Jobs Finally "Happy" With Unannounced Apple Tablet 303
All the whispers of an Apple tablet PC seem to be culminating in a flurry of rumors suggesting we may see one as soon as next month. Sources inside Apple are saying that Jobs is finally "happy" with the device after being involved in every detail of bringing it into the light of day. As a side result of these rumors, it seems that Apple stockholders are also getting a bit of Christmas cheer with a significant bump in stock price.
New interface (Score:4, Funny)
"You will be very surprised how you interact with the new tablet"
DOS prompt?
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I'd rather Csh myself. If this iTablet runs Vim, count me in.
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Rectal probe. You use your sphincter muscles to move the cursor around the screen and click. A few months later a bluetooth version of aforementioned probe will be announced and shipped. All hipsters with white wires sticking out of their backsides will rejoice.
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Just for visualization...
http://imgur.com/MeoQv.jpg [imgur.com]
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I all want for Christmas is a .........
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Apple Tablet [blogcdn.com]
Nah (Score:2)
How about this instead: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BnLbv6QYcA [youtube.com]
Courtesy of The Onion News Network...
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Senior Apple Executive to announce resignation? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Senior Apple Executive to announce resignation? (Score:5, Funny)
Will the executive anonymously quoted in the article be leaving soon [...]?
Let's just say he's singing soprano now.
Steve J.
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Will the executive anonymously quoted in the article be leaving soon [...]?
Let's just say he's singing soprano now.
Steve J.
His balls are served on a tablet to Sir Steve as his X-Mas appetizer.
Let the H8 begin! (Score:4, Insightful)
However, I have faith that people will come up with plenty of reasons to hate the new hardware when it appears.
Jobs is happy with it? (Score:5, Insightful)
It came out last summer that Jobs was intimately involved with every detail of bringing the tablet to market. It seems that the device has finally gotten Jobs's seal of approval: when asked if the tablet rumors were true, a senior Apple executive gave The New York Times a rather coy reply. "I can't really say anything," he said, "but, let's just say Steve is extremely happy with the new tablet."
Translation: the only button is a power button, it has a battery-sucking colour screen as opposed to an e-ink display, it requires itunes on a mac or PC to use, the only Apple-approved way to run programs is via an app store, it has a non-user-replaceable battery, and it will cost upwards of $1000.
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Shiney! What's not to like?
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:4, Insightful)
..and it already has legions of people already exclaiming that this is the best device yet, despite the fact that nobody has seen as much as a drawing yet.
Then again, how did Windows Vista get all those rave reviews?
Exactly :-)
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, I haven't read anyone who actually liked apple products say anything of the sort. All I've read in this thread so far are people who are complaining about imagined features they have pulled out of their asses, as you've pointed out, nobody has seen anything yet.
If Apple's past design decisions are any guide, the only thing I feel confident saying is that Apple has likely spent a tremendous amount of time and money designing the interface and it will likely be fairly intuitive and easy to use, but it's far from certain. It could just be an ipod touch, but bigger. This will certainly have some interesting applications, especially if they use a display that can be read in direct sunlight. I believe it likely that for applications they will follow their (mind-blowingly) successful app store but who knows. This is Apple we're talking about, they aren't the leader in innovation in the PC market for nothing and it's hard to imagine Jobs getting excited over an overblown ipod touch, but he has tried to sell us polished turds before so who knows.
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:5, Insightful)
making it look nice is 90% of the battle. most consumer devices are far from user friendly. you want to know why the iphone is a smashing success? it has an interface that is designed for the screen that it is displaying on. the ipod? the simple interface is very easy to use and learn.
while other companies duplicate the hardware side, they always fail to design an interface that is simple to use. Or they resort to skinning an interface that isn't simple to use. (every version of win mobile) Palm pre, and chromeOS are both unique. Chrome more than likely won't have proper multi touch support even though it should be easy to install. Palm Pre is suffering the same fate the iphone did when it was first released. no native apps, all web apps.
