Linux Based Tablets Are Coming 217
CrypticSpawn writes "Read some good news on Diracian; there will be a Linux tablet coming out running Lycoris's Linux distribution, Lycoris Desktop/LX Tablet Edition. What's great is the tablet is the Protege by Toshiba, so you get a laptop and a tablet wrapped up into one. I guess I am a gadget fanatic, I love my Zaurus, now I want this. They even have pictures of it here. Also found another reference of this tablet on PC World, without the pics."
In the next release? (Score:5, Insightful)
Right now one of the things it is lacking that it really needs is handwritting recognition, which they say will be in the next release.
Did I tell you I'm just about to submit my perpetual motion machine to manufacturing? Motion will be in the next release, though.
But seriously... I hope they're talking about the "next release" as in "the version that will go onto the tablet when it ships." A Tablet Pc is just an expensive doodle pad without the handwriting recognition.
Re:In the next release? (Score:2, Offtopic)
gimme a keyboard any day over some flashy handwriting crap. a tablet with no keyboard is nice in the showroom & a paperweight by the time it's hit the parking lot.
Re:In the next release? (Score:2)
Those of us "of a certain age" that learned and practiced technical drawing/drafting before CAD made us obsolete are surprisingly fast.
Still haven't gotten to the point where I can draw animated cartoons real-time, though. Tremendous strain on the wrist.
[stealth Simpsons reference]
Re:In the next release? (Score:1)
KFG
Re:In the next release? (Score:2)
Re:In the next release? (Score:2, Interesting)
Not really. I have a tablet running XP Tablet PC edition which has excellent handwriting recognition, and I find myself using this feature rarely. Mostly because I can type about 50X faster, and it's so easy to flip out the keyboard and type instead of writing.
Instead, the main advantage of the tablet PC in my eyes is form factor / comfort for passive applications such as web browsing.
A tablet PC is not something you can
Linux Tablet PC == Good? (Score:5, Insightful)
Windows Tablet PC == Bad
Linux Tablet PC == Good
Ok, continue on with the mindless
Um, yeah... (Score:5, Insightful)
Tablet PC sales have been disapointing, and I understand that Microsoft made a deal with one of the manufacturers (I forget which one) that bundles the handwriting recognition software free with the OS while everyone else has to shell out for both. That's gotta be pissing the rest of 'em off.
Once the handwriting app's written, this'll be a perfect market for linux to make some headway in. I only hope they're not boneheaded enough to release the thing without handwriting recognition (maybe banking on the ability to use it as a laptop instead).
Re:Um, yeah... (Score:1, Informative)
Just to correct you slightly. Handwriting recognition comes with all XP Tablet PCs as standard. The application in question is Microsoft's OneNote - a note taking and brainstorming application. It's a killer app for the tablet PC, and Toshiba have license
Re:Um, yeah... (Score:2)
Re:Linux Tablet PC == Good? (Score:2)
It has nothing to do with the fact thats its a tablet.
Re:Linux Tablet PC == Good? (Score:2, Insightful)
Linux Tablet PC == Good
Close.
Windows Tablet PC == Okay, so maybe it is a cool toy but HA, apart from the gimmick value what's the point?
Linux Tablet PC == Okay, maybe it doesn't have much going for it beyond gimmick value but WOW, what a cool toy!
The difference in emphasis is a little more subtle than Good vs. Bad.
Re:Linux Tablet PC == Good? (Score:2)
I seriously doubt that the handwriting recognition is a big thing for now. Just the ability to get the things into digital format.
The ability to sit back and browse is probably good as well. These devices will likely be used as portable kiosks for charting in hospitals and other similar applications.
Just give them time. Th
Re:Linux Tablet PC == Good? (Score:3, Informative)
It's less expensive, works with existing zaurus apps, and ships *now* with handwriting recognition.
heh (Score:2)
Personally,
Windows Tablet PC == Stupid
Linux Tablet PC == Stupid
OTOH, I realize that some people are interested in these overpriced pieces of crap, so YMMV.
