Saturday, 2 July 2011

Colored Notebook Laptop

Colored  Notebook Laptop
Fans of the University of Texas football team, recently crowned national champions of college football, are known for their boisterous support for their home team and state.
That's why Nick Bhavsar, chief executive officer of LaptopLids and a Texas graduate student, knew he was onto something with his burnt-orange laptop cover bearing the iconic image of a longhorn.
The former Intel engineer's fledgling Web company began selling vinyl laptop covers with the Texas Longhorns logo as well as the Texas state flag in September 2005. After Texas won the national championship game at the Rose Bowl in early January and orders skyrocketed, Bhavsar realized he'd tapped into the growing demand for personalized laptop designs that are quickly vaulting the notebook PC out of its Model T era.
According to legend, Ford founder Henry Ford described his design philosophy for the Model T as, "You can paint it any color, so long as it's black." For many years a similar philosophy has held sway among laptop designers at the three largest PC companies in the world: Dell, Hewlett-Packard and the former IBM PC business now owned by Lenovo. Apple Computer, Sony, Acer, Alienware, Voodoo PC and others have introduced more stylish designs, but the standard products available from the largest Windows PC vendors tend to come in either black or gray.
That philosophy is starting to change. A few computer companies and several accessory makers and custom specialists have figured out that, like '70s-era custom vans and dot-com-era BMWs, custom-look laptops can be seen as potent style statements.
Dell's new XPS PC, introduced at the Consumer Electronics Show this month, features a flashy case design. Like LaptopLids, Dell has begun selling notebook covers along with its consumer laptops that add color or collegiate logos to its products. HP's Livestrong notebook features Lance Armstrong's signature yellow band in one of the company's few nods to personalization. And last fall, chipmaker Intel showed off a line of concept laptops that featured Ultrasuede fabric on their casing.
But custom designs are still relatively new to the mainstream PC industry. As a result, tech-savvy individuals looking for something different tend to produce their own creations, a practice known as "case-modding."
Most case mods have involved desktop PCs, but now that laptop shipments are set to overtake desktops in coming years, consumers are looking for ways to make their mobile PCs stand out from the rest of the black-and-gray crowd, said Tim Bajarin, president of Creative Strategies. For the most part, they are finding what they need outside of the traditional technology vendors, he said.
Take Skyn, which makes colorful laptop covers that can be reused on multiple laptops. Skyn's co-founder, Letitia Lucero, was looking for a colorful laptop a few years ago, but couldn't find anything she liked. After experimenting with materials in partnership with her husband, Miguel, they discovered a type of plastic that stood up to the wear and tear on a notebook, and applied an adhesive to the back that allows the cover to be removed and used on other laptops, a Skyn spokeswoman said.
Last year, Inclosia Solutions and Tulip Distribution International Holding teamed up to release a series of leather-covered laptops that are also available with fabrics such as denim.
Read more: http://news.cnet.com/Yearning-for-color-on-laptops/2100-1041_3-6032356.html#ixzz1Qw7V5Sz2


Colored  Notebook Laptop
Colored  Notebook Laptop
Colored  Notebook Laptop
Colored  Notebook Laptop
Colored  Notebook Laptop
Colored  Notebook Laptop
Colored  Notebook Laptop
Colored  Notebook Laptop

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