LAS VEGAS -- If you want people to fall in love with your curves,slut sex videos you better make them clean.
More than a year ago, HP introduced a giant, 34-inch curved-screen all-in-one Windows 10 PC. The "ENVY" was stunning for its audacious design, but also a bit clunky. The screen rested on two large chrome feet and the rather wide 4K display was flanked by a pair of ugly speakers.
This year, HP went back to the design drawing board and refashioned the computer into something you might actually envy. The company unveiled the new HP Envy Curved AiO 34 on Tuesday at CES.
Gone is the ugly bezel and speakers. Instead, all you see is a floating, curved screen, held up by a stem that connects gracefully to a nearly full-width, yet low profile base. HP smartly moved the motherboard and all the ports to that base, putting most of them within arm’s reach on the back of the right side (a handful are also on the front). Included are USB 3.1 ports, USB-C Thunderbolt and HDMI-out.
The speakers are now hidden behind a mesh on the front of the base. That base also houses a wireless charging pad near the left side.
Without all that technology inside it, the curved 4K (3440x1440) screen is just 16.9 mm thick. It can also adjust from a 0-degree tilt to a 25-degree one. It is not, however, a touchscreen.
The HP Envy Curved AiO 34 does include a camera, but it’s hidden out of sight on the top until you push on it to pop it up. HP told us they do this for privacy. The screen’s built-in IR camera and microphone also turn off when you push the camera back into the screen.
The system is backed by 7th generation Intel Core i5 and i7 CPUs, an optional NVidia GFX GPU and can support up to 256 GB SSD and a 2 TB HDD.
HP plans to start selling the 34-inch all-in-one PC on January 11 for a starting price of $1729.99.
HP also took the redesign brush to its immersive computing system, the HP Sprout Pro.
An unusual computer hybrid that combines touch screen, touch mat, projection and 3D scanning and manipulation technology for an “immersive” computing experience, the new HP Sprout Pro G2 takes that original idea and refines it in several crucial ways.
First of all, the design is cleaner, sharper and, thanks to the darker colors, more professional looking. HP also replaced its original Workspace Software with WorkTools. This is an important change because it does away with the Sprout shell and replaces it with a suite of tools running in the more familiar Windows 10 operating system desktop.
The 20-point Touch Mat is now, at just 2.2 mm thick, significantly thinner than the original touchpad. HP told us they’ve also improved the scanning technology
HP made only small adjustments to the specs. The 10-point touch screen is slightly larger (now 23.8 inches) and the graphics are now powered by an NVidia GTX 960M GPU. Backing that is an Intel Core i7 CPU, 8 GB of RAM and a 1 TB SSD.
The Sprout Pro G2 will ship in March. Pricing has not yet been set.
Topics CES HP
Santa Claus can give you directions in Waze these holidaysAmericans abroad: Tales of traveling woe in the age of TrumpBurning Man 2017 is as wild and amazingly artistic as you expectedTaylor Swift’s ‘evermore’ review: A thoughtful note for a dark year'Big Mouth' made a great point with its 'Pen15' crossoverAmericans abroad: Tales of traveling woe in the age of TrumpHow to have yourself an emo little ChristmasVirgin Galactic aborted a major test flight in midairVanessa Carlton offers to replace damaged piano after seeing man's heartbreaking videoMeet Vic Barrett, who's suing the U.S. government over climate change15 protests that defined 202014 best tweets of the week, including Taylor Swift, the Postal Service, beer, and steakUber adds option to send packages just in time for the holidaysKendall Jenner got a 'Fashion Icon of the Decade' award and people are not having itBurning Man 2017 is as wild and amazingly artistic as you expectedUN Emissions Gap Report 2020: We must rapidly slash carbon emissions'Cyberpunk 2077' review: A slick game dogged by miles of asterisksVirgin Galactic aborted a major test flight in midairApple's super expensive, super large AirPods Max were instantly mockedTaylor Swift’s ‘evermore’ review: A thoughtful note for a dark year Who Are the Hanged Men? by Kara Walker On Minor Feelings by Cathy Park Hong Staff Picks: Cinema, Sebald, and Small Surprises by The Paris Review Quarantine Reads: The Unconsoled by Emma Garman A Story in One Picture by The Paris Review The Photographer and the Ballerina by The Paris Review The Collages of Max Ernst by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Swans, Sieves, and Sentience by The Paris Review Jonathan Escoffery Wins Plimpton Prize; Leigh Newman Wins Terry Southern Prize by The Paris Review The Elena Ferrante in My Head by Katherine Hill One Word: Bonkers by Harry Dodge The Envelope by Jill Talbot The Bird Master by Yoshiharu Tsuge Whiting Awards 2020: Ling Ma, Fiction Eighteen Theses on Rachel Harrison by Maggie Nelson Going Blind at the Border by Marcelo Hernandez Castillo Sleep and the Dream by László F. Földényi Redux: Film Is Death at Work by The Paris Review Harry Mathews’s Drifts and Returns by Daniel Levin Becker What Men Have Told Me by Adrienne Miller
2.0324s , 10547.546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【slut sex videos】,Unobstructed Information Network