Hardware Makers Unhappy With Tablet Sales 299
rocketjam writes "According to The Register, hardware manufacturers, tired of continued low sales of the much-hyped tablet PC, are beginning to speak out, complaining that Microsoft has not marketed the platform enough and has over-priced licenses for its Windows XP Tablet Edition. The predicted demand for the devices has not materialized; faced with the tablet's premium pricing, consumers have continued to opt for lower-priced notebooks."
ever tried to use one for serious work....? (Score:5, Insightful)
I have worked with both the Fujitsu-Siemens as well as the Compaq tablets, have run Linux as well as Windows on both, and they simply get in between yourself and serious work.
The interface requires too much attention of the user, and the handwriting recognition, while pretty good on Windows, also requires too much attention. On Linux you would have to use some palm-type strok business, or even better, the excellent Dasher [cam.ac.uk] application.
Besides specialist applications, such as in hospitals for example, the form factor only really comes into its own during meetings, but it simply does not (yet) offer the simplicity of the two primary office tools: The humble pen and paper.
This is not a marketing or cost issue, it is a form-factor issue. They are cool, but all our demo and test models have their novelty worn off, and are currently going unused. At least we did not pay for them.....
Re:ever tried to use one for serious work....? (Score:5, Insightful)
Several different physicians I know have tried the tablet form... only to switch back to a PDA or notebook.
The tablet seems perfect; however, the problem in medicine is the problem everywhere else... input. In increasing amounts history/physicals, progress notes, clinic visits, and orders are being inputted directly into the system by typing. The other predominate way is by dictation... which allows somebody else to type it into the system.
Tablet PCs do not speed up this process in any way. It's still quicker to type or dictate, than to use this format.
Many physicians use PDAs for all the same reasons most geeks use PDAs... however, very few of the reasons are related to medicine. Every medical student knows that a PDA allows for a quick reference on rounds to spice up one's knowledge. The tablet would allow the same info... in just a larger format.
Anyway, we docs wanted to love the tablet... it's just not practical enough... yet.
Re:ever tried to use one for serious work....? (Score:2)
I'm curious, what about voice recognition? Is the amount of technical jargon too great for current technology? I'd think simultaneous voice recording and voice recognition w
Re:ever tried to use one for serious work....? (Score:4, Interesting)
The only reason that this is a consideration is because even the dictation people miss a bunch of words... so everything dictated as to be re-edited. If voice to text systems get 95%, it might be usable and would save an assload of money.
Digital dictation systems that connect to software for transcription haven't worked well either.
Of course, it doesn't help that we docs were all trained to dictate, scratch something unreadable in the chart, and move on.
Davak
Re:ever tried to use one for serious work....? (Score:3, Interesting)
Now while the Toshiba makes a very nice notebook (albeit a weak one with a PIII processor) it is WAYYYY overpriced as a notebook. I have used our CEO as an example to prevent any further purchases. I nice Dell lattitude can be had for much less.
Overpriced and Underpowered (Score:3, Informative)
"...WAYYYY overpriced as a notebook."
Yep, and underpowered. If someone came out with one of these babys using a Centrino processor or better, then I would have considered buying or recomending one to my clients. But when a client asks me to recommend a notebook, well, I just can't recommend something with a PIII processor at this point.
For example, someone noted above that the Tablet PC's main use within his company seemed to be during meetings. That's fine, and some of my clients could use that funtional
Unused?!! (Score:3, Interesting)
I work for a non proffit in KS and would gladly get you the paperwork to get those things donated over. They might not work in the office but in the classroom, which is where I work, they work GREAT.
(ergo the selling problem -- too expensive for those that need it)
Re:ever tried to use one for serious work....? (Score:3, Insightful)
and in the right applications they are perfect.
Problem is that Tablet PC's are a vertical market. they always have been even from the very first one, the Dauphin DTR-1 I used in a chemistry lab in 1992.
