A visit to the one-man computer factory
The computer on Keegan McNamara's desk is like nothing I've ever seen before. The machine sits on a light wood table, bathed in the sunlight coming into the second floor of McNamara's Los Angeles house. McNamara, tall and blonde in jeans and a light khaki Carhartt jacket, walks over to the desk, sits down, and reaches over to hit the power button. Then he pauses. He forgot something. He digs into his pants pocket, pulls out his keys, picks a silver one, sticks it into a cylinder just to the right of the computer's 8-inch screen, and turns. A light on the left side of the device turns red. Then McNamara reaches up and flips a silver switch just above the keyhole, the lights on the left turn to yellow and then green, and his computer comes to life.
Like I said, this is not your average computer.
This sure is interesting.