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December 10, 2007 9:01 PM PST

Dell tries tablets with Latitude XT

by Erica Ogg

Tablet computing is a very small pond, and it's now home to a very big fish: Dell.

The Round Rock, Texas-based PC maker on Tuesday is introducing the Latitude XT Tablet PC, its first product in the category.

Though it's just one notebook, Dell's entry is sure to cause a stir. It's a modest niche of computing that hasn't really gotten off the ground yet. And the interest of the second-largest PC maker in the world can't help but have an impact on the market.

"It puts the product in limelight," said Richard Shim, PC industry analyst with IDC. "It has potential to bring down pricing on key components that are being priced at a premium."

Dell Latitude XT

The Latitude XT at work.

(Credit: Erica Ogg/CNET News.com)

Currently tablet PCs comprise just 2.4 percent of the worldwide notebook market, according to IDC. That's about 2.5 million units shipped total. But as Dell joins other high-profile tablet makers like Hewlett-Packard, Toshiba, Gateway, and others, the category is expected to grow to 12.3 million units and 6.3 percent of the notebook market by 2011, IDC said. And as volumes go up, prices are sure to go down.

That Dell would delve into tablets was one of the worst-kept secrets in the PC industry over the last year. The company confirmed the rumors in May and then briefly showed the product during Michael Dell's keynote speech at Oracle Open World in November.

The Latitude XT is aimed chiefly at commercial markets, and Dell says it initially tried to address several of the key complaints expressed by typical tablet users: that they're too bulky, the screen isn't viewable in direct sun, poor handwriting recognition, and inadequate battery life.

Although tablets in general are not marketed toward consumers right now, Dell's entrance could bring component prices down enough to make building and buying tablets affordable for, say, students one day, noted Shim. "Lately we've been seeing manufacturers start to look at the consumer market as an audience for this type of tablet," he said. Particularly because the profit margins are much higher for consumer devices.

For now, the price is not what you would call friendly to the mainstream notebook buyer. At the starting price of $2,499, the Latitude XT has a 12.1-inch LED-backlit screen, a 1.06-gigahertz Intel Core 2 Solo processor, 1GB of memory, and a 40GB hard drive. It comes with Windows Vista Business edition or XP Tablet Edition. The whole device weighs 3.57 pounds, and has about 5 hours of battery life. It uses capacitive touch input, which recognizes both fingers and an included pen for inputting data. The pen also comes with a right-click button.

Dell Latitude XT

The Latitude XT at rest.

(Credit: Dell)

To target outdoor, all-day commercial users, the Latitude XT comes with upgrade options of an extra bright outdoor-viewable LCD display (which adds to the thickness of the notebook), an extended battery, which clips on the bottom of the device, as well as the option of an Intel Core 2 Duo processor and a 32 or 64 GB solid-state drive.

Dell calls its capacitive touch technology, which picks up on the electrical current in a person's hand, the "breakthrough" in the device. It also recognizes the difference between the touch of an errant palm or a purposeful press of a fingertip on the screen.

Touchscreen interfaces are a technology area with huge potential, and mainstream interest in multitouch technology skyrocketed this year with Apple's iPhone and Microsoft's demonstrations of its Surface PC technology. Dell has its cooking up its own multitouch technology, which it showed at Oracle Open World, in which all five fingers can be picked up by screen sensors. That won't be available until at least next year, said Glenn Keels, director of Dell's commercial product group.

The biggest delay is the availability of software applications that take advantage of touchscreen technologies. And it's not just Dell, but all makers of tablets. "The (manufacturers) making progress are the ones getting closer to customers, like Motion Computing," Shim said. Dell, HP, Toshiba, and Gateway "have to come up with applications that are a little more mainstream or mass market. The hard part is they're not used to thinking that way, in terms of applications, as (tablet computing) is less and less about speeds and feeds, and more about the experience."

Dell says it will begin to take orders and ship the Latitude XT by the end of the year.

Originally posted at News Blog
Erica Ogg is a CNET News reporter who covers Apple, HP, Dell, and other PC makers, as well as the consumer electronics industry. She's also one of the hosts of CNET News' Daily Podcast. In her non-work life, she's a history geek, a loyal Dodgers fan, and a mac-and-cheese connoisseur. E-mail Erica.
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You must be kidding me!
by pilaa December 10, 2007 9:28 PM PST
The price alone on this thing would scare anyone away. There is nothing new, exciting or desirable for a device that has proven to be an extremely over priced, clunky and an oddity in the business side of things. Where is the value?? Where is the software?? And, where is the market?? Oh, and how about drivers?? Where is the "Wow" factor??

