Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Roper Mobile Switchback UMPC

Add as a preferred source on Google


There’s something contradictory about devices that are small enough to go anywhere, but so fragile that you’d never dare remove them from the safety of the not-so-great indoors. After all, ultra-mobile isn’t so ultra when it comes with strings attached. While not everyone needs to drag a fully functional PC to the top of the mountain, or check their email in a rain storm, Roper technology has discovered the niche for those who do, and developed a device especially for them.

The Switchback is basically an ultra-mobile PC built Rambo-style. With a tough magnesium housing, beefy rubber overmold, and a seamless keyboard that’s one part Razr and one part DOOM, it certainly stands out among a field of blocky silver boxes that were built to be coddled on commuter trains and airplanes.

Recommended Videos

Fortunately, it also has the grit to back up the look. Equipped with a solid-state drive, the Switchback has met a number of impressive durability benchmarks, from surviving a four-foot drop to concrete, to operating in temperatures of 131 degrees Fahrenheit. It’s also passed the U.S. military’s rather stringent MIL-STD-810F testing, which sets standards for additional performance hurdles like shock and humidity resistance. To top it all off, it’s one of the few UMPCs that can truly be called waterproof, having successfully endured a half hour underwater to pass IP67 testing.

Roper Mobile Switchback
Image Courtesy of Roper Mobile

Outside of physical toughness, the Switchback’s specs very closely resemble what one might find on a more pedestrian UMPC, including a 1.0 GHz Intel Celeron M processor, Intel GMA-900 graphics, and 512MB of memory. Wireless 802.11b/g is optional, along with Bluetooth 2.0, and GPS for the truly adventurous. The base Switchback gets a 40GB conventional hard drive, but larger drives up to 120GB, or 64GB in solid-state form, are available, and all drives are removable. While the touch-enabled screen on the Switchback spans a generous 5.6 inches, the device pays for that size in weight, where, at three pounds, it’s a bit of a heffer.

One of the Switchback’s more intriguing features involves the ability to use “backpacks,” which are specialized modules built to latch on to the Switchback and interface directly with it via a high-speed connection. The standard backpack simply offers a lot more ports, such as PCMCIA, serial, VGA, audio in and out, plus an additional USB 2.0 port. However, since many Switchback customers will likely be large clients with industrial and military applications, Roper also offers the possibility of custom-designing backpacks, which can feature anything from digital cameras to RFID scanners.

There’s no question that the Switchback isn’t for everyone, and the lack of retail availability for the device sadly means that most of us civilians will have a hard time getting our hands on them. While the Switchback can be spotted for sale to consumers on the Web, a price tag upwards of $6,000 for the base unit certainly makes it a dream for all but the most well-off admirers. Those seeking more information on the Switchback can find it on Roper Mobile’s Web site.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
DuckDuckGo’s browser now blocks the YouTube ads everyone hates
DuckDuckGo adds a Brave-like YouTube ad blocking feature
Text, Aircraft, Airplane

DuckDuckGo has spent the past few months gaining fresh attention as more users look for alternatives to Google’s increasingly AI-heavy Search experience. Now, the privacy-focused company is adding a feature that could make its browser even more tempting for everyday use. DuckDuckGo says its browser can now block most video ads, including those on YouTube, when a video is playing inside the browser.

What’s happening?

Read more
ChatGPT Live could make talking to AI feel straight out of the movies
We might finally get the AI sidekick sci-fi movies promised
Elderly women using ChatGPT live on a smartphone

AI voice assistants have been chasing the sci-fi dream for years, but they still have a hard time holding a conversation with humans. Most voice systems still need clear turns, clean pauses, and a few seconds before they respond. OpenAI is now rolling out GPT-Live, a new voice model for ChatGPT Voice that is designed to make those exchanges feel faster and less scripted.

The main upgrade is what OpenAI calls a full-duplex architecture. In simpler terms, GPT-Live can listen and speak at the same time. It continuously processes what the user is saying while also generating its own response, allowing it to decide when to talk, when to pause, when to keep listening, and when to use a tool.

Read more
A broken Galaxy Fold 5 just became the Pixel desktop future I want Google to steal
A broken Galaxy Fold 5 became a tiny PC because Samsung already built the desktop mode Google keeps treating like a side quest.
Desktop mode within Android 16.

A broken Galaxy Fold 5 should be a sad little monument to modern gadget math. One busted outer display, one repair bill nobody wants to inspect too closely, and suddenly a powerful foldable starts heading toward a drawer. Instead, a Redditor turned one into a glowing acrylic DeX box with spare parts, fans, a USB hub, and the kind of LED lighting that makes every homebrew computer look mildly illegal.

https://www.reddit.com/r/SamsungDex/comments/1upica7/fold_5_dexbox/

Read more