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:5, Insightful)
You can say that again. We bought a Panasonic house phone set, and the UI sucks eggs. For example, there's a "speaker" button to turn on speaker-phone mode. However, the same button doesn't turn it off. (It's not broken because there are multiple handsets). I never figured out how to turn off speaker mode (the manual was lost). It's as if they don't do any real UI testing. They bang out a design and as soon as it merely works they ship it. And don't even get me started about Windows.
Apple is one of the few companies that really gives UI's any thought. This is because doing such is expensive compared to hardware and raw programming. Hardware design and manufacturing can be shipped to some 3rd-world nation where they pay like $1/hr. However, you can only work on and test the UI *in* the target market, where you have to pay people many times more. Thus, it's far more expensive. The result is gadgets with a jillion features, but crappy UI integration.
Apple will likely grow because they are the only company with a reputation for caring and I don't see anybody else trying to shift into the same niche. At best, they wait and then copy Apple.
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You can say that again. We bought a Panasonic house phone set, and the UI sucks eggs. For example, there's a "speaker" button to turn on speaker-phone mode. However, the same button doesn't turn it off. (It's not broken because there are multiple handsets). I never figured out how to turn off speaker mode (the manual was lost). It's as if they don't do any real UI testing. They bang out a design and as soon as it merely works they ship it. And don't even get me started about Windows.
If you have the same sort of Panasonic phone I do, you switch it from speaker to normal by pushing the talk button.
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:4, Funny)
And don't even get me started about Windows.
Apple is one of the few companies that really gives UI's any thought
Actually, Microsoft has done quite a bit of UI research culminating in the Ribbon interface. Since this is Slashdot, you're going to start whining about all the horrible diseases the ribbon interface brought to mankind, but the fact of the matter is that it's a measurable improvement in usability.
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:5, Insightful)
With all due respect, I'm not even sure how to characterize that statement -- "oversimplification" itself seems to be an oversimplification.
If anything, what the iPhone, iPod, and even Mac OS itself demonstrates is that it is a long way from some skunkworks lab at a buttoned-up company to designing and implementing a game-changing product. How is it that even after Apple comes out with its products that its competitors' ripoff copies often look so second-rate by comparison?
But, you go ahead and believe what you want.
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How is it that even after Apple comes out with its products that its competitors' ripoff copies often look so second-rate by comparison?
Patents.
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How is it that even after Apple comes out with its products that its competitors' ripoff copies often look so second-rate by comparison?
Patents.
Um, in case you haven't been keeping up, Apple LOST the "Look And Feel" legal battle over a decade ago. So, sorry, that isn't the reason.
Someone could market a device indistiguishable from an iPhone/iPod Touch, with an OS that was indistinguishable from an iPhone/iPod Touch, and that actually ran iPhone/iPod Touch apps (as long as it didn't do the Palm trick and attempt to fool iTunes into thinking it was an iPhone/iPod Touch), and Apple couldn't do a thing about it.
The REAL reason that the imitators' p
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How is it that even after Apple comes out with its products that its competitors' ripoff copies often look so second-rate by comparison?
I don't know. A sansa player, for one, seems to outperform the latest generation of iPods: it's cheaper, and not locked to Apple low quality audio standard/iTunes software.
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Because judgements about looks are an entirely subjective matter. Personally, I think the white plastic on MacBooks looks cheaper than even most netbooks, and that while the MBPs look nice, Sony's high-end Vaios look far better, though neither hold a candle to a good Thinkpad.
What does that prove, that Sony, Lenovo et al hire more competent designers than Apple? of course not, it merely shows that you and I have different tastes.
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think a lot of designers for Sony and Lenovo are just engineers/technical draftsmen that have a hard-on for Ralph McQuarrie illustrations [ralphmcquarrie.com] and quasi-military design, so when they do a case it has lots of 60-degree angles, accented seams and reveals, and lots of non-functional detail and relief work -- the idea is to make the laptop feel like it's in place on the Millenium Falcon. Most of the designers at Apple are people that are actual professional consumer product designers, they don't know a nut from a bolt, but have spent their entire education on gettings hard-ons for 1960's-era German coffee makers and learning the difference between Zigzag Moderne and true Art Deco.
