Skip to main content

Dell announces Project Ophelia, a USB stick that uses the cloud to make any monitor a PC

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Dell Wyse, the computer brand’s cloud computing arm, is slated to announce a device code-named Project Ophelia at CES in Las Vegas. The gadget is a USB stick that plugs into any monitor and converts it temporarily into a PC computer, according to Engadget. The device runs Android 4.0, the operating system better known as Jelly Bean, and it connects to a cloud server that houses all of your computing content. Project Ophelia only needs two amps of power to run, and it can get that from the monitor it’s plugged into. Just add in a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse, and you have your computer anywhere you go.

Tarkan Maner, Dell’s vice president and general manager of cloud computing, spoke with Cloud Pro about the new device. Maner said the company has its own IP on the device for security all the way between the device and the Dell data center. The gadget is managed by Dell Wyse Cloud Client Manager software-as-a-service, which gives extra protection by ensuring that the person using Project Ophelia has the correct permissions to access files.

Recommended Videos

Maner also noted that during Dell’s design phase, the company received inquiries from telecommunications firms about the device. Project Ophelia is slated to begin beta testing at 20 different major telecom businesses following CES, with a general release to the public in the second half of this year. 

It’s a cool idea, and it has the potential to be especially useful for enterprise businesses or professionals who are frequently on the road. Project Ophelia could make it easier to work without a laptop or to still be productive without lugging around your primary computer, although it does require some certainty about which monitors are compatible. Dell has clearly thought through the sticky issues of security, but the biggest remaining question is how easy it will be for consumers to just happen upon a free monitor to use without prior planning. 

Image via Miguel Mendez

Topics
Anna Washenko
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Anna is a professional writer living in Chicago. She covers everything from social media to digital entertainment, from tech…
Nvidia celebrates Trump, slams Biden for putting AI in jeopardy
The Nvidia RTX 5090 GPU.

In response to new export restrictions placed on AI GPUs, Nvidia posted a scathing blog criticizing the outgoing Biden-Harris administration. The administration's Interim Final Rule on Artificial Intelligence Diffusion largely targets China with restrictions on AI GPUs, according to Newsweek.

Nvidia disagrees. "While cloaked in the guise of an 'anti-China' measure, these rules would do nothing to enhance U.S. security. The new rules would control technology worldwide, including technology that is already widely available in mainstream gaming PCs and consumer hardware. Rather than mitigate any threat, the new Biden rules would only weaken America’s global competitiveness, undermining the innovation that has kept the U.S. ahead," wrote Nvidia's vice president of government of affairs Ned Finkle.

Read more
This new DirectX feature could completely change how PC games work
A scene from Fortnite running in Unreal Engine 5.

Microsoft has announced that neural rendering capabilities are coming to DirectX soon. Cooperative vector support, as it's called, will lead to "cross-platform enablement of neural rendering techniques," according to Microsoft, and it will usher in "a new paradigm in 3D graphics programming."

It sounds buzzy, but that's not without reason. This past week, Nvidia announced its new range of RTX 50-series graphics cards, and along with them, it revealed a slate of neural rendering features. Neural shaders, as Nvidia calls them, allow developers to execute small neural networks from shader code, running them on the dedicated AI hardware available on Nvidia, AMD, Intel, and Qualcomm GPUs. Microsoft is saying that it will enable these features on all GPUs, not just those sold by Nvidia, through the DirectX API.

Read more
This gaming PC with an RTX 4060 is on sale for $1,000 today
The iBuyPower Trace 7 on a white background.

Best Buy often has some great gaming PC deals, with one highlight available today: Right now, you can buy the iBuyPower Trace 7 gaming PC for $1,000 instead of $1,300. The PC includes the RTX 4060 GPU, so it’s ideal for mid-range gaming. It even comes with a keyboard and mouse, so you only need to make sure you have a screen to add to it. If you’re looking to upgrade your gaming PC for less, here’s what it has to offer.

Why you should buy the iBuyPower Trace 7
You won’t see anything from iBuyPower in our look at the best gaming PCs, but don’t let that discourage you. This is still a good option for those on a budget. This particular model has great hardware for the price. It has an AMD Ryzen 7 5700 CPU teamed up with 16GB of RAM and 1TB of SSD storage. More pivotal for a gaming PC is its graphics card: a GeForce RTX 4060 with 8GB of VRAM.

Read more