Tablet Pc's have been around for over 10 years, and every time microsoft get's around to actually making a OS for it, they try to market it for everyone and that is a bold faced lie. Tablet pc's have very distinct uses. they are NOT for everyone.
and finally they are too damned big now. the dau
Re:ever tried to use one for serious work....? (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, the Palm, followed by WinCE/PPC clones, achieved tablet PC status years ago and is the true innovator in this area.
Consider how far the laptop/desktop family is from being a true appliance, and how close the Palmtop family is.
To use a laptop, you must do the following steps:
- open the clamshell, locate the little power button and turn it on.
- watch as it comes to life; little LEDs light up, and after a minute or so you see the Windows splash screen.
- Wait until you see either a login screen or the actual desktop (depends on versions of Windows, how configured, etc.)
- Wait another minute or so while all the little proggies in the System Tray initialize and load. Watch Yahoo Messenger announce, irrelevantly, that it is logging you in.
- If you were savvy enough to understand "hybernation", you may have skipped a couple of these steps, but why should a user have to know the difference between hybernating and shutting down?
- Optionally, see one or two "Windows Update" messages pop up that you don't understand and aren't interested in.
- Now, find the application you are seeking--typically, your word processor, spreadsheet, PIM, or browser. It may be represented by a little icon among a sea of icons on the desktop, since you don't know anything about folders and other tricks to keep things clean. Or, it may be hidden somewhere deep in the Start menu; for example, Start->Programs->Adobe->Acrobat->Reade r (or something like that).
- Watch the application's splash screen announce its existence. Then, the application comes up. Now, at last, you can get to work, though you must play by the rules of the application.
- When you are done working, you can't simply close the computer; you must "save your work", a task which neophytes do not understand. You don't need to "save your work" when you turn off your television; it remembers what channel you were on last time. Yet, you must do this mysterious thing with your wordpro/spreadsheet or else you will "lose your work", something your long-suffering computer literate friends will angrily scold you about.
- Now, you shut down the system, either by Start->Shutdown->Turn off Computer, or by pressing power switch (in recent hardware and Windows versions) or by closing the clamshell (in recent hardware).
With the Palm/PPC, your main obstacle is finding your app amongst the icons. Chances are, you're using one of the apps bound to a hardware button anyway; just press Calendar, the thing pops on and poof! you're looking at today's schedule. No fuss, no muss. Just point at the thing you want, start writing on it, etc.
I believe the so-called Tablet PC will go away soon and we will, one hopes, see what little innovations it did possess finding their way into conventional laptops where they belong, minus Microsoft's hefty royalty overhead.
Re:ever tried to use one for serious work....? (Score:3, Informative)
Yah. (Score:3, Interesting)
The display would be one of those snazzy shades/glasses.
For input - a tiny camera, a tiny microphone, something that detects where my eyes are looking at and a small keypad at my waist or that thought pattern recognition thing.
There's also network input - where me or permitted par
Re:Yah. (Score:2)
- handwriting recognition that takes pen movement as an input, and allows user to correct the mis-recognized text (this is what everything uses -- with moderate success),
- handwriting recognition that uses pen movement as an input without a feedback (what can work, but usually only after either user or computer will go through a lot of learning in a feedback mode),
- "handwriting recognition" that takes the images of written text as an input (what is something that even h
Re:ever tried to use one for serious work....? (Score:2)
A PDA should suffice for most hospital applications.
Re: (Score:2)
And then moses came down the mountain... (Score:3, Funny)
Er - hang on a minute, my tablet just crashed
Re:And then moses came down the mountain... (Score:3, Funny)
[Moses drops a tablet.] Oy...
10! 10 commandments, for all to obey!