But, TBH, I think ANYTHING with Windows on it is stupid, so...
Re:Linux Tablet PC == Good? (Score:2)
Re:Linux Tablet PC == Good? (Score:2)
When do I get to walk in to my apt after work, fall into my couch, grap the tablet off the coffee ta
Toshiba (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually it's a Portege - we have one at work. I really like it quite a lot. There are a few software enhancements that need to be made to XP Tablet, but for a kick-start it's really quite nice. I could even go for one that is a bit thinner, has no keyboard, no hard drive, and 802.11G. Basically a thin client tablet that connects to a server and does everything "Terminal" or X-Server style. That way you additionally wouldn't have to lug around the processor and cooling. You'd get killer awesome battery life too. It would still need a simple 'cradle' style charger, though.
Tables are cool - they just need a little work.
Re:Toshiba (Score:2)
I've got it - a fifth leg!
*hurriedly scribbles on paper and stuffs patent application in mailbox*
Only If (Score:1, Insightful)
Take the red tablet (Score:2, Funny)
How great are tablets anyway? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not a PDA. You can't put it in your pocket.
It relies on recognizing your handwriting with this pen.
I dunno about the rest of the geeks out there, but I would *much* rather type than write. Typing is faster and more accurate (vs recognition).
Re:How great are tablets anyway? (Score:2)
No kidding. You ever tried doing any sort of programming or scripting using some sort of pen input device?
Look at some code sometime and imagine writing it out by hand (esp. with things like &, *, {}, etc.)
It hurts me to think about it.
-mo
Re:How great are tablets anyway? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How great are tablets anyway? (Score:1, Interesting)
You should only really spend just enough to make sure that the damn thing can do all you want (word processing most likely), is suited to your needs and has a fairly good build quality.
Oh, and a professio
You obviously didn't read the article (Score:1, Informative)
Of course you can type on it. If you had bothered to read the article, you'd see right there in the image at the top that it has a normal laptop keyboard when used in laptop mode. Sheesh!
Re:How great are tablets anyway? (Score:1)
Re:How great are tablets anyway? (Score:2)
It would be used as a portable chart. It would have acccess to all active patient info.
Any industry that needs someone to carry a clip board would be likly to want one of these.
Personally, I think it would be neet for role playing games. Too bad it's so dang expensive.
A Tablet is NOT a notebook without a keyboard (Score:3, Interesting)
They have no details about the character recognition technology at all. I'm also curious about the type of stylus they use. Windows TablePC's use an electromagnetic type detection of the point of the stylus so that you can wrest your hand on the screen without accidentally pushing window controls. In other words, its NOT really a "touchscreen." In this Lycoris tablet, they do call it a "touchscreen." But if this is the same Toshiba then it too must have the same type of LCD right... maybe not necessarily?
In any case, their site is very short on details.
Toshiba clone (Score:4, Informative)
That's it. Its time for bed.... (Score:1)
You know that its time to go to bed when you read the title and start thinking:
"Why the hell did those folks at Slashdot put Linux on a table?!?!"
mirror (Score:1)
Linux Based Tablets Are Coming... (Score:4, Funny)
THE END IS NIGH, 'WARE THE COMING OF THE LINUX BASED TABLETS!!!11
Reviewed (Score:2, Informative)
Given some time and a bunch of developers really motivated to get an awesome linux tablet, I would consider this do-able, but unfortunatley, I don't think that is the case right now.
Linux Based Tablets? (Score:4, Funny)
Skeptical (Score:2, Redundant)
Consumers and early adopters are free to buy the thing, and they probably buy most of manufactured tablets already. They have too much
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
Re:Skeptical (Score:2)
Not true (Score:2)
No handwriting recognition (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No handwriting recognition (Score:2)
Re:No handwriting recognition (Score:2)
Linux on a tablet? (Score:3, Funny)
great news... (Score:1)
let's just hope this will encourage adobe and corel to port their artistic stuff to linux, or that it'll add to the mindshare and therefore developer input that the gimp has.
