Toshiba Demos Dual-Touchscreen Netbook 132
Lanxon writes "Toshiba has announced a trio of new devices that it's hoping will shake up the somewhat stagnant notebook PC market. The most interesting is the Libretto W100 — a clamshell device that comes with two screens in place of a screen and a keyboard. Both screens are identical, measuring 7-inches diagonally, and are touch-sensitive. An onboard accelerometer allows you to use it in landscape or portrait configuration, and Toshiba's pre-loaded a boatload of specialist software that'll let you get the most from the device — including a range of virtual keyboards. It runs Windows 7, is powered by an Intel U5400 processor, and comes with 2GB of DDR3 RAM, a 62GB SSD, and the usual array of connectivity options, including 3G."
I cant wait till they make this pocket sized (Score:1)
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Guess you are looking for an openpandora then? http://openpandora.org/ [openpandora.org]
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You mean that thing that has been "about to ship" for years now?
Until I see one in real life, I am just going to assume it was a giant scam engineered to get thousands of people to send them hundreds of dollars apiece.
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They are shipping now. Yes, it's taking much longer then they planned (3x as long I guess) but they are shipping.
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Wow. I guess the Chicago Cubs are slated to win the World Series in 2010 as well?
Wallet sized - with electronic credit cards (Score:2)
If they reduced it still to a wallet, with e-IDs and ability to swipe CCs [mobilecrunch.com], then it would get FAR more interesting. Of course, I would not bet that Toshiba could do this (more like Apple, HTC/Google or HP/Palm).
Courier flasbacks anyone? (Score:1)
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And minus the software, which is kinda the most important thing (of the Courier and touch devices in general).
sounds like a great e-reader form factor (Score:2)
But for a netbook it's somewhat puzzling. Nobody wants to do that much input with a virtual keyboard. On the other hand, adding touch to an ordinary netbook form factor running Android would make a lot of sense. HP has announced one as a Compaq but I don't know if it's hit the channel yet, and further, I will never give HP my money again after the nightmare I had with an EliteBook (We're talking a $2500 machine here) with a defective GPU and a service contract (apparently also defective)
Re:sounds like a great e-reader form factor (Score:5, Interesting)
It just seems like a niche product, and the niche is quite tiny.
For a netbook/laptop, a virtual keyboard won't cut it for a long typing session.
For a tablet PC, it is a bit unwieldy, and there are a lot of good alternatives on the market. The iPad comes to mind for a general function device. The Kindle or Nook come to mind for an e-reader that is easy on the eyes and doesn't burn batteries. And for general computing there are laptops which have the screen fold back so they can double both as a touch screen, and a regular laptop with a keyboard.
I am sure that there are some uses for it that come to mind for dedicated applications (control surface for music production, various embedded tasks), but for a general purpose device, there are a lot of form factors that are a lot more ergonomic.
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Apple has already patented this and they have introduced devices to market for a generation where people will be used to typing without a keyboard on their portable devices. This will not be something foreign or new. And with OLED technology, it does not need to affect battery life and can act as a secondary (albeit lower res) screen.
Technology changes and those who scoff at the changes are usually the older generation who doesn't want to change. And they usually end up being thos
Re:sounds like a great e-reader form factor (Score:4, Insightful)
Technology changes and those who scoff at the changes are usually the older generation who doesn't want to change. And they usually end up being those engineers who are unable to adapt.
A touch screen keyboard is not better than a hardware keyboard for a "creation" device. No matter how used to the touch screen keyboard a generation of people might be.
Technology really only changes when a newer technology is developed that is actually demonstrably better than the previous technology.
Take the LP record. There were several technologies developed that were supposed to supercede it in the marketplace (8 track, cassette) but it was only the CD that actually won the day. The CD was going to be replaced with DAT, SACD, DVD-audio but it is now only going the way of the dinosaur because of mp3's and digital distribution. And the mp3 may even have seen its best days now thanks to streaming services. The point is, just because a new technology comes along that may have a few advantages doesn't mean it is The Future(TM). It has to be significantly better, meaning, functionally, aesthetically, cheaper, easily marketable, etc. I don't think I'll be turning in my mouse and keyboard anytime soon despite being a member of "the older generation who doesn't want to change."
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A touch screen input system may be better for creation tasks if it has appropriate customizations for each task. A hardware keyboard is ergonomically better and provides better feel and feedback, so a general "touch screen keyboard" that copies the limitation of a hardware keyboard (same layout for all tasks) won't be very good. But something that adapts to tasks may be very good for "creation" tasks (particularly those t
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A touch screen input system may be better for creation tasks if it has appropriate customizations for each task.