-- from Mel Brooks' History of the World, Part I
Re:And then moses came down the mountain... (Score:2)
why? GUI/touchscreen probs, clunkyness... (Score:5, Informative)
the real reason that it hasn't caught on might also be that the digitizers and or the windows GUI handling aren't good enough to make using the touchscreen and the stylus an acceptable user experience.
we have these things at my lab (for multimodal HCI studies), and while the handwriting recognition of Win Tablet isn't too bad, clicking on things in the GUI is way too unreliable. the windows GUI doesn't allow ambiguous inputs (selecting an area rather than a point), as they would occur with a finger and as they do occur when the digitizer isn't good enough. here, either the GUI should become more robust (= fault-tolerant) or the digitizers should become better. probably both. (tried with a top-notch acer centrino tablet!)
other issues with the tablet is the sheer size and weight of these things. still waiting for apple to come up with a really thin tablet that you actually WANT to take anywhere. at the moment, the tablet's i have seen suffer from over-weight, clunky-ness, short battery-life...
my prediction is that in a couple of years these problems will be solved and people will enjoy clicking on items directly (and maybe handwriting) rather than using a stupid trackpad...!
Re:why? GUI/touchscreen probs, clunkyness... (Score:2)
Total cost difference is $200 (Score:5, Insightful)
It is sad, we have arrived in a day and age where it seems as though every new technology that comes around the block needs to make it big in the first couple years , or it is considered a failure. Real improvements in productivity don't happen that way. They can take many years before the returns are actually realized. The people who use the technology don't learn it overnight. In fact, it is only now that many companies are finally starting to see a decent return on their investments in technology in the late 1990's.
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:2, Insightful)
Tablet PCs are not a bad idea, but it's just not worth the extra $700-$1000.
I personally wouldn't mind having a couple of those and run Reason and Ableton Live side-by-side. Tweaking knobs on screen in real-time using a stylus is much better than using a mouse.
But do I want to spend $2000 on a tablet PC? Or would I rather by 2 low-end laptops and a couple Wacom tablets?
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:2)
No way. Even better than that is to get a simple MIDI controller like an Oxygen 8 [midiman.net] and tweak real knobs in real time. Use the right tool for the right job.
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:3, Insightful)
It happens.
Clipboard - couple bucks
Piece of paper- some fraction of a cent
Pen- Free if you steal it. Agree to take a survey at the mall and then just walk away
Functionality - overall superiour to a tablet PC, especially with the advancing state of OCR software
Tablets have two real functions, Filling out standard forms, such as you might d
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:2)
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:2, Insightful)
Certainly the ability to run a real database and grep text is a real advantage, but crippled without a real keyboard. Pen input devices are really nifty for making checkmarks and such. Much better than a keyboard or mouse, but they really are no match for inputing text and I d
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:2)
IMHO, Bill G and gang are promoting the tablet because they've been having such a difficult time with WinCE. WinCE doesn't scale DOWN very well so they are attempting to create a market between the PDA and
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:3, Insightful)
Tablets have actually been around for a while. I remember lusting after the Linux tablets several years ago. Then Microsoft came in with its billions in marketing, and I've not heard of Linux tablets again (though I think they're starting to resurface).
Repeat with me: Just because Microsoft does something doe
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:3, Insightful)
I assume he's talking about the production cost. Certainly the retail price difference is more than $200.
It seems to me that the major reason tablet PCs are not selling well is that they are a solution in search of a problem. A tablet PC is bigger and heavier than a PDA; and, for that matter, a clipbboard. A notebook PC, of course, comes with a keyboard.
Personally, the only thing I can see that a tablet PC
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:3, Insightful)
Unless, of course, you're standing up and trying to take notes. Or trying to take notes in mathematics or physics. These applications make trying to use a keyboard an exercise in farce. Also, you need something considerably larger than a palm pilot just to write out a single integral equation.
You could just use paper and a pen, that is if you don't mind sea
Re:Total cost difference is $200 (Score:3, Informative)
The first tablets were around in the early 90's so I don't think it's still in "the first couple years".
Quit yer whining (Score:2, Insightful)
With the availibility of OSS, bitchin' about proprietary software makes no sense. (Oh no, not the Chewbacca defense!)
