demo functioning prototype or is it a manufacturing prototype which would mean it would have electronics inside but none of them would work it would just be mock ups to make the plastic case

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +2

      Hard to say. My best guess is they might have been in a pilot run phase.. ran off a few cases that either were just there as static physical demos, or were to have boards added later. And then the whole program got canceled and they dumped them off.. maybe employees took whatever existed home. I'm hoping someone from Intel back in the day will see this and maybe have answers.

    • @WoodsPrecisionArms
      @WoodsPrecisionArms Месяц назад +1

      @@TechTimeTraveller I think you’re absolutely right - it was a test run. Did it come in the retail packaging at all?

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад

      I worked on this product at Intel as the UX designer. These got to the engineering prototype level, the plastic tooling was probably final but no clue about the electronics. The one I have does boot up but all it does is complain that it can't find a base station.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 25 дней назад

      @@WoodsPrecisionArmsI don’t think the development ever got far enough for retail packaging. I never saw any.

  • @Geogres
    @Geogres Месяц назад +3

    9:06 that key says "Del" and has a crescent shaped object on it...
    is that a key specifically for ordering from Del Taco?!?!?!??!!?1/?!/?1/?1/!!!?!1

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  Месяц назад +2

      I mean, the Netpliance iOpener had a 🍕 key..

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад

      It was a sleep key.

  • @Lilithe
    @Lilithe Месяц назад

    Get Foone Turing to look at it lol. Making weird keyboards is their thing!

  • @bokami3445
    @bokami3445 Месяц назад

    You might be able to put a Raspberry PI in there and get some sort of functionality from it.

  • @wskinnyodden
    @wskinnyodden Месяц назад +1

    Hey, if the keyboard is amenable to have a membrane put below the keys (or other solution) and a replacement LCD/TFT/OLED panel exists just grab a Rock PI 5 (Yes, rock pi, way better than the Raspi 5 I have a NanoPC-T6 that uses the same soc so I definitely know hehe) and make a nice ARM laptop to insult Intel (unless you find a suitable Atom or similar SBC)

  • @seanmorris440
    @seanmorris440 17 дней назад

    100% speculating, but its possible that it never had a motherboard, and the prototype just had a pigtail to wire the components to another device while they developed it.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  17 дней назад +2

      Yes now that I have a complete unit courtesy of an Intel engineer here, I'm thinking mine never had a board and was just an engineering sample used for marketing or such. I'll be doing more of a deep dive with the complete unit next week.

  • @TVperson1
    @TVperson1 Месяц назад

    Would have been cool if it worked with MSN messenger

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Месяц назад +1

      Intel wanted to make deals with the large players at the time. I’m sure they talked to Microsoft and Yahoo. I know they had a deal with AOL since that was the only service it was going to support at initial release.

  • @werehyenataur
    @werehyenataur Месяц назад +1

    Lemme use it please I’ll program it

  • @bokami3445
    @bokami3445 Месяц назад

    2:03 -> What in God's name were Intel think about this! I'm guessing they though it's vaguely like a steering wheel, We'll sell million to Gamers that are into driving games... sheez!

  • @human.earthling
    @human.earthling Месяц назад

    The banner for patron at beginning was distracting

  • @ErraticPT
    @ErraticPT Месяц назад +3

    Why is it shaped like a sanitary pad?

  • @jennaorlowski5469
    @jennaorlowski5469 Месяц назад

    Get an ardweeno and finish it.
    if it is a proto, cool... umm well you got lucky you have a mostly finished thing... give it a beating heart!

  • @bokami3445
    @bokami3445 Месяц назад

    0:51 -> Very IMac'ish

  • @LX-0
    @LX-0 26 дней назад

    There will be possible no serial no. because of the missing Mainboard. This is a dummy device just for the showcase.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 26 дней назад +1

      The one I have that boots has a sticker that says Beta 0 Serial no. 0080.

  • @wiwingmargahayu6831
    @wiwingmargahayu6831 Месяц назад

    Zamzam water

  • @Sir-Dexter
    @Sir-Dexter Месяц назад

    wot no power ???

  • @jonasrnb7586
    @jonasrnb7586 Месяц назад

    Run a esp32 in it

  • @gsestream
    @gsestream 28 дней назад

    sony play station made that just now.

  • @pinrod1
    @pinrod1 Месяц назад

    So its a motorola IMFree message pad, sort of....

  • @Kafj302
    @Kafj302 Месяц назад

    I am like number 597

  • @Rawstock92
    @Rawstock92 28 дней назад

    Mod!

  • @stopmotionadventures4812
    @stopmotionadventures4812 Месяц назад

    1 day ago!!!

  • @Squiggy8440
    @Squiggy8440 28 дней назад

    Bet the ebay seller took it out and is selling it as a separate part =_=

  • @imark7777777
    @imark7777777 22 дня назад

    11:05 charging via USB… No charging via USB was not a thing especially when it only put out 300 mA. that's only a rather recent occurrence that USB is considered a power supply. What year was this again yeah that was probably a barrel jack if it was for charging or USB if it was for some sort of Communication to the whole system but then that doesn't make sense because they have the Wireless link. And well it is possible to have a battery compartment and removable cells most the stuff with removable cells expected to be using alkaline type cells. So this is truly a weird device.

    • @TechTimeTraveller
      @TechTimeTraveller  21 день назад

      Good call. I am receiving a complete unit next week sometime and it sounds like it IS a USB port but for syncing/updating the device.. not charging.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur 17 дней назад

      @@TechTimeTravellerIt would have been released in 2001 if it hadn’t been cancelled. In the production version it was only supposed to have a power connector. You could run it on external power or non rechargeable AA batteries. But in the prototypes who knows?

  • @Aeduo
    @Aeduo Месяц назад

    I love how pre-frutiger all these look. You see the beginnings of the style but it's not quite there yet. It's in a weird in-between that looks like stuff a dentist office would have around that they got from some tooth care company because it's cheap to make round, bulbous plastic objects.

  • @lunarmodule6419
    @lunarmodule6419 29 дней назад

    8:00 It's clearly just an IMac rip-off. Colored rounded clear plastic...

  • @djowen5192
    @djowen5192 Месяц назад

    Hah! ThiefBay.

  • @KoleckOLP
    @KoleckOLP Месяц назад +2

    I hope you got a partial refund.