This might drive down the prices of all Tablet PCs (Score:1, Interesting)
http://asia.cnet.com/newstech/personaltech/0,39
Could this presage competition for Microsoft, forcing it to bring down it's prices for Windows Tablet Edition, and thus, tablet PCs in general? One of my major concerns with the tablet pc is the fact that it costs so much more than it's laptop equivalent - even though it costs incrementally more to produce.
VisionPlate (Score:1)
And what about us Mac Users? (Score:1)
Re:And what about us Mac Users? (Score:2, Insightful)
But I'm sure Apple won't be entering the tablet market until it's more stable,
Re:And what about us Mac Users? (Score:2)
I've been putting forward the idea that it would _not_ cost Apple much to do a pen convertible, and that the potential benefits are win-win.
- Apple already includes InkWell (nee Rosetta, the print recognizer from Newton OS 2.0), Microsoft is _licensing_ Calligrapher (the cursive recognizer from Newton OS) from Paragraph
- Apple doesn't have to muck around w/ things like the Transmeta chip to get decent battery life
- all Apple has to do is engineer an elegant double-hinge (idealy improvi
Ignore the naysayers (Score:2)
The device is robust and elegant with it's light metal case and the glass plate. You can attach a keyboard and use it as a (sub-) notebook. You can detach it and snuggle up on a couch and read e-books. In summer, he also brought it to the park for use as a mobile mp3 and video player. (The display is not transreflexive. Works ok in the shadow, but not in the full sun).
My frien
Re:Ignore the naysayers (Score:2)
You sure can... And as an added benefit, the screen wobbling as you type acts as test for motion sickness. Thanks to my TC1000, I now know that I need to pick up some Dramamine before getting on a boat.
"You can detach it and snuggle up on a couch and read e-books."
Yep, the 5-degree viewing angle makes it very comfortable to read as a book or use as a notepad. I
Uhm so let's see... (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft, with their market share and cold hard cash, couldn't convince people that tablets were a "good idea" but some minute outfit, using an OS that's has the most arcane GUI of any of the major OSs is going to succeed ?
I don't think so.
Re:Uhm so let's see... (Score:2)
Oh, that Linux community (Score:2)
That is so cool. It's just like the Windows community, where at sites like download.com or jumbo.com there is free, shareware, and commercial software for everything.
I finally used the Compaq Based Tablet (Score:3, Interesting)
I was distinctly underwhelmed.
I can certainly see why it would be interesting for vertical applications where it is in essense a replacement for a clipboard. But as a general purpose computing tool? Its clunky, the interface is bad, the software feels prototype-ish.
And while I like the newest toys, I couldn't think of a single practical use for it. I wonder how Microsoft managed to talk companies into building this thing, because I can't believe they'll sell more than a handful.
Might be useful in schools (Score:3, Insightful)
I can see several potential vertical markets for tablet PCs, but they lack the following:
- a killer app or suite of apps for any one vertical market
- a distinctly "better" interface than laptop PCs for any market
- a new group of users; ones that wouldn't use laptop PCs, but would use one of these
- a cost point that makes them a worthwhile investment. In particular, the Windows OS+tablet interface and the hardware requirements to run them blows the cost out too much
- a much simpler interface. Current tablets are too complex for current non-PC users to use; manufacturers should be looking to *remove* stuff from tablets to make them simpler to use and cheaper to purchase in bulk. Something like an X-terminal with local storage and the ability to sync to central servers makes more sense than an all-singing-dancing laptop-like thing; the only people likely to buy the current crop of tablets are current laptop owners
However...
If the price of the hardware came down, and the tablet was reasonably rugged, I could see some opportunities for schools to take these up. I'm talking primary/secondary schools, or K-12 in US-speak. Take out the price of the Windows licence, and they're suddenly a lot more attractive.
