Comments on: Toshiba's latest slim tablet
Toshiba's latest slim tablet
Toshiba's latest slim tablet
The world may have thrilled to the potential for a Google Phone, but what Google actually unveiled is its plan for a new smartphone world order.
Photos: Unboxing Nexus One
faq Worms, Trojans, and SMS attacks are risks for mobile phones, but the biggest practical threat to users is losing the device.
Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.
Add this feed to your online news reader
I myself, as implied in the above paragraph, do own a convertable tablet PC. I do grant that I don't know anyone else besides students with them, but I'm sure if the ASUS-leaked rumor of an Apple tablet are true, the graphic artists will get on board. They're all die-hard Apple fans, and suggesting to them to boot up Windows to do graphic work is as alien to them as suggesting one inhale food and eat air for a change.
- Tablet innovation
- by dlluce December 15, 2007 7:34 AM PST
- Where are the real tablets?
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(3 Comments)I have a vision of a iPhone-like tablet: One computer helps me wherever I go. It dials my phone, finds wiki entries and deals with the Web. The bluetooth keyboard, mouse and pads are left in the office, where they and two other monitor screens are waiting for me when I have to do heavy-duty modeling, planning or drawing. Whan I go to a meeting, I can record the audio and video, and write my own comments into a unified record. On the road, speech recognition and audio control help me with quick data entry and browsing. I can read a book or see a movie on the screen, and I can pair up wireless eyewear and earpieces for an immersive experience.
I think that the manufacturers don't get what we have known for years: it's all about the software. Dell, HP and Toshiba have invested a lot of design effort in the hinges to convert a laptop with a keyboard in the conventional form to a tablet which has no keyboard, but they don't realize that the keyboard is the component we want the least! The keyboard, and therefore the hinges, serve no function, if you can use the computer without having to type. Similarly, the mouse was invented because we couldn't use a pen. It is nowhere near as direct and quick as using our hand (whether holding a stylus or pointing our finger) to select the item we want. We need good handwriting and speech recognition, coupled with an interactive screen, so the computer interacts with us in a natural way; then the keyboard, the mouse, the eraser-head and the touch pad will be irrelevant.