Great minds think alike. So too, apparently, do hardware makers designing their own workspaces of the future.
Following HP’s announcement of the Sprout PC
 last week, Dell showed off its own double-touchscreen PC, which it 
merely called the Dell “smart desk.” Like the Sprout, the smart desk 
concept uses a large LCD monitor—presumably the Dell UltraSharp 27 Ultra HD 5K monitor it launched in September—paired with a touchscreen display perched on the desk in front of it.
So far, there’s no indication that Dell plans to commercialize the 
concept, let alone when it could do so. But it does appear to be more 
than just art.
Unfortunately, Dell’s description of the smart desk itself is bogged down in the wonder of it all.
 
Placed in a natural, horizontal location that is more comfortable for
 touch interaction, the Dell smart desk provides a work surface that 
aligns closely with the productivity requirements of professional 
software applications. Paired with a vertical display and powered by 
plug-ins to key ISV applications, it instinctually separates seeing from
 doing; primary work activities are close to the user while secondary 
ones are further away, accessible through intuitive screen swipes. 
Ten-plus finger touch functions as well as high-performance pen 
functions and gestures, paired with a new generation of tools naturally 
located on a horizontal surface, will allow users to easily manipulate 
digital content without having to step away from the task at hand. This 
digital desktop allows for multiple desks to be clustered around 
specific projects, notes that can be searched and shared, and better 
organization with scaling and stacking of growing content. In fact, any 
smart desk workspace will allow users to pick up their work session 
wherever they left it—regardless of location. This means that the 
creative cycle will never miss a beat. 
 
Whew. Translated, it appears that the Dell smart desk uses 
touchscreens in both the vertical and tabletop LCDs to allow users to 
manipulate objects by voice and by stylus—basically, treating the 
tabletop LCD as a tablet of sorts. It also appears that the workspace is
 synced to the cloud, and that users can push their flat tabletop LCDs 
together to create an ad-hoc network of sorts for collaboration.
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
whoo this is amazing dell corp
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