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Toshiba Unveils Laptop With Instant-On TV & DVR

Patik writes "Toshiba has unveiled a new laptop, Qosmio, that allows users to watch TV or a DVD without booting the OS. The laptop turns on instantly for these functions and has a 15" near-TV quality screen. To use DVR functions like time shifting and recording, the user must boot the Windows Media Center OS."

5 of 189 comments (clear)

  1. uh oh. by torpor · · Score: 5, Insightful


    This is an interesting dis-info exercise. People think "OS = Microsoft".

    It is "not booting -the- OS", no. Its not booting "Windows OS".

    There -is- an OS being loaded, just that its only going to support Toshiba's Apps... and nobody elses.

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  2. Not quite so nice by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Its only got half the functionality.

    Consider yourself turning this thing on and watching, you get carried away and want to record something.

    You have to reboot, LOAD WINDOWS, start the tv thingy and get recording.

    from the article:

    If users want to pause live TV or record TV shows onto the 80-gigabyte hard disk, however, they'll need to do so with the Windows software.

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  3. Re:Wow! by torpor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why do they need to catchup? I very rarely turn my systems off, they're sleeping in low-power mode pretty much most of the time, and everything is available to me whenever I need it.

    This "Not-An-OS" hack/trick of Toshiba is a way to get away Windows' (The OS) horrific boot-loading/suspend/power-management stability issue.

    In OSX, no such problem exists: the system is stable, and manages its power in such a way that it need not interfere with instant-on operation.

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  4. TV / laptop combinations by davejenkins · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Combining a TV with a notebook is a big point here in Japan. Many young people live in single room apartments (literally 15 sq metre boxes) where space is at an extreme premium. As such, many just cannot afford the space of having both a computer monitor and a television.

    Dell Japan offers TV tuners for their desktops only in Japan. All the Japanese manufacturers (Fujitsu, Toshiba, NEC, Hitachi, Sony, et al) pack TV tuners in their machines as defaults. Toshiba has made the jump by avoiding the 20-seconds of boot-up time when someone just wants to watch the latest episode of Gundam reruns...

    While we're on the subject of japanese notebooks, the US notebooks suck in terms of case design and overall size/weight.

  5. Re:Why widescreen laptops? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I don't know about you, but I am a member of the species homo sapiens. We have two eyes on the front of our heads giving two horizontally overlapping fields of vision. These are interpreted by the brain and stitched together to give a field of view that is considerably wider than it is high. A laptop screen (or a desktop screen, for that matter) that is wider than it is tall fits in our field of vision better than on that is taller.

    Now, consider the UI I usually interact with:

    OS X dock on the right hand side of the screen.
    Menu bar at the top (no clutter by having visible menu bars for inactive windows. Easier target to hit according to Fitt's law.)
    Document window the height of the screen.
    Tool pallets floating around it.
    Preview window floating next to it.

    When using something like LaTeX (or even editing HTML) widescreen is very useful, since you can have a preview window and an editing window on screen next to each other at the same time. The same is true of writing code, since it is possible to put a code window and a document window on screen next to each other easily.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News