So yeah, taste. But just looking at my mom's Dell versus my MacBook, I can't help noticing how "busy" the Dell is, and how really none of it is really designed to make the thing more "useful," aside from making it stand-out on a showroom shelf.
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You're right, they aren't. Apple tends to take other peoples' ideas and make them WORK.
There, fixed that for you.
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:4, Funny)
What, like lead poisoning? :D
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Arsenic, the lead singer of the unpublished metal band "Lead Poisoning", when told that iTunes will not carry his songs, reportedly exclaimed "GGGAAAAFGGGAWWAGAHHH!"
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It's fairly well known, in fact. It's called "tactile feedback", and it helps tremendously in doing things by muscle memory rather than conscious thought.
If anything, it's the fetish for button-less appliances that's unusual. Perhaps we should send Steve Jobs to a psychologist to investigate it further.
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Ask, and maybe you shall receive [gizmodo.com].
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Yeah, it's a "fetish", and makes me completely insane, to state that I'd rather press a button that I can feel actually click, instead of wiping my fingers across a smudgy screen and not being able to interact with it without staring down at the screen like an ape.
I've used touchscreens on everything from POS terminals to cash registers to tablets to iphones. Without exception, they all suck. Touchscreens are an answer to a que
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Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:5, Insightful)
Translation: the only button is a power button, it has a battery-sucking colour screen as opposed to an e-ink display, it requires itunes on a mac or PC to use, the only Apple-approved way to run programs is via an app store, it has a non-user-replaceable battery, and it will cost upwards of $1000.
The scary part? Despite all that, it'll probably still embarrass all of the other companies that have tablet products.
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And it's pretty obvious you've missed the point, just like the GGP.
There's a segment of the nerd population that looks at a product and thinks they see a 'superior' product. And they just can't understand why it's not popular, even though it's clearly superior as it's got feature X, Y, Z and Æ while getting 42 hogsheads per millisecond. It's pretty obvious who is missing the point here...
Re:Jobs is happy with it? (Score:5, Funny)
You hear that sound? It's the sound of a million Apple fanboys orgasming and suddenly being silent.
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I didn't just orgasm. I lost consciousness.
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I don't know about your shitty pants, but I do know you should see your doctor if your elation lasts more than 4 hours.
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Wow (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's what I want a high quality, fast and truly usable tablet for : medical care. It should be possible to walk into a patient's room carrying a clipboard sized device that resembled a giant iphone. You should be able to call up medical records, imagery, and the rest with no detectable latency. (because the tablet should use push downloading : each tablet is assigned to a particular doctor or nurse. The table would cache all medical records for each patient assigned to that doctor or nurse, and if a new report comes out for one of those patients, the tablet should automatically download it over the hospital's wireless network)
It should use a glass topped display, like the iphone, so that you could use caustic chemicals to sterilize the surface. The medical industry has enough money that if this product cost $1500 it would barely be noticed as an expense. (especially if it could boost efficiency)
Apple has as good a chance to make this happen as anyone. Medical users would be running custom software for this tablet, so there's no need for it to be windows compatible. While displaying large 2D images like X-rays will require some CPU horsepower, it's still entirely possible for a low power CPU to do the job. And apple's superior user interfaces and integration with hardware mean that it will be cheaper and easier to train doctors and nurses to use this device.
The biggest technical problems I foresee are back end problems, problems with the EMR software, and battery life.(hospital IT departments tend to fuck things up. If they bought a bunch of apple tablets, they probably wouldn't build and maintain the back end servers and wireless AP correctly)
Also, such a tablet will probably be quite fragile, and fairly heavy.
Remember, YOU (the typical slashdotter running Linux with a windows box for games on desktop machines) are not the intended users for this tablet. YOU probably sit at a desk all day. You have enough technical expertise that tinkering is fun for you, and you don't mind the idea of a tablet on kludgey, cheap hardware that is running open source software.