IMHO, all Linux needs is a couple of "success stories" where a hardware mfr opted for Linux and saved itself from ruin, and you'll have hw mfrs falling over each other try
Re:Quit yer whining (Score:2)
It's not like there was a market for these things, it was just Billy's latest idea about what the future would be. You know, like MS Bob, MSN dialup, UPNP, voice recognition, and all those other things that never amounted to anything. Bill Gates is probably the world's worst technology visionary (*): he is so bad that even with all his power and money, he cannot even force into the world the things he i
Re:Quit yer whining (Score:2)
Re:Quit yer whining (Score:2)
1024x768 is a replacement for paper? (Score:2)
Re:1024x768 is a replacement for paper? (Score:5, Interesting)
Just try writing on a tablet PC with one hand while holding the damn thing in the other. You can't do it. You'll be searching for a table in no time, and probably have to sit down too, because there's no table high enough to use while standing. And if you try holding it with your elbow, it's at the wrong angle for writing. Clipboards work because they're light enough that they don't require much leverage to hold with a grip.
You need something that fits in the palm of your hand, and that means six inches wide at the most.
Why is this MS's fault? (Score:4, Informative)
If you had decided on Linux, would you have expected Linus Torvalds to launch an expensive advertising campaign for your benefit? Who advertised your car? Was it the car manufacturer, or a manufacturer of one of its components?
It's easier (Score:3, Insightful)
Make hardware CHEAP (and reliable), and people will buy it. It's that simple.
Re:Why is this MS's fault? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why is this MS's fault? (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't the first time (Score:3, Insightful)
As for the price of licencing Pen, er, Tablet Windows, perhaps they should look around for alternatives? (Say, what ever happen to GRiD anyway?)
Sounds like sour grapes: "Wah, Microsoft isn't pushing our market enough! And they put a gun to our heads to make us use Windows!" Sell enough computers for Microsoft to care guys.
Re:This isn't the first time (Score:5, Interesting)
I posted exactly the same message as yours above, a couple of years ago when this marketing hype coming out of Redmond was starting up again for the Tablet PC. I got a ton of replies from the trolls when I posted that the minute the market started going south, you would be stuck with an expensive pen computer w/o drivers. The trolls replies were that "the technology wasn't there in '95" and "now Microsoft was committed to the Tablet PC because the technology is there" and "this was going to be the hottest thing since electronic sliced bread."
Since there are not enough of these devices sold, nobody is going to waste time writing Linux drivers for these M$ abandoned tablets, when there's lots of other things to be done. You will be left with an obsolete brick in just a few years.
Re:This isn't the first time (Score:3, Informative)
Note Taker (Score:5, Funny)
If I have to carry a clunky box around... (Score:2, Interesting)
They're just not useful (Score:3, Funny)
Can anybody think of a general use for one of these (nothing too specialized, something that might actually be useful for a lot of people?)
Re:They're just not useful (Score:2, Insightful)
I not telling! Re:They're just not useful (Score:2)
You're a genius!!! (Score:2)
Oh yeah, your website isn't working.
Re:They're just not useful (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:They're just not useful (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:They're just not useful (Score:3, Interesting)
The "executives don't use keyboards" trap (Score:4, Insightful)
Up to the 1980's, keyboards were associated with secretarial and clerical staff, who were paid less and ranked lower socially than executives. Executives had no skill in keyboarding and were proud of it. The mantra was "I have people to do that for me." The result, unfortunately, was that the decision-makers never got any gut experience in the feeling of keyboard interaction or the power and suitability of the keyboard as a human-interface device.
So, you have all those stupid fantasies of machines that you "will just talk to in English," and the continuing search for handwriting recognition.
Ever since all the bright young MBA's started using Excel and Powerpoint you'd think people would know better. Sure, the upper-mid-level people play the game of "my-laptop-is-shinier-than-yours", but I have still seen upper management eyes gleam at the idea of not needing to use a keyboard. They give lip service to the legitimacy of the keyboard, but in their hearts they feel that a high-ranking person should not be using one.
