At least that's the gist of what I heard a Best Buy employee telling a shopper. The shopper was looking at this new HP TouchSmart "Family PC" and trying out it's Smart Centre functions. It has a 19" touchscreen, a Family Calendar, a message center, integrated TV tuner, webcam and microphone, and wireless keyboard, mouse and stylus. It runs Windows Vista, so it has the Media Centre functionality built-in. The shopper thought it was cool, but asked "Why would they make something like this?". The Best Buy guy said that laptops are outselling desktops 6 to 1, and that most people are buying laptops as a personal item, no different than a PDA, cell phone or music player. He also said that even though some families have a laptop for each family member, they still wanted a "Family PC" for keeping shared files and media, so HP designed something that could go on a kitchen counter or family room table to fit those requirements plus more.
The funny thing is, I recognized the truth and implications of that right away, because I'm going through a similar situation right now. I've built every PC I've ever owned from parts I've researched and found to meet my needs, so I get everything I need, and nothing extra I don't. So, when my old desktop needed upgrading, I did the same thing, and just moved my Windows 2000 installation "as-is" to the new machine (it wasn't quite that simple, but you get the point). And it's a nice machine: Asus motherboard, 2GB OCZ RAM, AMD X2 2.6GHz procesor, SATA II drive. It's powerful, fast, and... I maybe get to use it a couple of hours a week if I'm lucky! Family life with two young kids does not lend itself to going to the home office and getting some stuff done on the desktop. That can only happen at nap times, or when they finally go to bed (at which point I'm so tired I probably want to go to bed too!). So, most of the time I use my Treo for computing work I need to do (which is what it's intended for); for when I need more horsepower, I use VNC to my server, and run those applications there. It can get a little tedious after a while though, working with desktop applications running in a resolution of 1024x768 or higher, on a display 320x320 in size!
Sadly, I've come to the realization that I need portability and mobility... for in my house! The Treo does everything I need it too while I'm out-and-about, but I'm really tied down at home using the desktop. I could get a laptop, but I don't find them as portable or as ergonomic as they could be. So, being a long time Palm user, I'm thinking a convertible Tablet PC is the way to go. It has the pen interface I've always liked about Palm handhelds, with the power and flexibility of a portable PC. A convertible tablet is one that has a keyboard like a conventional laptop, but turns into a "slate" tablet with a "twist-and-flip" of the display. The only disadvantage to the Tablet PC is price; they're still considered a "niche" item with some pricey components in them, and you do pay a premium for that. So, I may end up having to settle for a resonably priced laptop and using my Wacom Graphire 4 tablet with it; after all, I've got a mortgage to pay and kids to feed, so something has to give somewhere. Decisions, decisions, but I digress...
As far as the "Family PC"; I think it's a concept that will work well. As more and more of our daily interactions become digital, and the pace of our lifestyles increases, the calendar on the fridge just won't cut it anymore. We've had a home server running in the house since 2003; it's the central repository for all shared media and files, the mail server, HTPC recording backend, and a VNC terminal server (for access by my Treo, or for long running operations on a desktop application). It's the hub of our home systems, as it's accessible from everything from my Treo, to my desktop or my wife's work laptop, to devices like the HTPC and the MediaMVP we use for viewing various media like TV programs and movies, family pictures and videos. I'm too much of a DIY person to run out and buy something like the TouchSmart (it'll be more fun to try and replicate the same functionality using Open-Source components and my choice of hardware). But I can honestly say I can see it as the hub in many a household, tying together laptops, UMPC's, PDA's and smartphones, keeping the family organized and in touch in the coming digital era. Having something like this allows you to have a common repository for family information, as well as a common message centre. Imagine being able to forward VoIP voice mail (or Video voice mail), voice or video messages from family members, ink notes, or even the grocery list to a family member's Treo, with just a few taps of your finger. Or how about making dinner arrangements, and having it entered into each family members calendar automatically, available when they next sync. The possibilities are endless; think your group calendars at work, but applied to the home and combined with the power of Internet Calendars.
Apple could easily make something similar to the SmartTouch PC with a Multi-Touch iMac, an umbrella package like SmartCentre, and many of their existing software packages (iCal, Front Row, iPhoto, iTunes, Inkwell, etc). The desktop as we know it is dying in the home; it will become a niche market for power users, system builders, and gamers with the need for speed. Evolution is happening in the home, and the Family PC won't look like it's boxy brethren of old; slick new fashionable designs, combined with powerful user interfaces and family organizational tools will make this a pleasure to use, and more interesting than sticky notes and the calendar on the fridge that nobody bothers to read. This new class of "Family PC" is huge; this may be a big step towards the Jetson's home of the future.