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Meet the Laptop of 2015
Posted by
Zonk
on Wed Mar 26, 2008 02:22 PM
from the o-hai-laptop dept.
from the o-hai-laptop dept.
cweditor writes "Like concept cars at auto shows, the computer industry designs 'concept notebooks' to imagine the machines of the future. The 'concepts' may not come to market as-is, but it's likely some of their ideas, components and features will. Take a look at systems you might be using in 7 years. In one, a touch-sensitive screen acts as the system's keyboard and mouse, allowing you to slide your finger across the screen to immediately shut off the display and keep what you're working on confidential. Their associated image gallery includes a prototype for a dual-screen laptop."
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That's nothing new (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:That's nothing new (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:That's nothing new (Score:5, Insightful)
With vibration, haptic advances, visual, and audio feedback, what is wrong with a second touch sensitive screen as the keyboard?
Then when you don't need it as a keyboard, it can become a tool-kit, palette, and any other interface you need.
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Re:That's nothing new (Score:5, Insightful)
For the typical road-warrior that totes a laptop around, you need a keyboard that you can type on without having to look at it.
Touch screens work adequately for systems like the iPhone where you need to be looking at the display anyway, but are useless on a laptop where you need to be able to type quickly and move on and off the keyboard without having to look at it all the time.
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Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Why should we type?
Because, you [bleep], typing on a keyboard is the fastest and most efficient way to get stuff into a computer.
then you draw them
You can type any letter or number far faster than you can draw it.
hand writing
Even if hand writing, or drawing recognition was 100%, you can still type a lot faster than you can write. Not to mention you can type for far longer than you can write without tiring.
All of these alternate input ideas are bottom line stupid. You can type stuff faster into a computer than you could speak it. If voice recognition wa
Re:That's nothing new (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:That's nothing new (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:That's nothing new (Score:4, Funny)
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small dual screens is kind of a dumb idea (Score:4, Interesting)
I personally think it probably comes down to cost - it's cheaper for Nintendo to buy two smaller screens than a single large screen. My understanding of LCD technology is that, apparently, it's difficult to grow the crystals without bad pixels, so that as the screens get larger, they rapidly get more expensive, because it's decreasingly likely that you'll get an LCD panel of a particular size without flaws - so all the flawed ones either get thrown away, or maybe they can cut them down to smaller displays (that is, cut out the bad part and end up with 1 or 2 smaller panels) and sold more cheaply at the small size?
Anyhow - *my* laptop of the future has a simple white (or neutral color) flap onto which a display can be projected, and the flap can be folded under the laptop when I want to project onto another surface, like a projection screen or white wall. That is, a laptop with built-in projector, not an LCD. (I suppose, ultimately, for power consumption purposes, you'll never have a projector built in, because it would take too much energy to run, but I can dream, right?)
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Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Never is a really long time...advances in battery capability (or the replacement of what we call a battery by some other power source) coupled with advances in projector technology (ie http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2704,2242734,00.asp [pcmag.com] ) may make this possible, perhaps sooner rather than later.
Re:small dual screens is kind of a dumb idea (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.audioholics.com/news/editorials/laser-projectors-coming-to-cell-phones-and-pdas [audioholics.com]
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In the case of the DS, I get the 'flip-ability' is (Score:3, Informative)
Re:In the case of the DS, I get the 'flip-ability' (Score:3, Informative)
The dual screens reduces processing power needs. The 2D hardware on the DS requires far, far less power than the 3D hardware, and is also much cheaper to make. The DS design has 2 2D engines and 1 3D engine. Doing one screen would've required bumping up the power of the 3D engine substantially, and probably would require more RAM as well.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
except for that nasty crack in the screen when you try to fold it over =/
I'll be dead by then (Score:5, Funny)
In the future nobody touches anything (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Also come on, really? We have an article [slashdot.org] on the front page about how stupid futurism is and then a futurist article. Trying to appeal to everyone I see. Anyway it's not like all of that has interest to anybody except the PC World grandpa crowd; I'm
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:In the future nobody touches anything (Score:5, Funny)
As in, when you hit another car, it gives you obvious physical feedback, such as smashing your face in with the dashboard?
No but seriously, I'm curious what you're talking about here.
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Re:In the future nobody touches anything (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:In the future nobody touches anything (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:In the future nobody touches anything (Score:5, Interesting)
Even better, with a touch screen, EVERYWHERE you put your fingers, initially, is the homerow.
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Re:In the future nobody touches anything (Score:4, Funny)
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Modded Offtopic already? (Score:3, Interesting)
It is easy to see how accuracy plays less of a role in a world where thumb typing slang is de rigeur and the excuse of "you
Re:In the future nobody touches anything (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:In the future nobody touches anything (Score:5, Interesting)
Which is why a combination of the concepts presented in the article would be far more attractive than any of them separately (I'm surprised the author of the piece didn't pick up on this): One of the laptops is billed as being "for blind people" because the surface can deform to generate bumps that the blind can read. The rest of the laptops have flat touch-screens for keyboards. Which is great for dynamic layouts but sucks for typing.