Most schools are having their budgets slashed, so IT spending is very low, but imagine taking a bunch of these and hooking them to something like an LTSP server:
- teachers could use them to mark attendance; most current teachers are hopeless with a keyboard, and prefer writing. I'm inclined to think that a full-screen app that looks just like an attendance book, which has the names of all the students and check boxes next to their names, would go down very well with teachers, particularly if they could enter a "tick" or "cross" with a pen rather than typing stuff in or using a mouse. Laptops just aren't working out for most non-maths/science teachers who have them, in my experience
- teachers grading assignments, particularly if they could take the tablets home, enter their data then do a seamless sync back to the central server
- kids using them in test environments; imagine entering all your answers on the tablet, having the handwriting recognition neaten up the answers, then (for some subjects) getting your results at the end of the class. The marks could immediately go into a central database, and be exposed to parents over the Web; lots of possibilities here...
- learning tools for specific, visual/factual subjects (e.g. geography; imagine all those maps coming to life when you point to them...)
In particular, using LTSP, there's no need for every kid to have one; they could be tied to a class or classroom rather than an individual kid. Maybe physically lock them to desks somehow, or use RFIDs to track their whereabouts - I don't know, ask a hardware guy...
I'd say this could be an interesting opportunity for a vertical market in education.
BTW, IANAT (...teacher), but I have a mother who's an English teacher, and who constantly complains about using laptops because they're just too complicated.
Tablet killer app (Score:2)
For business, you could think that Inventory management would be suitable, but really, the cost savings of avoiding a 2 step process of pen and paper combine
Nifty (Score:2)
What I want from a tablet (Score:3, Insightful)
The tablet should barely be able to run an OS. It should have minimal RAM, a really small harddrive, and no keyboard, but come with the fastest wireless networking hardware available. For me, a useful tablet is one that I can leave laying around my house and pick up just to wander around and read an email, or browse a website, or read a paper or something. I have a desktop computer for all the hard stuff. If I needed proper portable computing, I'd buy a Powerbook.
I figure this would be most useful for business, too. You install a good wireless network in the building, and people bring the tablets to meetings, or wander the hallways reading whatever it is they think they need to read so urgently. Checklists and meeting notes are sync'd to your PC automatically and wirelessly, so you can just sit down at your computer and do work when you get back to your desk. Forget doing work while walking...nobody does that very well right now with pen and paper anyway.
Because the specs for the machine would be so low, it would be a lot cheaper. You don't have to pay the price of making things really small like a PDA, and you don't have to pay the price of making things powerful, like a good laptop, so you should be able to come up with something farily reasonable.
Re:What I want from a tablet (Score:2)
as far as cost, I would imagine that most of the cost ss the screen, not the power.
This is neat and all (Score:2)
But the price seems like it will limit it to a narrow market of "ooh I gotta have that" tech thrill-seekers. For that price, I can build a least two very capable desktop systems.
Re:My Experience with the Linux (Score:5, Funny)
This is probably one of the most innovative parts of the posting :-) I don't recall anyone else claiming that before.
Re:My Experience with the Linux (Score:2)
Personally, I liked the "new 2.4.9" kernel. Aren't we up to 2.4.23 at this point? It's such a bad troll it's almost funny.
Re:My Experience with the Linux (Score:2)
As long as they did not claim to use ReiserFS as the default file system on it (mkreiserfs specifically warns against using a 2.4.9-derived kernel)
Re:My Experience with the Linux (Score:2)
Nah, the troll actually claimed that Linux has no journaled file systems or SMP support. Guess SCO can leave us alone now, huh?
Re:My Experience with the Linux (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:My Experience with the Linux (Score:2)
A notice to the effect that the parent post is hidden would be nice in cases like this.. maybe I should set my preference to not penalize trolls so I could see them
Re:My Experience with the Linux (Score:2, Funny)
Perhaps they meant to say "I consider myself to be very technically inclined, having programmed while drinking VB for the last 8 years doing kernel level programming."