Absolutely. On paper, that makes a lot of sense. However, in reality, we've had touch screen creation oriented tablets for a while now. Aside from verticals, the software you speak of hasn't moved very many units. So, sure, you can write something and put it out there and say it's the best thing ever but it has to sell. It hasn't so far, what makes you think that's likely to change?
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I'll second that opinion. With 37+ years in this ridiculous industry I've lost count of the number of Next New Things® that turned out to be ... a yawn. People get invested with a particular way of doing/using/thinking-about things and they only move when the pain threshold of the Old Way gets too high, or the New Way is so clearly superior. Most of us have neither the time nor money to chase ever Shiny New Object that comes along.
My desktop mouse is classic example of this: I am still using a Micros
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A touch screen keyboard is not better than a hardware keyboard for a "creation" device. No matter how used to the touch screen keyboard a generation of people might be.
Nothing's quite as good as the Model M for typing. But if you give a touch screen haptic feedback where the screen can produce artificial texture, then it's good enough for most people that the benefits outweigh the drawbacks. I'm not saying this Toshiba device has haptic feedback, but maybe it should.
Technology changes, but there are intermediate steps and branches that may not catch on. Especially when things are limited by an artificial barrier (DRM and price fixing in the case of SACD's and DVD-Audio),
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Apple has already patented this and they have introduced devices to market for a generation where people will be used to typing without a keyboard on their portable devices. This will not be something foreign or new. And with OLED technology, it does not need to affect battery life and can act as a secondary (albeit lower res) screen.
Just because it won't be "foreign and new" doesn't mean it will be better.
Technology changes and those who scoff at the changes are usually the older generation who doesn't want to change. And they usually end up being those engineers who are unable to adapt.
I don't mind one bit if the "newer generation" forgoes physical keyboards for virtual keyboards. In fact, I welcome it. It means that we "older generation" will be more valuable because we can type faster, more accurately and be less prone to typing injuries. Nothing would please me more than to be clacking away on my Model M while some kid thumps away at a dead spot on his virtual keyboard.
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Seems pointless for an e-reader. (Score:2)
The dual digital screens for reading a novel are not an advantage at all. They actually make it more cumbersome to deal with.
You have dual open pages in a paper book because of the way pages are bound, there is no advantage to carrying over this paper artifact to digital except in rare cases.
With a digital reader you simply page instantly to the next page, no need to have two screens, look at one, then the other, then page them both.
This is one of those niche ideas that looks cool at first but in reality ha
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This would be a significant improvement no books and e-readers in general. Remember a lot of content spans two pages. Maybe I'm better off with twice the resolution screen, perhap
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But for a netbook it's somewhat puzzling. Nobody wants to do that much input with a virtual keyboard.
Notebook keyboards these days aren't really any better than a touch screen; both my old IBM laptop and my new netbook have flat keyboards, and as they'll have USB ports you can always plug a real keyboard in for typing more than a few lines; that's what I di with the netbook.
I will never give HP my money again after the nightmare I had with an EliteBook (We're talking a $2500 machine here) with a defective G
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Notebook keyboards these days aren't really any better than a touch screen; both my old IBM laptop and my new netbook have flat keyboards, and as they'll have USB ports you can always plug a real keyboard in for typing more than a few lines; that's what I di with the netbook.
That is a load of dingo's kidneys. Even the microscopic keyboard on my EEE 701 can be touch-typed upon, and my hands are big enough to where I can depress the control keys of the average desktop keyboard with the thumb and pinky of either hand without pressing any other keys. I just barely can't do it on this Dell keyboard with media stuff (looks to be made by Lite-On). But only a Vulcan ninja is going to touch-type on one of these things. I suppose if you played tones which changed pitch based on keying ac
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sounds like a great e-reader form factor
I'm not even sure I buy that. I use my Sony e-reader while lying in bed all the time. I lay on my back and read some, then I lay on my left side holding the ereader in one hand and read some more. Then I lay on my right side and so on. The sony is just a few ounces, has a battery that lasts for weeks, generates no heat, and an e-ink display. I can't imagine how a dual touch screen laptop is going to be anything but a pain in the ass as an ebook consumption device.
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I can't imagine how a
dual touch screen laptop is going to be anything but a pain in the
ass as an ebook consumption device.
Actually, this form factor *could* be exactly what I was looking for in an e-reader, when I was looking around a couple of years ago.