It's silly. A tablet PC is like a PC with a mouse but no keyboard (yes, I know there is a keyboard buried inside). It's an impoverished communications channel, and no matter how cleverly you design it, it will never be as comfortable, efficient, or powerful as a channel that includes a keyboard or a keyboard-like modality.
It would be far better to research improved, more convenient, more portable keyboard subtitutes (type in the air and let lasers track your fingers, or whatever) than to continue down the silly path of trying to express a human-computer dialog solely with a continous two-dimensional line.
Re:The "executives don't use keyboards" trap (Score:3, Insightful)
A tablet PC is like a PC with a mouse but no keyboard (yes, I know there is a keyboard buried inside). It's an impoverished communications channel, and no matter how cleverly you design it, it will never be as comfortable, efficient, or powerful as a channel that includes a keyboard or a keyboard-like modality.[Emphasis mine.]
I disagree strongly. I can't argue to Microsoft's implemenation of TabletPC, as I've never used one, but you're talking about the tablet computer or pen based computer in general.
Re:The "executives don't use keyboards" trap (Score:2)
After I submitted this, a number of other advantages came to mind:
Re:The "executives don't use keyboards" trap (Score:2)
Closer - When using a tablet I feel as though I'm interacting directly with the machine rather than trying to command it through an intermediary.
That's pretty much just a personal feeling, there. I feel like I'm using an intermediary when I'm not using a text based interface (and I'd be right, too). I don't expect computer devices to work like pen and paper because they AREN'T pen and paper. Forcing them into that role puts them at a disadvantage.
Faster - I
Re:The "executives don't use keyboards" trap (Score:2)
There's a reason for that, and it's tied into something that a lot of people here on slashdot and similar tech-based sites don't understand: most people don't want to have to learn something new just to get their job done.
Executives, as you point out, don't need to type because they "have someone to do that for them". Given that, and that they didn't learn to
Re:The "executives don't use keyboards" trap (Score:2)
I agree with the overall point I think you're making here, which I might summarize as 'let the tool make this easy for me.' I do agree, honest. But, the devils advocate in me says, 'It's a tool, and sometimes you have to learn a bit about a tool in order for it to be really useful to you.' I say this because I often see people turn off their brains when it comes to computers. I've seen very logical people behave ver
Perhaps .. (Score:2, Funny)
Could this be the begining of the end of marketing?
mmmm
I still don't get it. (Score:5, Insightful)
Friend: Let me give you my new number. Got a pen?
Me: Uh, hang on a sec. Let me get out my tablet. Just have to boot it up here...just a minute more. Okay. I've got to open Outlook... New contact...new number. Damn, it's not recognizing my handwriting. Wait, wait. Okay. Done. Now let me give you my number.
Friend: *writes it on back of hand with a pen that costs a quarter, never needs to be recharged, and fits in a shirt pocket*
Re:I still don't get it. (Score:3, Interesting)
Stupid form factor... (Score:2)
The only advantage is for diagrams, and ultimately, there are far better ways of doing that even, back of a napkin, notebook, whiteboard, even touchpads provide 'good enough' capability for things like teleconferencing, why in the world would
Re:Stupid form factor... (Score:2)
Your prize is our encouragement to travel to Redmond and deliver a 2x4 clue stick to Bill Gates. Be sure to chant out "Here's another one you blew the call on" while delivering it.
btw, for meetings, we use a Smart Board [smarttech.com] which allows drawing on a white board and saving
Top 5 "why nots" (Score:3, Interesting)
2) Too expensive. Even the tablets with keyboards (yes, some of them have keyboards) are much more expensive than a comparable laptop.
3) Short battery life. See point 1, above.
4) Fragility. You're carrying around a color LCD plus digitizer (i.e., $$$). You're writing on it. It's collecting dust and dirt. Pity about that scratch, crack, ding ...
5) False mimicry. The parallax between screen pixels and moving pen point makes it really, really clear that you're not using a pen on paper.