Re:My Experience with the Linux (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Still Underpowered w/ a Pentium III (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Still Underpowered w/ a Pentium III (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Still Underpowered w/ a Pentium III (Score:3, Informative)
Pentium M rocks hard... (Score:3, Interesting)
I suspect that Pentium M will show up in blade servers and 1U servers eventually, but alas, I will never see a Banias desktop.
Oh yeah...the Penti
Re:Pentium M rocks hard... (Score:2)
Re:Pentium M rocks hard... (Score:3)
Re:Still Underpowered w/ a Pentium III (Score:2)
Re:Still Underpowered w/ a Pentium III (Score:1, Insightful)
Anyway, what is this about Pentium III mobile shit? It's still a current line Intel CPU, has low power drain compared to mobile P4 hardware. I'd sure as hell want good battery life from a tablet rather than a speed increase cos there's no way I'm running off to find a power socket every hour and a half.
From the specs you've mentioned, you sound like someone who wants a tablet
Re:Still Underpowered w/ a Pentium III (Score:2, Informative)
This all comes in the form of Intel's Centrino chipset. So when you look at the specs, you say, "gee, this Tablet has all three of those features", but it doesn't get the Centrino name because it didn't use Intel's chipset.
Re:Still Underpowered w/ a Pentium III (Score:2)
You're correct. However, I used the Centrino name because many people, including me, find the Pentium M moniker vague. It's very easy to get confused as to whether we're talking about a PIII Mobile, a P4 Mobile, or the Pentium M when using that name.
The Pentium M is really a new chip, it's not a PIII or a P4, and it tends to perform at about the level of a P4 rated 50% higher than the Pentium M. So a 1.4 Ghz Pentium runs at about the level of a 2 Ghz P4, and a 1.6 Ghz Pentium M performs about the same as a
Re:Still Underpowered w/ a Pentium III (Score:2)
Re:Still Underpowered w/ a Pentium III (Score:2)
Turns out, I was wrong. The Tualatin was actually based on the Pentium M (probably a prerelease model)! It's in family 6, same as the Pentium 3, and is model 9. The Coppermine is model 8, and the Tualie is model 11. BTW, it did nicely against a P4 2.4 GHz, but an overclocked 1.13 Tualie at 1.4 was almost as fast as a 1.3GHz PM.
Re:Uhh... (Score:5, Informative)
I disagree. The laptop/tablet combination is really a neat idea. You have a keyboard with a touchpad or nipple for mouse movement, but also a touch screen and stylus. The LCD rotates 180 degrees so you can have it in a laptop form factor (LCD and keyboard at 90 degrees), or in a tablet form (like a closed laptop, but with the LCD screen facing outwards). That way, you can carry it around like a notepad and write on it in tablet form, but then sit down, swing it around into a laptop, and use it for typing in a meeting.
I've been thinking about selling my current laptop and buying a tablet to replace it, but prices need to come down a bit more before I do that.
Re:Uhh... (Score:4, Insightful)
You're missing the obvious advantage of having one device instead of two.
In fact, I was just passively reading slashdot in tablet mode on my Portege 3500, when I decided to flip it into laptop mode to quickly write this rebuttal to your ignorant posts. Now I will flip back into tablet mode and continue browsing slashdot like a book.
Now -- let's see... you suggest having two different devices... Am I supposed to carry two devices with me at all times? And if I were browsing this same article on my slate tablet, and wanted to write a length reply like this, I would have to boot up / start using my tablet, navigate to the same page I am already at, and write this reply? Or use a pen that is made for only short input?
I hope you can see that there are clear advantages to the hybrid style.
Re:Uhh... (Score:2)
And where are you going to store this USB keyboard? I don't care how light it is, it's going to be bulky, which means you can't put it in your back pocket or clip it to your belt (assuming you want to go for the geek look, which most of us don't). Do you carry around a backpack everywhere you go? That may be fine in school, but in the real world that's fairly rare, even considering laptop bags (my lap
Re:Uhh... (Score:2)
I didn't want to make the assumption that you weren't blind, or that you somehow otherwise didn't have a look at the pictures, because otherwise it would be fairly obvious why the combo is good.