It would 'look' and 'feel' much more like a paperback, and having the clamshell design for an e-reader is, to my mind, perfect. When I'm done reading, I close the 'book' and the screens power down, no hunting for some easily-loseable (and bloody expensive to replace) slip cover to protect the screen, no fumbling with power buttons, or wasting the battery until the auto-power-
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Since we're on the subject, though, the ultimate e-reader is basically a book with about 50 or so "pages" that change based on what you want to read. This solves the problem of being
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Idiots!To compete with the iPad you do it on PRICE (Score:2, Insightful)
Look you can't compete with the iPad at the same price points. You have to undercut the iPad. The iPad is a reasonable tablet device with a lot slickness and though put into it. Unless you are truly better than the iPad you cannot charge the same price.
You have to be 1 order of magnitude cheaper (base 2 is fine). You need to be half the cost of the an iPad. This means that a competitive tablet has to be $350 USD or less.
If you're not even close to an iPad, your upper bound is $200 USD.
I have an EKEN M001, i
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This for $400 (or $300 without the keyboard) [alwaysinnovating.com] seems to fit the bill.
ZX-80 (Score:2)
Great.
Now we can recreate a complete ZX80/ZX81/Atari 400 experience with an emulator. And now I can have a Symbolics keyboard for programming.
Seriously: A virtual keyboard for extended usage is something that remains to be tested. It will require some clever mechanisms to compensate for fat fingers and some feedback for touch typists. I would not discard it as impossible.
Ah, the Microsoft Courier hardware (Score:1)
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I know you were being sarcastic, but no$gba [emubase.de] does DS games in the more recent releases. I haven't tried it for DS games, though. The author is currently MIA, though, so there haven't been any releases in 2 years.
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landscape or portrait configuration (Score:3, Interesting)
An onboard accelerometer allows you to use it in landscape or portrait configuration
What about Battleship(R) configuration? It would be interesting if it can be used by two people simultaneously. And there had better be an off-switch for that accelerometer. The thing I have hated most about my iPhone is that I can't read anything when laying down on my side.
Not a bad idea... (Score:1, Insightful)
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Really? Ok, then! I'd like to run one of the hundreds of thousands of iOS apps on it! (Or even one of the 50 or so I've downloaded so far.)
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I'd like to run one of the hundreds of thousands of iOS apps on it!
Then get the source code and port it.
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Then get the source code and port it.
That would be a waste. iOS was optimized for very specific mobile hardware, not generic PC touchscreen hardware. In other words, you'd get all the restrictions of DRM and not having enough swap memory, without any of the benefits of a long-lasting battery charge. It would be just as a bad idea as porting Android onto it (although, both are technically doable).
If you want run something from Apple on there, run the Mac OSX (the recent touch-enabled version). That would be a much better idea (although, prob
Obligatory Mac joke (Score:3, Funny)
Anyone else read that as a buttload?
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Find a better input device than a virtual keyboard (Score:3, Interesting)
7" touch sensitive screens and the best thing they can think to put on it is a flat, non-feedback QWERTY keyboard that was originally designed to avoid keys sticking on typewriters [earthlink.net] and has caused millions of cases of RSI [wikipedia.org]. The new input device has to be:
It's notable that Wii has done remarkably well with an obvious yet new input device, in spite of going backwards a generation in graphics capability.
Swype [slashdot.org] and SlideIT [mobiletextinput.com] look pretty cool, especially if they allowed optimised keyboard layouts. What else is possible?
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QWERTY doesn't cause RSI. Using a keyboard badly, or the wrong kind of keyboard, causes RSI - as well as carrying on when something hurts.
QWERTY was supposedly designed to slow down typists (though finding *definitive* references to that reasoning is tricky). However, it doesn't mean that it's any more difficult to type on once you've been trained. As always, a 100wpm typist could jam up any typewriter anyway, and even in the computer age QWERTY doesn't slow a professional typist down (The Dvorak stuff i
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Because that's a myth. QWERTY was the fastest design that was come up with based on the limitations of the existing hardware of the time. The funny key layout? That's to spread apart the commonly-used hammers so they wouldn't jam on the typewriter.
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QWERTY doesn't cause RSI. Using a keyboard badly, or the wrong kind of keyboard, causes RSI - as well as carrying on when something hurts.
And what proportion of users of this new laptop do you think will be using the virtual keyboard 'well'?
QWERTY was supposedly designed to slow down typists (though finding *definitive* references to that reasoning is tricky).
This is a less credible point than the one I already made.
However, it doesn't mean that it's any more difficult to type on once you've been trai
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We hear you like screen! (Score:2, Funny)
Well we're giving you three screens. That's right three! A tertiary screen on the back of your screen so everyone can that you're only browsing the hippest websites around.
What's that? Three screens not enough? Well we've put a revolutionary new fourth screen on the bottom. So your wang can instant message your friends too!
