HP pushes PC-in-a-keyboard for businesses with hot desks
Briefly

HP pushes PC-in-a-keyboard for businesses with hot desks
"The idea is that you plug the EliteBoard G1a into a monitor that has USB-C video input and allow it to send data and get power over a single wire. Connect a wireless mouse and you've got your workstation covered. Maintain a similar monitor and mouse setup at home and you can carry just the keyboard back and forth. If your monitor, like the majority on the market, doesn't have a USB-C input, you can use an included USB-to-HDMI adapter to connect."
"The G1a weighs between 1.49 and 1.69 pounds, depending on config, and measures 14.1 in x 4.7 in x 0.7 inches, so it is more portable than most laptops, though it is longer and thicker than some. At its CES preview, HP showed off a long, thin envelope you can use to carry it and said it would also fit into any laptop bag that holds a 16-inch or larger laptop."
The HP EliteBoard G1a integrates a Windows computer into a full-size keyboard with 93 keys and a number pad. Keys have 2 mm travel and offer an acceptable typing feel despite being non-mechanical. The back houses vents and either two USB-C ports or one port with an attached USB-C cable. The device supplies video and power over a single USB-C connection to compatible monitors; an included USB-to-HDMI adapter enables legacy monitors. It supports 65 W USB-C power adapters. Configurations weigh 1.49–1.69 pounds and measure 14.1 x 4.7 x 0.7 inches, fitting in a 16-inch laptop bag. It uses AMD Ryzen AI 5 or 7 Pro chips with Radeon 800 graphics and an NPU up to 50 TOPS, qualifying as a Copilot+ PC.
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