Tablet wont replace paper yet. (Score:2)
Duh! (Score:2)
Laptop Buyers Unhappy with Tablet Prices (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, when I talk about buying computers with network admins, and ask them to name a price point at which tablets make sense, the number seems to be (normal laptop) + $150. As it is now, the price penalty is much stiffer, and you end up comparing low-powered tablets with high-powered laptops. Sure, you can get a $1400 Compaq tablet - but it's got less than half the CPU power of their $1400 laptops.
Love mine (Score:4, Interesting)
Once I combined mine with a small portable scanner I found the amount of paper clutter in my offices to go down to a bare minimum (almost made me look like a type A person
I think people don't give it a fair try. It may be expectations, price or a combination of both. Any way you cut it though, this style unit does work for a number of people much better then a laptop.
Hardware just isn't there (Score:2)
You take a P3-900, a 20GB disk, that nice big screen and jam it in a tablet and you get.... sucky battery life and a 5 pound tablet. I think that is what really killed it for me, I was lucky to get 3 hours out of it.
Also, I found the wireless card very lame, when compared to a Netgear PCMCIA card it had much less range. The wireless card also really did in the battery.
I think the tablet concept is really co
Re:Hardware just isn't there (Score:2)
If Microsoft hadn't killed Go Corp off for sport ("It wasn't about 'grow the market,' it was about 'block that kick'), [amazon.com] we might have had one of those by now. If Jerry Kaplan [amazon.com] reads The Reg, I'm sure he's grinning in a fit of schadenfreude. [reference.com]
~Philly
Consumers Drive the Market Not Microsoft (Score:2)
good (Score:2)
Just like the all the 'internet appliances' that were dumped, I can get a tablet too.
They're a stupid idea (Score:2)
Handwriting is too slow. It is too slow on paper, why do you think shorthand appeared? It is much worse on PDA and tablet PCs to the point of uselessness. The tablet format is useful for single sentence notes and very little else.
For crying out loud just learn to touchtype, it *isn't* that hard...
[1] Psion Revo is still my number 1 PDA, I'm orde
Chalk one up for Apple (Score:5, Informative)
Apple's Steve jobs had previously mentioned that the tablet market was non-existant.
Specifically, here's what the westion was, and his answer to that:
M: A lot of people think given the success you've had with portable devices, you should be making a tablet or a PDA.
J: There are no plans to make a tablet. It turns out people want keyboards. When Apple first started out, "People couldn't type. We realized: Death would eventually take care of this." "We look at the tablet and we think it's going to fail." Tablets appeal to rich guys with plenty of other PCs and devices already. "And people accuse us of niche markets." I get a lot of pressure to do a PDA. What people really seem to want to do with these is get the data out. We believe cell phones are going to carry this information. We didn't think we'd do well in the cell phone business. What we've done instead is we've written what we think is some of the best software in the world to start syncing information between devices. We believe that mode is what cell phones need to get to. We chose to do the iPod instead of a PDA.
The full interview is avilable here [blogspot.com].
Let's see.... (Score:2)
You MUST play Bill's Way (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's Fiorina holding her leather organizer instead. [tabletpctalk.com] Of course, being the richest man in the world, Billy got his way [tabletpctalk.com] and had her hold a tablet PC by the end.
What gets me is how childish this all seems. "You didn't play right! You and your friends can't come to the party!"
NEWS FLASH - this just in! (Score:2)
in other news:
Most dot com companies went bankrupt after having no sellable product
Long lines are expected at the Department of Motor Vehicles
A man lost a poker hand drawing to an inside straight
In other news... (Score:2)
Film @ eleven.
Tablets need to have ... (Score:2)
... an integrated cell phone (that can actually be held and used like one), an integrated 3 Mpix camera/scanner (if it can read handwriting, it can surely read a newspaper), an integrated full quality audio system (supporting MP3, OGG, FLAC, etc), infrared port, ethernet port, 256 MB of RAM, 40 GB of storage, and of course ... run BSD/Linux.
Maybe they're pitching them to the wrong market? (Score:4, Insightful)
But I'm dying to get one of these to draw on!