But combining them would be amazing. Imagine a keyboard that can reconfigure not only what is displayed on each key (like the Optimus), but also the keys themselves. If this "surface deformation" technology was good enough (and could be integrated with flexible displays) then you could have a surface that acts as a flat screen some of the time (for reading e-books, as a drawing pad, etc.) but generates the tactile relief of keys when typing is required.
More generally, it could reconfigure to generate new keyboard layouts as required. This would also solve one of the criticisms with the iPhone and iPod touch: you can't operate them without looking directly at the keys. Imagine if in addition to visual changes on the screen, there were bumps and grooves that dynamically appeared so that by touch alone you could feel the current key layout.
This, to me, is the ultimate future for compact computing devices: we will have screens that can vary both display and topography. Of course the technology to do this will be difficult to "get right" (key topography is only half of typing: you need the keys to "spring" properly)... but there is nothing impossible in principle about having deformable surfaces with integrated flexible displays.
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Re:In the future nobody touches anything (Score:4, Interesting)
Not only do normal keyboards provide an excellent method of interfacing with a computer, they also cushion the fingers as you type so you don't experience pain and pressure by tapping away at a hard surface all day.
It looks pretty as a rendered image, but functionally I'd never own a computer for regular use that didn't have a normal keyboard - unless you could speak to the computer as you would in Star Trek land.
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Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
dual screen... (Score:2)
Wrong. (Score:3, Insightful)
Not to poo-poo, but... (Score:5, Funny)
One thing I noticed... (Score:4, Interesting)
It's the whole "gee, look, with touch-sensitive screens we can paint a keyboard on the screen that you can use instead of an actual keyboard!"
How the heck are you supposed to touch-type on something that gives you no tactile response?
Re:One thing I noticed... (Score:5, Funny)
May I introduce you to my wife?
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Touch screen keyboards (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Then again by 2015 it would be REALLY nice if there would be some decent voice recognition too. I think the best situation is to have a variety of input devices available and to switch around as the need/mood strike you.
Saifu notebook (Score:2, Funny)
The Siafu concept notebook, designed for the blind by Jonathan Lucas, omits a display altogether. Images from applications and Web sites are converted into corresponding 3-D shapes on Siafu's surface. It can be used for reading a Braille newspaper, feeling the shape of someone's face..."
Think of the possibilities!
Oh how the Slashdot crowd would love to get their hands on one of these... literally
Hardly "futuristic"... (Score:4, Interesting)
With a flexible LCD that rolls up when not in use, coupled with a flexible keyboard that likewise rolls up, one can escape (at least partially), the limiting factor of computer design...that is, having a system that a human can interface with comfortably.
Confidential....riiiiight (Score:4, Funny)
Will it automatically hide the box of kleenex and bottle of hand lotion, too?
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On a car steering wheel!!?!? (Score:2, Insightful)
Worst ideas ever (Score:5, Insightful)
The one that turns into a book viewer if you turn it 90 degrees is a total joke. Seriously, take your laptop right now, turn it 90 degrees so that the break between the two "halves" is vertical, and tell me that's a comfortable way to handle reading material. Unless it's laying flat on the table (in which case it better be quite small) it's completely unmanageable.
The one they showed slung over the steering wheel of a car, that's just bad. BAD BAD BAD! Hey guys, here's a piece of crap with a touch-screen keyboard you have to stare at in order to use that you can hang right on your steering wheel! And then what, drive and type? That looks like the most uncomfortable thing ever even if you're parked.
I give all these "laptops of the future" an EPIC FAIL out of 10.
I don't want a laptop at all (Score:5, Interesting)
The various Linux-on-a-thumbdrive distributions and products are a step in the right direction. What we really need now is for vendors to design stations that these doodads can plug into.
Re: (Score:3)
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There's a reason everyone carries a whole computer around with them now, instead of just relying on businesses to provide sharable computers. When such things have been tried in the past, it's been a disaster: the computers weren't well set-up, were infected with viruses, didn't work right, didn't have the software people needed, and worse, had an enormous per-minute charge t
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That's the crux of the problem right there. You're going to trust the hardware at some public place where anyone and everyone has been messing with it? Even if the CPU is in your USB key, you're going to trust that someone hasn't installed a keylogger to capture your passwords? It's bad enough that we share wireless interne
in re Cario notebook (Score:3, Insightful)
If you thought idiots talking on cell phones while driving were dangerous, wait until you get next to some jerk using the convenient steering wheel mount on the Cario laptop.
A more likely scenario... (Score:4, Interesting)
Is that the laptop of the future:
You know, people just don't get it. If I'm buying a desktop, yes, I want all of the bells and whistles and don't care how heavy or how much power it uses. But when I buy a laptop, I'm not buying a mobile desktop. I want something that's light and easily portable. I want something with a keyboard that's usable, not merely "painted on" as an afterthought; tactile feedback matters. I want something which can be opened in economy class on an airline - the last corporate laptop I had was so big that this was impossible - I used my Palm instead. And I want something that can be used for hours on end without a recharge.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Obvious question (Score:5, Funny)
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