Dell is making its Studio One 19 desktop available to customers in the United States and Europe on April 28. The all-in-one computer had originally been released Japan in March.
Studio One 19 nods to the stylings of the Apple iMac, with all its components fitted inside a slim, high-definition screen on brushed-aluminum legs. An on-screen “carousel” application feature is also reminiscent of Apple’s application dock, but the carousel, using Studio One 19’s perhaps most braggable (though optional) feature-multi-touch-can be spun with the flick of a finger.
Dell designed the Studio One 19 with families in mind. It comes in white, red, blue, pink and charcoal, and Dell envisions it on a kitchen counter or in a living room, being used by multiple members of a family, and its looks and features speak to this.
The desktop has a 19-inch (diagonal) screen and several applications made for use with multi-touch. The way touch-screen users have become accustomed to dragging and arranging items with their fingers-and iPhone users are now used to “pinching” or drawing apart their fingers to minimize or enlarge items-so can users interact with Dell applications on-screen, making music playlists, creating photo slide shows, taking notes or browsing the Web.
Dell has also teamed with software maker Cozi to feature the Cozi Family Organizer on both the touch and non-touch versions. With Cozi, calendar information or grocery lists, for example, can be e-mailed to family members or texted to their phones.
Pricing for Studio One 19 begins at $699. Processor options include the Intel Celeron, Dual Core Celeron, Pentium Dual Core, Core 2 Duo and Core 2 Quad Core. For integrated graphics, users can choose from the Nvidia GeForce 9200 or GeForce 9400.
A slot-loaded optical drive is to the right of the screen, and the desktop includes a 7-in-1 media card reader, six USB ports, a 2.1 audio output plus headphone and microphone ports, a hard drive of up to 750GB and up to 4GB of dual-channel memory.
In addition to the multi-touch capability, Blu-ray disc, integrated wireless, a Web cam and facial recognition security are also optional.
Studio One 19 measures 22 by 15.5 by 3.2 inches and weighs 22.7 pounds.

AI success depends on whether enterprise data is ready, reachable, and close enough to the workloads that need it. In this eSpeaks episode, Dell Technologies’ Vrashank Jain explains why fragmented data, weak metadata, slow pipelines, and poor data locality can stall AI projects before models ever reach production.

In this episode of eSpeaks, Jennifer Margles, Director of Product Management at BMC Software, discusses the transition from traditional job scheduling to the era of the autonomous enterprise.

eSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly uncertain world. They explore how automation, AI, and integrated platforms are helping finance teams tackle today’s biggest challenges, from cross-border compliance and FX volatility to […]
-
Aktuelle Nachrichten - Ressourcen Ressourcen-HubsAusgewählte RessourcenLink to The Real AI Power Play: Who Controls Your Enterprise Data Layer?
The Real AI Power Play: Who Controls Your Enterprise Data Layer?IT and data teams were promised that AI would make work easier. Instead, it's created new layers of complexity.Link to Building the Backbone of Agentic AI with Trusted, Context-Rich Data
Building the Backbone of Agentic AI with Trusted, Context-Rich DataIn this 10-minute take video, Reltio Principal Solutions Consultant Guy Vorster explains how organizations can overcome fragmented data challenges to power AI agents.Link to IHG scales real-time, trusted data across global brands
IHG scales real-time, trusted data across global brandsAccelerating time to value while powering data-driven engagementLink to Dell’s Vrashank Jain on Enterprise AI Data Readiness and AI Data Platform Infrastructure
Dell’s Vrashank Jain on Enterprise AI Data Readiness and AI Data Platform InfrastructureAI success depends on whether enterprise data is ready, reachable, and close enough to the workloads that need it. In this eSpeaks episode, Dell Technologies’ Vrashank Jain explains why fragmented data, weak metadata, slow pipelines, and poor data locality can stall AI projects before models ever reach production.
Link to BMC’s Jennifer Margules on Intelligent Enterprise Orchestration
BMC’s Jennifer Margules on Intelligent Enterprise OrchestrationIn this episode of eSpeaks, Jennifer Margles, Director of Product Management at BMC Software, discusses the transition from traditional job scheduling to the era of the autonomous enterprise.
Link to Global-First Finance: Building Scalable, Compliant Operations in an Uncertain World
Global-First Finance: Building Scalable, Compliant Operations in an Uncertain WorldeSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly uncertain world. They explore how automation, AI, and integrated platforms are helping finance teams tackle today’s biggest challenges, from cross-border compliance and FX volatility to […]
-
Künstliche Intelligenz -
Video -
Big Data & Analytik -
Cloud -
Netzwerk - Cybersicherheit Cybersicherheit
- Anwendungen Anwendungen
- IT-Verwaltung IT-Verwaltung
- Speicherung Speicherung
- Mobil Mobil
- Kleine Unternehmen Kleine Unternehmen
- Entwicklung Entwicklung
- Datenbank Datenbank
- Server Server
- Android Android
- Apple Apple
- Innovation Innovation
- PC-Hardware PC-Hardware
- Bewertungen Bewertungen
- Suchmaschinen Suchmaschinen
- Virtualisierung Virtualisierung
-
- Blogs Blogs
- Ereignisse Ereignisse