Shit, you want screens, we'll install them in your colon! Just please buy our gadget! I need the allowance to buy my soul back.
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"You can never be too thin, too rich, or have too many screens."
-- Wallis Simpson
Clearly, she'd never met Stevie Wonder.
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Fuck everything, we're doing five screens.
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Fuck everything, we're doing five screens.
What's the 5th screen for? removing the top layer of skin?
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active digitizer? (Score:2)
Seems honestly like they copied the courier minus the only thing that actually made the courier work. The active digitizer.
Have fun taking notes with your fingers. Sadness.
Swyper (Score:1)
Swyper would be great on this.
it needs a pen (Score:1)
If you've ever had a remotely mathematical class you would know keyboards just don't cut it. And don't give me that Lyx-with-micros crap- I need diagrams too.
It's the microsoft (Score:2)
so... it's a giant Nintendo DS? (Score:1)
Big is all the rage now:
First, it was a hip-hop thing and Flava-Flav upsizing his watch to wear across his chest, then Apple upsized the iPhone to the iPad and now Toshiba upsizes the DSi.
What's next? Cars? Barbie action figures?
yawn (Score:2)
"-- including a range of virtual keyboards. It runs Windows 7,"
Yawn...
It's getting closer... (Score:2)
I believe the concept was something like this (Score:2)
"Sir, Apple has released the iPad, it's eating into our sales what will we do?"
"Apple's selling a lot of iPads? Then we'll make a DOUBLE iPad!"
How many years to wait for a workable software? (Score:1)
Guess how many years a workable os run on this magically device?
How many years a workable note taking program available?
How many years your I.T. department migrate the app to that un-magically-old-aged device?
Re:Windows 7 (Score:5, Funny)
On the other hand, this could really be the computer that takes the underground Nintendo DS emulator scene by storm....
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How far back in the past are you willing to reach?
- Palm
- PenPoint
- NewtonOS
- Momenta
- GRiD's PenDOS
All sadly gone (I especially miss PenPoint)
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Windows 7 is touch-enabled out of the box, and the interface is far more suited to touch than the older one, with the large task buttons etc. Leave it to Slashdot to be out of touch (har har).
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Problem is, Windows 7 is just the OS. Apps are the biggest problem and having to right/middle click is a royal PITA with a touchscreen. Either you have to use an active touchscreen (no finger pointing - special stylus needed), or a passitve one with various gesturing to achieve a right-click (tap-and-hold being a commo
Re:Windows 7 (Score:4, Insightful)
In that case, how do you go about rightously making such wide statements about it?
I've used 7 a bit on a HP TouchSmart machine and I really don't know what you're getting at about it being a non-touch OS. I found nothing lacking.
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Don't pay any attention to him, he's just out of touch.
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My aunt recently retired and wanted a new computer, desk, chair, etc. While waiting for the Office Depot guy to go check on if the desk she liked came in different colors we started playing around with the Touchsmart 600-1050, the 23" model. It had Windows Touchscreen Pack on it which includes touchscreen Virtual Earth (amazing) and a bunch of other fun apps.
The best was this game where origami flowers float in a pond and you have a little paper boat to go around and gather them. The key is that you don'
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Admittedly, I haven't used Windows 7 on a touch-based device
And yet you feel compelled to comment that it's not up to the job. Interesting.
Not that I'm saying that it is - far from it, not having used it I am specifically refraining from expressing an opinion on that either way.
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Admittedly, I haven't used Windows 7 on a touch-based device...
I can see I'm going to have to expand the scope of my signature...
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Well, you're not far off...
It's a netbook. Globe, Browser, Etc, all big icons on the taskbar. Combined with a decent on-screen keyboard and what more do you need?
You aren't one of those people who claims the iPad is not for "real" work and then turns around complaining that a similar device running windows isn't usable for "real" work, are you?
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Problem is, the touch-only form factor isn't exactly ideal for 'real work'.
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Read carefully. That was my point. :)
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Touch interface with a non-touch OS GUI. I don't think this is gonna fly, fellas.
I'm not sure what this even means, nor why it was modded +Insightful.
The OS has a GUI, yes. The physical device has a touch sensitive display, yes. I'm sorry you didn't even bother to RTFS, so here let me highlight this gem for you:
Toshiba's pre-loaded a boatload of specialist software that'll let you get the most from the device
Re:Windows 7 (Score:4, Insightful)
I know you're being deliberately obtuse, but here's what it means: you need to design the whole damn UI to work with fingers. Some bandaid software on a mouse-centric UI will not work nearly so well, and this has clearly been borne out by the market. If you want to make a touch UI, you need to do it properly.
