The Naked PC Newsletter

Your good neighbor
who's also a computer
consultant!

Monday, 08-Sep-2008 11:05:30 EDT

TNPCers Say:
You people [at The Naked PC] are the best. I want to thank you for all of your help, information and URLs that have taught me more about how to use my PC than any other source. -- Richard S.
117,977+ current readers

Type your email address and click Subscribe!
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
Name: 
E-mail:

Swiss-Tech Key Ring Products

You'll find a jillion uses for these super-cool portable tool kits that fit right on your key chain. Whether it's fixing your eyeglasses, pulling splinters, tightening up the loose screws you run into everyday... Open computer cases with ease, snip wires, all the jobs a small set of pliers would make easy work of, you've got to check out Swiss-Tech tools!


Get Jim and Lee's Book!
T.J. Lee and Lee Hudspeth's Absolute Beginner's Guide to PC Upgrades
Now available at Amazon!



Contact TNPC



Home What is TNPC?
Meet the crew... The TNPC Store TNPC Articles
Send comments Members Only Prior Issues

From TNPC issue #3.23...Dan Butler

Featured Product - FrontX

by T.J. Lee
November 9, 2000

FrontX is one of things that the second you see it you slap your forehead and exclaim, "Why didn't I think of that!" It's a very simple idea but once you use it, it's very hard to do without.

What FrontX does is bring those annoyingly pesky ports on the back of your computer to the front of your computer. Those connections that you can never find when you need them without practically uninstalling your PC and dragging it into a good light: the speaker jack, the microphone jack, the joystick port, etc.

Changing out a monitor is doable, as is a printer, since you can usually discern the right connector by touch. But the sound card ports are not so easy because even if you find them the microphone and the speaker jack are indistinguishable by touch. Even if you pull the chassis out where you can see the back of the system you're lucky if you can figure out the faintly etched hieroglyphics that are supposedly the international symbols for things like line out, audio in, and such. If you're on the same side of 40 as I am you're lucky if you can even see them.

The FrontX is a simple concept that's executed very well. You install a front plate into a vacant 5 1/2 inch drive bay. A series of cables run from this plate to the back of the computer, slip out through a vacant slot plate then are plugged into the appropriate ports on the back of the system. The cables have female receptacles on modular plastic mounts that slide into the front plate. The design is modular in that the basic kit comes with four ports but the plate can accept a total of eight cables.

So why do you want to move the ports to the front of the computer? If you've been reading TNPC for a while you'll know I use DialPad to avoid long distance toll charges on my phone bill. To work well this requires a multimedia headset that plugs into the speaker and microphone jacks on my sound card. I also like to listen to music and movies on my computer, which requires I have my speakers hooked up to my computer. Switching back and forth was no fun at all and invariably the wrong equipment was always attached to the system for what I needed to do. I also have two systems I use regularly and only one nice joystick. This also gets swapped back and forth. Having the ports easily accessible on the front of the system is quickly addicting.

The only downside that I can see is that a full size drive bay has to be available to accommodate the front panel piece (which has a nifty plastic cover that snaps up, covering the ports when they're not in use). You also have to have an available slot in the computer that you snake the cables out through the slot cover. Fortunately my motherboard had an old ISA slot I never use. FrontX comes with a replacement slot cover that leaves only enough room for the cables to exit the chassis.

Given that the eyesight of my youth is fast fading, I did not relish trying to figure out which jack on the sound card was the line out but luckily for me the sound card jacks were color coded and matched exactly the color coding of the cables that came with the FrontX kit. I was able to switch speakers, microphone, and joystick to the front panel in just a few minutes. There's also a female receptacle that mounts on the replacement slot cover that forced me to study the documentation that came with the unit. It was well worth the read because you plug your speakers into this port on the back of the machine. Then, if you plug a headset into the port on the front panel it cuts out the speakers and channels the sound to the headset. Unplug the headset and the speakers kick in automatically. Very slick.

To see pictures of the FrontX product and how it installs go here:
http://www.TheNakedPC.com/t/323/tr.cgi?fprod1

The FrontX is made by Frontx CPX Sdn. Bhd., a Malaysian company and retails for $25.50 US. Their Web site was not the easiest to figure out and it looks like they're planning on a host of ancillary products that are not yet available.
http://www.TheNakedPC.com/t/323/tr.cgi?fprod

You can reach T.J. Lee at:
mailto:tj_lee@TheNakedPC.com

Why not subscribe to TNPC Newsletter Now?
You'll be glad you did.
Your Name: 
Your E-mail Address:
Copyright © 2000, PRIME Consulting Group, Inc. and Dan Butler.
All Rights Reserved.
The Naked PC is a trademark of PRIME Consulting Group, Inc.
ISSN: 1522-4422

You may reprint an article from TNPC as long as you show the
entire article and include the authors byline, excerpt and
subscription information as shown:

article_title
by author_name
(This article originally appeared in The Naked PC
newsletter; subscribe at http://www.TheNakedPC.com)

Return to Top


Advertise in TNPC Disclosure JOIN the Horde!
Letters to Editor Privacy policy Search TNPC
TNPC Library
TNPC Forum
Subscriber Services

Why not subscribe to TNPC Newsletter Now?
You'll be glad you did.
Your Name: 
Your E-mail Address:

TNPC Hot Tips:
  • Email out of control? Spam filling your inbox? People trying to steal your identity? Same here - until I applied these tips. You can too in a new multimedia e-book. Tame Your Email.

  • DO YOU MAKE THESE MONEY MISTAKES? Do you know that trying to pay off your high interest rate debts first and/or paying extra on more than one debt is the SLOWEST way to get out of debt? Don't make these same mistakes. Learn more at by clicking here...

Google

In The Current Issue

Read #3.23 here!

Veritas Revisited
Developer's Corner:
   Signing VBA Projects

Putting Together an
   E-Commerce Store


The Cathedral and the Bazaar
Eric S. Raymond
At its core the Open Source movement is the contrast between Centralized (the Cathedral) and de-centralized (the Bazaar) development. Thought-provoking and useable ideas on project management and the real meaning of free software.

FrontX installs into a vacant 5 ¼ inch bay and brings those pesky, hard to find ports right to the front of your computer.

RGB Decimal to Hexadecimal Converter
Tom's Web Reference contains a simple tool for converting RGB decimal values (255 255 255) and RGB hexadecimal values (FF FF FF) from one notation to the other. Super handy if you build Web pages.

Read TNPC Backissues