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You might pay a little bit more
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i'm typing this on a HP Compaq 8510p, a business laptop. maybe i'm unlucky but it seems like mine is self destructing. SquareTrade's figures put Apple at #3 and Asus at #1. those are pre unibody aluminum MBP MacBook Pro figures too.
Re:Wow (Score:4, Insightful)
Have you even used a Mac?
I don't even know what the point of reading Mac threads on Slashdot is though. I used to think Mac fanboys were the most annoying people on the planet... until I started reading what their equally ignorant detractors had to say.
Ruggedised laptops... seriously? Apple? Gee, I wonder when Ferrari will start making dump trucks.
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Re:Wow (Score:4, Insightful)
1) Apple doesn't do well with big, clunky Enterprise customers who have their own agendas and ideas (AT&T notwithstanding)
2) Medical systems DO run Windows. Sorry, but it's true. Some of them are coming off of IE 6 as we speak. Some of them. Now, the trend towards making everything run in a browser might mitigate that somewhat, as long as the browser isn't IE 6.
3. If you run the software in the browser, then you are at the mercy of whatever idiot UI got slapped on to the software at the last moment. If you've worked with medical software, you will quickly realize that nobody spends any time getting the interface even remotely correct.
4. For Apple's vaunted strategy of tightly coupling the app with the hardware to work out, you have to have a dozen goofball vendors agree to do things the same way. Not going to happen in our lifetimes.
But keep smoking what you're smoking and don't Bogart that joint!
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As I puff out a cloud of marijuana smoke laced with LSD, I think of a world where medical EMR software was require by federal law to store it's data in an open format that could be read by multiple vendors....
Then, you could use your slick apple tablet running some high quality EMR software, bought right through the app store in a competitive market, that would be able to read and write to the records stored on the hospital's clunky back-end servers running last century's EMR app...
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I like your vision, but you need two more things: A barcode scanner (otherwise you can't scan patients and meds) and the cooperation of the closed systems (GE, Siemens, etc.) that run hospitals.
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So of course things don't usually work well. Which segues into my previous rant about how the new iWhatever won't be a major force in the medical arena: Apple can't control it very well.
Your wish list requires again, a close working relationship between the hardware and software vendor (
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That does sound great. Someone wrote an app for that, but unfortunatley it was rejected. When the folks at Apple realized that it was for medical use and that someone might see the words "penis," "areola," or "clavicle" the app was not allowed to be sold in their store. Since it is not officially blessed by Apple you cannot use it even though you purchased the damn thing and presumably are an adult. Now be quiet, go browse the web like a nice doctor, and move along.
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This isn't Apple's target market. The only niche business user Apple is likely to target with this is the photographer or film maker on-location. If this can serve them better than a Mac Book Pro, then Apple will do it. I can't think how it would though, but I suppose that's why I don't have Jonathan Ive's job.
Technical Problems? (Score:2)
As an example, next time you are there take a look at the massive proprietary whatchamacallit connectors they use on their machines when much simpler industry standard plugs could be used. And I thought HDMI cables were expensive. Another interesting thought is what happens when one of these wonder devices is stolen? Or is it
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But it is telling that you're unwilling to look around you and see the alternatives. I guess if it doesn't have an Apple logo...
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Medical already have tablets. Since about 2002. See Motion Computing, HP, Fujitsu and others. They do all this stuff already. And Windows is needed because the EMR software is Windows based already. Yes, the problems are all the same ones you describe, with the exception of displaying 2d images. That's childs play for todays dual core machines.
Drop the YOU aren't in the target market crap. If Apple doesn't make what I want I'll buy from somewhere else, and so will others like me. If Apple makes what I
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iSlate ? (Score:2)
What do you think about the iSlate name?
http://www.google.com/webhp?hl=en#hl=en&source=hp&q=iSlate [google.com]
Is Late (Score:2)
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The "iSlate" trademark belongs to Slate Computing: http://tess2.uspto.gov/bin/showfield?f=doc&state=4010:tovtfs.2.1 [uspto.gov]
Various "iPad" trademarks belong to various companies that are not Apple and "iTablet" belongs to some company out of Taiwan.
