Intriguing idea. 
http://www.zdnet.com/dell-cooks-up-an-android-pc-on-an-hdmi-stick-7000025851/

Dell cooks up an Android PC on an HDMI stick

Thin-clients are great for security and keeping everyone on the same software 
platform page but they can be a pain to set up. Dell's Wyse division, which has 
been doing thin-clients for decades, has cooked up a new way to avoid the 
thin-client setup trouble: An Android-powered, universal-thin client called the 
Wyse Cloud Connect.


Wyse Cloud Connect: An Android PC and thin-client desktop you can carry in your 
pocket.
The Cloud Connect is about as large as an over-sized USB stick. While it comes 
with a USB port, to use it you'll need a device such as an HDTV monitor or a 
modern laptop with an HDMI or Mobile High-Definition Link (MHL) port. To 
"install" it, all you need do is plug Cloud Connect into the device, plug in a 
power-source with the mini-USB port, and you're ready for business.

Inside it there's a multi-core Cortex-A9 ARM System-on-Chip (SoC), 8GBs of 
internal storage, and 1GB of RAM. This is powered up with Android 4.1, Jelly 
Bean. It also comes with a micro-SD card slot, which can support up to 72GBs of 
additional storage. It also comes with 802.11a/b/g/n networking and Bluetooth

Once in place you can use it with a USB or Bluetooth mouse and keyboard to turn 
any properly equipped display into an Android PC. If you want more than 
Android's goodness, and Dell and its partners certainly hope you do, the Cloud 
Connect also comes with Dell's Wyse Cloud Client Manager software-as-a-service 
(SaaS). With this IT managers can manage device so that it can be used with the 
appropriate thin-client, back-end programs.
By default that's Dell Wyse PocketCloud software for remote access to physical 
or virtual desktops, apps and content. By itself this enables you to access 
your office Mac or Windows desktop.

If you want more, and Dell and its partners hope you will, you can use it with 
Citrix, Microsoft or VMware thin-client servers or for Web-based apps. In 
short, the Wyse Cloud Connect provides IT department with a tasty dish of a way 
to easily get both conventional and BYOD users on the enterprise desktop with 
no messy setup annoyances.

For a list price of $129 I can see many companies finding the Wyse Cloud 
Connect to be the perfect meal for their road warriors.

Related Stories:

Dell Wyse launches cloud stick dubbed Project Ophelia
Dell buys Wyse, plays 'cloud client' game
Android PCs and other Windows-alternative desktops are for real
Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, aka sjvn, has been writing about technology and the 
business of technology since CP/M-80 was the cutting edge PC operating system. 
SJVN covers networking, Linux, open source, and operating systems.


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