Maybe if they bundled some of the better pressure sensitive pens and photoshop and painter instead of office, they'd find that people were more interested in using them as digital sketchbooks. I know some people say the digitizers aren't up to it, but from what I've read on tablet pc forums, it depends on which one you get. The ones with the newer Wacom based digitizers are supposedly pretty good if you're using one of the decent Wacom pens, which are all interchangeable with the crappy ones bundled with the tablets.
Maybe they should try pitching them more towards art students, and maybe try to bring the prices down a bit. I wish apple would make one of the convertable flip-over type tablets because I'm betting they could get it right on the first try. It's probably the only way I'd ever consider buying a mac, but I'd buy one in a heartbeat if they did it.
Lose the mouse, but not the keyboard. (Score:2, Insightful)
I've got two of them, and I love them for... (Score:3, Informative)
I'm developing software for the Toshiba, but have had a chance to use it for classwork (I'm a Senior in Electrical and Computer Engineering at OU [ou.edu]), and I can seriously say that for people like me that take a lot of notes (read digital packrats), tablets have lots of potential. I can search my handwriting for specific keywords, or "print" a document to the Journal and mark it up, which is a great feature for professors that provide notes to follow along with in class. While everyone else is scribbling madly to keep up, I just pick the "highlighter" and highlight the notes, and maybe make some of my own in the side margin.
As far as the form factor goes, they're getting smaller, and lighter. Look at Acer's TravelMate [acer.com], for example.
Also, what some people fail to realize is that there are two distinct types of tablets. All of the ones I've highlighted, with the exception of the ProGear are "convertible" machines. A second (cheaper) form factor is also out there, the "slate" machines. Check out a great overview at TheTabletPC.Net [thetabletpc.net].
As they say with many other things, don't knock it 'til you try it.
Mike Hollinger
There's a market somewhere... (Score:2)
I remember when there was a hype over eBooks a couple of years ago and one of the future visions were specifically for this. Students could download their text book, have multiple bookmarks in each text, highlight, have a dictionary loaded...
If that part could come true but with regard to Table PC's...I would love to do that. I wouldn't have a backpack full of notes, paper, books, and a lap
They're missing the market (Score:2)
one redeeming feature (Score:2)
Microsoft's trouble with Innovation? (Score:3, Insightful)
hardware makers should sell them cheaper (Score:2)
They went for the laptop replacement and found out most people would rath
Tired (Score:2)
Frankly, I'm tired of hardware manufacturers complaining about MSFT. If they didn't want to be 0wn3d by Microsoft, they shouldn't have handed them their monopoly status, by, for instance, accepting Microsoft's terms on dual-installs. Now that MSFT has them by the short-n-curlies, they start whinging on? Tough luck, and MSFT could care less--they'll just negotiate with someone else, since the hardware is a commodity and therefore any given manufacturer is easily replaced by another one that wants to play
Re:yeah but (Score:2, Funny)
sigh, even those who don't know what SCO is post SCO jokes nowadays.
Re:Glorified PDA (Score:2)
The form factor is convenient, especially if it comes with keyboard to boot, but I'm guessing these things won't become more mainstream untill they are as cheap and powerfull as notebooks.
The 800mhz to 1.x ghz range just isn't enough for anyone, anymore.
Re:Glorified PDA (Score:2)
What are you on? Cause I want some. Seriously my main machine is a 1.2Ghz Athlon and I play games, encode audio, do 3D rendering, etc on it all the time. A 1Ghz Pentium-M would be even faster than my machine so it should be WAY more than enough for anything you are going to run on a tablet. If the input method is condusive to what you need to run then I really, really doubt the speed of the cpu will be an issue, and by keeping speed down to
I don't even need 800 to 1.x (Score:2)
My home desktop is a 600Mhz, my work desktop is a 450Mhz and my laptop is 233Mhz laptop from 1997! They all work just fine, I don't play too many games so what would I need more horsepower for? I run Gentoo on the 600 and the only time I have feel that I need more speed is when building KDE which takes about 16 hours. And the office desktop has zero reason to be replaced, heck it's a PIII and many of my co-workers still have PIIs.