If you want to guess what Apple will call it, search the US trademark database to see what trademarks Apple holds...
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A lot of people predicted that Apple would call their TV thingy an "iTV", except people in Britain who were aware that that is the name of our largest commercial television channel which has been around a lot longer than Apple. In the end it was called the Apple TV, so maybe this will be called the Apple Tablet?
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Next month? (Score:2)
Jan 26th Release? (Score:2)
According to the The Age: apple major product launch set for january 26 [theage.com.au]
Of course given the date [wikipedia.org] it must be the Ocker [wikipedia.org] version rather than the version
Begrudging Respect (Score:2, Flamebait)
Here come the endless stories and speculation; the masses of apple fanboys ready to re-mortgage their condo's to pay for this thing, and the articles; OH, THE ARTICLES!
Dont cha love the 20page reviews with a single paragraph per page and enough ads to lock up your Noscript?
The guy knows what he's doing. They will sell milli
Apple ___ to revolutionise consumer electronics (Score:5, Funny)
Apple is reportedly close to launching its long-rumored [newstechnica.com] ____. It could be Apple's latest billion-dollar jackpot.
Analyst speculation says the ___ will be launched in September and be in the shops by Christmas. A new mention of the ___ crops up on Twitter around every eight minutes.
The ___ is rumoured to be any size and scale between the iPod Shuffle and the Macintosh IIfx. Some have described the ___ as a "___-killer." Analyst speculation suggests the ___ will use a fantastic new interface. "It will be a whole new paradigm," said Apple blogger Leander Kahney.
Expectations flared when technology research analysts noted that Taiwanese suppliers had received orders from an unknown buyer for a particular obscure component to be filled by the end of the year. "The only possible conclusion is that Apple will launch a ___ by early next year," said Kahney. "They've been working on the ___ for the past six years. People expect it to be the ultimate Apple surprise. This thing will knock people's socks off."
Apple has refused to comment on the ___ speculation. But Tim Cook, its chief operating officer, recently hinted that the company was working on something "very innovative." Steve Jobs is thought to have been personally involved in the development of the ___ over the past two years.
Daniel Eran Dilger noted on roughlydrafted.com that the ___ would need to be fueled on pain, angst, the destruction of the ecology, the torture of kittens and the tears of widows and orphans, but put together a devastatingly convincing and very lengthy explanation as to why Apple's actions were the only humanly acceptable option for the consumer, the technology industry and the future of humanity, and that Jobs' Nobel Peace Prize was ridiculously overdue. And that all problems were clearly Microsoft's fault.
What horrible timing (Score:4, Funny)
What horrid timing - they're about a month and a half late, if indeed they do come out with this thing next month. Next month will not only be after Christmas, but it'll also be after this healthcare bill has passed.
Granted, there weren't too many, if any, "socially big item" releases this Christmas, that I can think of. No new game systems, no special new electronics (though, I'm sure there are netbooks aplenty under trees), no new product from Apple, and all the big PC vendors pretty much stayed stable throughout the year.
Of course, the "uninsured" demographic will have more money this coming year due to not having to pay hospital bills, which in my experience means the kind of people who buy $3000 Macs as often as it means homeless people. So it might work out for Apple to 'release late' anyway.
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.... or in time for tax refunds... when some people buy a present to themselves, whatever they didn't get for Christmas.
Apple did say late summer that they weren't releasing any more new products for the year, so they knew the schedule of this product well ahead of time. So I figured that they are just releasing it when it's ready, instead of pushing a product out the door before it's truly ready just to get some extra sales. If the product is indeed a hit and it picks up speed as opposed to fizzling out
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Sounds interesting tho and if they combine that with multi touch, it could be a perfect device to use while laying on sofa.
How are you going to hang it up in front of your face? :S
I can only imagine laying on my sofa and using my laptop, if the keyboard would be the display.
Ugh.
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I take it you've never used a notebook or a sketchbook then (you know, the kinds that are made of paper)? Or, god forbid, a Wacom Cintiq (Here's a hint, most cintiq users don't mount it flat on a table or standing up at a right angle to the floor).