And two devices are more convenient to carry than o
Re:Uhh... (Score:3, Interesting)
This looks just about right.
The Linux part is good. Linux on my desktop, Linux on my laptop.
Lycoris. Oh man. Icky poo! Linux for Wi
Lycoris is not Linux for Windows Dummies. (Score:2)
Actually, Lycoris is a pretty serviceable distro once you install the development tools. Lycoris was the only distro I have ever dealt with that would show non-encrypted DVDs right out of the box, complete with working menus. They have some other slick things in there that from what I understand are 100% GPLed. The only thing not GPLed is Iris, their equivalent of Lindows' "Click And Run".
My beef ab
Re:Uhh... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Uhh... (Score:4, Informative)
I've also got a Stylistic (Score:2)
Now that I rarely use removable drives, opting for NFS instead, a hybrid might be a good idea. When you get to the price, you end up choosing between one hell of a desktop and a slow portable
Re:Uhh... (Score:4, Interesting)
As a Toshiba TabletPC user for the last year or so, I've had numerous times where I've needed to switch between tablet and laptop in a matter of minutes. As a freelance developer, there's no way I'm taking a tablet and a laptop to a clients, that's just nuts.
I tend to use the Toshiba in slate form at meetings - typing can be distracting and too time consuming, whereas with a slate I get to show my notes around and have others annotate them - it's much more natural. When I'm coding, it goes back into laptop mode because there's no way I'm using the handwriting recognition to do that!
Now I'd agree that a traditional laptop with pen input (Acer makes one I believe?) is a bit of a waste of time, but the Toshiba screen swivels around and lies face up on top of the keyboard which gives you a very useable tablet. To this extent, it does give you the advantages of both form factors in one package.
The other issue is market acceptability. Your market is much smaller if you release pure tablets. Making hybrids means that people are willing to try out the tablet features if it means spending a little more than they'd splash out for a laptop, rather than blowing thousands on something they might grow tired of after a month or so.
So to sum up, hybrid tablet/laptops are a good thing and in my opinion, they couldn't have chosen a better hardware platform for the Linux tablet.
Have the best of both worlds (Im a tabletPC owner) (Score:2, Redundant)
HP's and Motion computer have DETACHABLE keyboards, meaning that you CAN have the best of both worlds.
I would know, I have a Motion M1300 with mobile keyboard [motioncomputing.com].
A detachable keyboard is very very nice, I can break out the keyboard for my social sciences where text notetaking is all that's needed and keep the keyboard in my backpack when I'm in a math class. If I need to draw a couple of dia
Re:Have the best of both worlds (Im a tabletPC own (Score:2)
Re:Have the best of both worlds (Im a tabletPC own (Score:4, Informative)
Wacom's graphics tablets are fully supported by Linux using these drivers [sourceforge.net]. If a tablet PC manufacturer isn't arrogant enough to adopt a Not Invented Here attitude and instead uses the Wacom protocol, their products can work with Linux, today.
All that's needed is some handwriting-input software.
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Re:Have the best of both worlds (Im a tabletPC own (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Have the best of both worlds (Im a tabletPC own (Score:3, Interesting)
What I was saying was that if the Tablet PC manufacturer had the tablet/pen portion of their hardware use the Wacom protocol (and I can't think of any reason why they couldn't), then drivers already exist.
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Re:Have the best of both worlds (Im a tabletPC own (Score:2)
Agreed. I won't be happy until I have an affordable 24"x36" tiltable surface to draw/write on. Something where I could overlay a clean, blank sheet and trace over.
Look to the now-defunct profession of drafting if you want to have i
Re:Uhh... (Score:2)
they want a laptop they could use like a tablet every now and then.. tablet as itself is extremely expensive for whats it usable for, but when you get it with laptop possibility as well it becomes much more usable and you might actually want to use the damn thing!
.
WHO MODDED THIS FUNNY? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Three button pointer? (Score:2)