I will make a bet with you right now. This little laptop thing will go nowhere. It will be eaten alive by the iPad and Android tablet devices. Toshiba will stop selling it within a year-18 months.
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Put your challenge on longbets.org and see if anyone bites! Your bet is on the short term for the site, but still a good bet!
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nyctopterus meant they are using an OS GUI that was not made for, or geared toward, 'touch' user interaction. Windows 7 may have some features that work with a 'touch' device but it certainly isn't "made for touch". The Windows Phone 7 OS would probably have been a better choice.
I strongly disagree with the concept that an OS isn't "made for touch." The OS is there to help you do things, like run software. I hardly think that today's modern OS can be put to blame when a given device's software is not "up to par" for the expected experience.
As anecdotal evidence, I can use WindowsXP/Vista/7 without a mouse or touchpad. I can get by in many programs and procedures without the mouse. The invention and the widespread usage of the mouse has no relevance to what the OS will or will not a
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I'm not sure you get what GP means. A touch UI is optimized for fingers and the imprecise boundaries of the finger. A normal UI is optimized for precision that a mouse/stylus enables (there is, in fact, a difference between a mouse UI and a stylus UI, but the difference is not nearly as profound).
I.e. touch UI's can't have elements that are too small, because then they'd become too difficult to activate without unintentionally activating neighboring elements. Touch UI's rely more on gestures for navigation
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I'm gonna bite.
The fact you can use Windows 7 as a non-touch OS doesn't make it not support touch.
I'm using it (right now) on a tablet convertible.
The on-screen keyboard is the best I've used, work well on my 8.9" screen.
The ability to scroll seamlessly on every window with a scrollbar by dragging up and down works well.
Large buttons.
Other than a mobile interface (iOS, android), it''s really quite workable.
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Battery: 5-6 hours
Weight: 2 pounds
Heat: None
Rotating fan: None
Windows 7 words great with a touchscreen.
-signed
Someone who uses it on a regular basis.
PS, if you have a touch screen and use the built in flicks at all, you really really should try out this app. http://forum.eeeuser.com/viewtopic.php?id=84092 [eeeuser.com] It takes the default flicks and blows them away.
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Apple redesigned an shitty product that MS had been utterly failing at for a decade. They made it actually worth buying and, surprise, people are buying it. How them grapes taste?
Herd instincts only affect cows. Who cares what everybody else thinks is good? I'm only really interested in serving my personal requirements when it comes to a Personal Computer. (Go figure!)
The iPad makes it hard to fix stupidity on the Web. This is due to it's design factor, which is all about feeding people pre-made media while severely gimping HALF the point of the entire internet. Interactivity without a keyboard means you've been reduced to a drooling consumer. Or a paste-eating finger-painter.
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Your arrogance and juvenile petulance astounds me. I don't have an iPad. I feel like my Droid does everything an iPad does and more. But I'm not going to sit around on a high horse and dog people that do see value in the device. Basically, go fuck yourself.
Hm. Well now, if you typed that response on your iPad clone, then you might (almost) have a valid point of view.
Otherwise, I have to wonder if you didn't simply recognize exactly what I was saying as an uncomfortable and unavoidable truth and reacted primarily because you don't like what it says about you or where your brain might be headed.
-FL
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When the iPad's screen is off, it is conserving just as much power as your tablet, yet, it can receive emails, alerts, etc.
That's about as useful as a carpet fitter's ladder. You still have to wake it up to read them.
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It's also slow as molasses according to videos on Youtube,
Oh what a joy to spend 4 seconds to change Window... Must have!
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Seriously? A modem? in this age of 3g and ubiquitous wifi?
You want a paralell port with that?
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Dial up internet access is better than nothing in places with no Wifi, ethernet or 3G.
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Really? GPRS is as fast as the fastest MODEM and works in the middle of nowhere. Landlines are increasingly rare - especially without a decent Internet connection provided with it - the only people I know who still bother having a landline do because it's cheap to get a POTS line with ADSL. Meanwhile, I can walk out into the countryside, miles away from the nearest wired connection, and still get UMTS, falling back to GPRS in a few places. My mother's house, in the middle of nowhere, had 3G coverage abo
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I have a friend who lives out in the sticks, an an analog modem is all the internet access he can get. You don't even get a decent cell signal there; it takes forever to pull up a weather map on my phone when I visit him.
However, for someone like him a USB modem should suffice. No sense in putting in something only a very tiny minority of users is ever going to want or need, and is increasingly quaint.
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Seriously though, is this the first break from setting SSD capacities to power-of-two sizes (even while the GB units are still metric, not binary), or was this just a typo by the reporter?