/Mikael
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So how is it better to interact with the device from an angle?
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You're not trying very hard, are you?
Grab a sketchbook, lean back in the nearest couch and try drawing something, are you using the sketchbook at an angle or do you simply position it so that it is facing you?
/Mikael
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Yes, I can do that, but my point is that you have to position yourself in a certain way to use it properly.
Oh well, I'm just finding a laptop more flexible as I can point the screen as I wish.
I can have my kneels up like with a sketchbook, but just because I shift position doesn't make it harder to use.
Re:And the price... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, I can do that, but my point is that you have to position yourself in a certain way to use it properly.
The same holds true for a book. Or a cellphone. Or your dick. Hopefully you can figure all these out.
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I can picture myself placing the tablet against my knees as I lie down, yes, but my point is that I don't find it as flexible. What if I want to lie down with it next to me, for example? Since this isn't a small pocket PC, but a larger (supposedly, given the competition) tablet-sized device, that sounds much less flexible to me at least. I'm not sure how this device would offer similar flexibility in terms of actually working with it. Actually, I hardly get them at all, since a laptop with a folded screen i
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Well, in that case maybe laptop is better for you. But it doesn't mean its for everyone. I have a comfy L-shaped sofa and enjoy lying on the _ part of it, having my back against the wall. Laptop on that is ok, but it isn't as comfy as tablet (and you usually need a mouse too - yeah, hw thingie, but still). Tablet you can put against your legs, or keep it slightly in air with your other hand. You can also easily and lightweightly put it on side to watch some tv and so on. I'm not looking for a laptop replac
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From the Wacom Cintiq product info:
"With a smooth, flat surface. And with a light weight that enables you to use it on your knees...
Does it come with knee-pads?
With a 2 year data plan 5gb and then $5 /mb (Score:2)
With a 2 year data plan 5gb and then $5 /mb
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And the 1st gen iPhone was a dismal failure until Apple gave customers what they wanted vis-a-vis 3G, native applications, and carrier subsidies.
They sold 6 million of the original iPhones before the 3G came out in 5 quarters. That is hardly something that is considered a "dismal failure".
It doesn't work that way. (Score:3, Funny)
Apple beats Linux, Linux beats Google, "M$ i5 3v111111|_!!!11eleven" stories beat all.
Or, in the order of preference:
1 - "M$ i5 3v111111|_!!!11eleven"
2 - "Apple news and rumors including daily Steve-tracker"
3 - "Linux and why we love it"
4 - "Google - not really evil. Honest."
5 - "Other tech news"
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Swsp 2 and 3. Didn't ya catch the 'Does Santa hate Linux' story?
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Intel gave him a kick back to use there shit gma video in this and to tie the new next mini and all laptops under $2000 with there carp on board in the i3 cpu.
and a table pc needs awesome graphics because a) i want to play doom! b) i want to play doom!! c) duke nukem forever! Ok i admit it, if i could touch to shoot i wouldn't mind this :P
There is so much grammar nazi bait in this thread. I would go for it but I don't have all day.
Re:Tablet Prediction: (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course -- "most" people buy the iPhone because its sexy, not because it's usable... so what do I know...
Well, for one thing you apparently don't know why people really buy an iPhone - the success of the apps store indicates that usability matters a lot to people. I'd also argue that the same design principles that make the iPhone "sexy" are also what's made it such a useful little gadget.
I've got an iPod Touch rather than an iPhone, but the same argument applies. Having one well-designed device that serves as my hyperfocal distance calculator, my "on the go" email checker, play-games-on-the-train machine, and even (in a pinch) allows me to run a vnc session over ssh is a plus in my book. Having tried other poorly-thought-out solutions (*cough* windows mobile *cough*) (*cough* multiple Linux desktop environments *cough*), I'd say it's pretty obvious design significantly affects usability.
But don't let reason get in the way of your narrative.
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Windows 7 might change that a bit since it supposedly has native tablet / gesture functionality built in as opposed to somebody kludging up some XP drivers, but I think a lot of people are h