Re:Glorified PDA (Score:2)
Who uses tablet PC's for client-server applications? I don't think that is the target market.
Re:Glorified PDA (Score:2)
Newton didn't fail; Apple management did (Score:5, Informative)
From Pen Computing Magazine #22, June 1998
Why Did Apple Kill Newton?
(C)Copyright 1998 David MacNeill
Early Friday morning, February 27, 1998, Apple Computer made official what the Newton cognoscenti had strongly suspected for six months: the Newton handheld computing platform was dead.
The rather terse press release gave the basic facts: Apple will cease all Newton OS hardware and software development, no more products will be made after the existing stock is depleted, and Apple will continue to provide support to users. Brief mention was made of development of a new low-cost Mac OS-based mobile device in the future, but no details were offered. But the most galling omission was the lack of an answer to the question on the minds of hundreds of thousands of shocked, angry Newton owners: Why?
Before I attempt to answer this question, let's take a quick tour of the mercurial five-year career of Newton. This will serve to prepare you for the several explanations we will be considering.
A brief history of Newton
During its turbulent five-year life, Newton technology was close to death several times, yet always managed to survive. Department heads came and went, but the essential concept of the personal digital assistant (PDA) was too compelling to die easily: A small, inexpensive, pen-based computing device that would accompany you everywhere, and that would learn enough about you to make informed assumptions about how to help you keep track of the myriad little bits of information we all must carry. It would be simple enough for anyone to use, a true computer for the rest of us.
I was fortunate to participate in the Newton beta test program and to co-author and deliver the training materials used to launch the product. The moment I saw that beta unit my life changed, and I wasn't the only one. I still remember the excitement of holding a pre-release Newton NotePad (as it was labeled then) in my hands for the first time, said Clinton Logan, ace developer for LandWare. Truly unique products like that don't come along very often.
For those of us who bought into this vision, it seemed like the future was arriving ahead of schedule. Like the buyers of the original 128K Macintosh, we gladly paid the high price of admission just to participate in this achingly cool dream that had taken physical form. We loved it and made it work for us in ways unanticipated by its creators, which is the true measure of great computer design.
What is Newton ?
Newton had an identity crisis from the very beginning. Former Apple CEO and Newton champion John Sculley first showed the prototype to the press in Chicago on May 1992, where he described not only the device but also their platform strategy. A central theme in Apple's advertising and promotional materials at the time repeatedly used the phrase What is Newton? Some have suggested that Apple never actually answered this question to anyone's satisfaction.
Consider the name change. The product was originally called the Newton NotePad to suggest its personal assistive features, but that was later changed to MessagePad to emphasize the product's communications capabilities.
We had always intended for Newton to be a platform, not just a product, said former Newton Systems Group chief Gaston Bastiens, now CEO of Lernout & Hauspie, an eminent speech recognition company. Unfortunately, all the press took away with them was the handwriting recognition aspect, which was over-emphasized. The whole thrust of Newton was to be a personal communicator as well as a personal assistant. From a conceptual point of view, John was absolutely right. The infrastructure for two-way wireless at the time was not there; we all knew it was a couple of years away, but it was always part of our platform strategy.
John Sculley generally gets both the credit and the blame for the origi
Re:Newton didn't fail; Apple management did (Score:2)
The link I found this morning...
http://www.pencomputing.com/frames/newton_obitu
Re:Little rich kids in Boston got tons of em (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Little rich kids in Boston got tons of em (Score:2)
If what you want is more serious storage, more than you would want to jam into your PC, get a few of these [cnet.com], and you don't need to reconfigure your systems when you upgrade.
As far as gaming and fragility goes, I've got a Dell 8500 with a GF4 4200 2Go, which seems to handle a couple new games I've bought just fi
Re:Linux is the way (Score:2)
With anything not wired down battery-life is a killer or a seller.