Bristol Interactive is building a an all in one TV PC based on a 22 inch or 32 inch Freeview TV with an Atom powered Netbook running inside the case. It has a 160GB drive, Air Mouse, network ports and comes with Windows XP. I have seen combined units before but this is one of the first I have seen from the UK with an independent Freeview tuner and PC. It’s Expected to show up in supermarkets for less than £500 and could good in a kitchen or bedroom but I would go for a small PC and monitor for a better experience and put Windows 7 on it.

More details from the Guardian:

The 22-inch model shown above is a standard Freeview TV set. Click the remote, however, and you’ve got what amounts to a built-in Atom-powered netbook showing Windows XP on the TV screen. The PC part also includes a gigabyte of memory, 160GB hard drive, four USB ports, an RJ45 Ethernet port, a circular "air mouse" and a wireless keyboard. (The one in my photo looks like a Hillcrest Loop Pointer.) The screen resolution is 1680 x 1050 pixels, which is far more than you get on a netbook.
Bristol Interactive’s chief executive officer Paul Fellows says: "This is a full digital television set: a Freeview chassis for the UK market. The red button works, and the TV is completely independent of the PC functions. You don’t have to be in Windows to watch TV."

One thing that’s missing is Wi-Fi, because of the reliability issues and the potential for support costs. An Ethernet cable works better if you want video, and Fellows expects this will be a main function: buyers will be using the BBC iPlayer, and watching YouTube and similar videos. Internet radio is another attraction.

thanks to @umdivx for the tip

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