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Posted by questions
 - January 06, 2026, 08:56:06
Similar to, as of recent, a raspberry pi 400, but with up to 64 GB upgradable DDR5-6400 SODIMMs, nice (up to 64 GB RAM is good, it allows for some decently smart/capable LLMs). But what happens if a (sugary) liquid splashes on the keyboard, is it replaceable? Individual keys easily repairable? I suppose the internals are at least to some degree protected from liquid floating from above? And how good is the keyboard?
Posted by Mister Dalliard
 - January 06, 2026, 07:26:25
A fresh take? What's next? Devices for recording TV shows on tape?

My guess is that whoever wrote the press release wasn't even born when the Commodore 64 I used as a teenager was built. That's no excuse for repeating it.
Posted by Ubersonic
 - January 06, 2026, 06:00:36
"HP has a fresh new take on low-profile PCs."

If by fresh you mean identical to almost every home computer of the 80s then sure :P
Posted by Redaktion
 - January 06, 2026, 04:30:27
The HP EliteBoard G1a, a fully functional PC installed inside a keyboard, has been shown off at CES 2026. It uses AMD's Ryzen AI 300 Krackan Point CPUs and can support up to 64 GB RAM, 2 TB storage and power two 4K displays.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/EliteBoard-G1a-HP-unveils-a-keyboard-with-an-entire-PC-in-it.1196935.0.html