Dell is grabbing at straws in order to try to be unique and different but I am afraid to say they are a day late and a dollar short on this one. How about changing the form factor a bit and adding some sort of innovative style... Hmmmm... now there's an idea...
Reply to this comment
Kidding indeed...
by Dandy55 December 11, 2007 10:19 AM PST
$2500 for what???
"Latitude XT has a 12.1-inch LED-backlit screen, a 1.06-gigahertz Intel Core 2 Solo processor, 1GB of memory, and a 40GB hard drive" - and the only new feature is that you don;t need a pen and can poke your fingers in the screen???

Just hompare it with other tablet manufacturers:

TOSHIBA Portege M400-S4034 Tablet PC:
Intel Core 2 Duo T7200(2.00GHz), 12.1" XGA screen, 1GB DDR2 667 RAM, 100GB 5400rpm HD
- $2100

ASUS R1E-B1 Tablet PC:
Intel Core 2 Duo T7700(2.40GHz), 13.3" Wide XGA screen, 2GB RAM, 160GB 5400rpm HD
- $1850 (I'm the happy owner of one of these)

Fujitsu LifeBook T4220(FPCM11067) Tablet PC:
Intel Core 2 Duo T7250(2.00GHz), 12.1" XGA screen, 1GB DDR2 667 RAM, 60GB 5400rpm HD
- $1600

HP Compaq tc4400(RM141UT#ABA) Tablet PC:
Intel Core 2 Duo T5600(1.83GHz), 12.1" XGA screen, 1GB DDR2 667 RAM, 80GB 5400rpm HD
- $1450

Any student will know better than by DELL
View reply
Dell is doomed...
by Llib Setag December 10, 2007 9:51 PM PST
WOW! Del must be running scared...In the last few days, there's
been what 5, 6 7 stories about Dell at Best Buy, Dell, it's not
your fathers Dell, DellPhone?, Dell Tablet speculation? DellPDA?,
yadda, yadda, yadda...

Or did Dell just drop a big bag of cash at the CNET editor's front
door for Christmas...?
How much do you get paid per word from Dell CNET?

Dude, you go a Dull Dud Dell for Christmas....
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHHH!
Reply to this comment
at least one thing is clear...
by terminalblue December 10, 2007 11:56 PM PST
that dell doesnt see much confidence in Vista.
Reply to this comment
Why do you say that?
by catch23 December 11, 2007 7:16 AM PST
They offer it with Vista if you want, XP tablet if you don't.
I find it funny that when companies offer what has been asked of them (in this case, choice) fools read everything else they can into it...
Who wants an XT anymore
by sanenazok December 11, 2007 7:11 AM PST
Geez with products like that Dell is doooomeeed.

I demand the power of the AT (286) architecture! Maybe I'll skip this generation and wait for IBM's PS/2.
Reply to this comment
The tablet PC is one of Microsoft's "innovations"
by Norseman December 11, 2007 1:08 PM PST
Or at least that's what Bill Gates said recently. He's been pushing these things forever, but the market has spoken. And it said "Tablets? Who cares?"
Reply to this comment
RTP
by timber2005 December 15, 2007 1:00 PM PST
The Research Triangle Park in NC uses tablets quite a bit. All of the college book salesmen I know use them, and Graphics Design courses are taught on them. Look at what the iPhone did with touch, and imagine if someone can make a sleek, powerful computer in the same fashion, touch will take off.

People thought mice were worthless once too.
It is a IBM Design!!!
by slickuser December 15, 2007 1:05 PM PST
IBM came up with similar designs several years ago. so whats new?

Can't believe that Dell is "innovating".
Reply to this comment
It's finally here
by babygene December 18, 2007 1:24 PM PST
This is supposed to be for education? How can a teacher or student afford this?
Latitude XT - New!
Price $2,785.00

Haha good thing I waited for nothing. Thanks Dell.

check for yourself
http://premierconfigure.us.dell.com/dellstore/config.aspx?c=&ci=K196&customer_id=RC960543&~tgt=cfg&l=en&s=k12&cs=RC960543
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