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Meet the Laptop of 2015

cweditor writes "Like concept cars at auto shows, the computer industry designs 'concept notebooks' to imagine the machines of the future. The 'concepts' may not come to market as-is, but it's likely some of their ideas, components and features will. Take a look at systems you might be using in 7 years. In one, a touch-sensitive screen acts as the system's keyboard and mouse, allowing you to slide your finger across the screen to immediately shut off the display and keep what you're working on confidential. Their associated image gallery includes a prototype for a dual-screen laptop."

17 of 351 comments (clear)

  1. That's nothing new by Minwee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have a "concept model" of a dual screen laptop. It fits in my hand and can play Mario Bros.

    1. Re:That's nothing new by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You mean until it is successful, right?

      With vibration, haptic advances, visual, and audio feedback, what is wrong with a second touch sensitive screen as the keyboard?

      Then when you don't need it as a keyboard, it can become a tool-kit, palette, and any other interface you need.

    2. Re:That's nothing new by Raineer · · Score: 5, Funny

      No sane computer user would ever have two monitors on one desk, and 640k is enough for anyone.

    3. Re:That's nothing new by astrotek · · Score: 4, Funny

      dual screen is useful until you figure out you can watch video on one while you work on the other

    4. Re:That's nothing new by Allador · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Using a touch-screen as a keyboard is a terrible idea, and only good for very casual users.

      For the typical road-warrior that totes a laptop around, you need a keyboard that you can type on without having to look at it.

      Touch screens work adequately for systems like the iPhone where you need to be looking at the display anyway, but are useless on a laptop where you need to be able to type quickly and move on and off the keyboard without having to look at it all the time.

  2. I'll be dead by then by stoolpigeon · · Score: 4, Funny

    You insensitive clod!

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  3. In the future nobody touches anything by jandrese · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Apparently in the future the idea of tactile feedback is dead and everybody just types on glass screens like in the movies. Presumably these laptop designers have not actually tried that themselves to see just how much people actually like typing on a piece of glass with no cues at to where the keys are.

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    I read the internet for the articles.
    1. Re:In the future nobody touches anything by plumby · · Score: 5, Informative

      There's been plenty of research into tactile touchscreens already (Nokia seem to think they're on to something ). I'm sure there will be more within the next 7 years.

    2. Re:In the future nobody touches anything by Sciros · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Type a lengthy text message without looking at the phone's keyboard. Quickly. ^_^ I mean, there's a reason there's a bump on the 'F' and 'J' keys on the keyboard I'm using at the moment. A good reason.

      --
      I like basketball!!1!
    3. Re:In the future nobody touches anything by kebes · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Agreed. Typing on rigid, flat surfaces is painful and inefficient.

      Which is why a combination of the concepts presented in the article would be far more attractive than any of them separately (I'm surprised the author of the piece didn't pick up on this): One of the laptops is billed as being "for blind people" because the surface can deform to generate bumps that the blind can read. The rest of the laptops have flat touch-screens for keyboards. Which is great for dynamic layouts but sucks for typing.

      But combining them would be amazing. Imagine a keyboard that can reconfigure not only what is displayed on each key (like the Optimus), but also the keys themselves. If this "surface deformation" technology was good enough (and could be integrated with flexible displays) then you could have a surface that acts as a flat screen some of the time (for reading e-books, as a drawing pad, etc.) but generates the tactile relief of keys when typing is required.

      More generally, it could reconfigure to generate new keyboard layouts as required. This would also solve one of the criticisms with the iPhone and iPod touch: you can't operate them without looking directly at the keys. Imagine if in addition to visual changes on the screen, there were bumps and grooves that dynamically appeared so that by touch alone you could feel the current key layout.

      This, to me, is the ultimate future for compact computing devices: we will have screens that can vary both display and topography. Of course the technology to do this will be difficult to "get right" (key topography is only half of typing: you need the keys to "spring" properly)... but there is nothing impossible in principle about having deformable surfaces with integrated flexible displays.

    4. Re:In the future nobody touches anything by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Why wouldn't a touch-screen provide the bump? Vibration (or advanced haptic technology) can provide that.

      Even better, with a touch screen, EVERYWHERE you put your fingers, initially, is the homerow.

    5. Re:In the future nobody touches anything by FredFredrickson · · Score: 5, Funny

      Tactile feedback is making a big comeback in cars and I expect to see it stay in laptops.
      As in, when you hit another car, it gives you obvious physical feedback, such as smashing your face in with the dashboard?

      No but seriously, I'm curious what you're talking about here.
      --
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  4. Not to poo-poo, but... by spazdor · · Score: 5, Funny

    This concept art all looks like my first-year 3d design projects. Are they developing new plastics that will automatically produce lens-flares against any light source available? God, I hope so.

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    DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
  5. Worst ideas ever by Sciros · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seriously, the people who came up with this stuff are completely unimaginative and idiotic. Tactile feedback for typing is almost a necessity given you *don't f-ing look at the keyboard while typing*!! The only "future laptop" with some actual touch feedback they showed was the oily blob, which I don't even know how to approach. If I want to replace my laptop with an oily blob, I'll gain 200 pounds and sit on the table myself.

    The one that turns into a book viewer if you turn it 90 degrees is a total joke. Seriously, take your laptop right now, turn it 90 degrees so that the break between the two "halves" is vertical, and tell me that's a comfortable way to handle reading material. Unless it's laying flat on the table (in which case it better be quite small) it's completely unmanageable.

    The one they showed slung over the steering wheel of a car, that's just bad. BAD BAD BAD! Hey guys, here's a piece of crap with a touch-screen keyboard you have to stare at in order to use that you can hang right on your steering wheel! And then what, drive and type? That looks like the most uncomfortable thing ever even if you're parked.

    I give all these "laptops of the future" an EPIC FAIL out of 10.

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    I like basketball!!1!
  6. I don't want a laptop at all by geophile · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What I want is my 1TB USB keychain (or iphone) to have my favorite OS, apps, and all my data, and to be able to plug it into CPU/keyboard/mouse/display/diskless/OSless stations in airplanes, cafes, hotels, etc.

    The various Linux-on-a-thumbdrive distributions and products are a step in the right direction. What we really need now is for vendors to design stations that these doodads can plug into.

  7. Re:Obvious question by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 4, Funny

    But of course! In 2015, everything runs Linux and OEMs ship it pre-installed. We know this because, as everyone knows, 2008 will be the year of Linux on the desktop.

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  8. Re:One thing I noticed... by gfreeman · · Score: 5, Funny

    "How the heck are you supposed to touch ... something that gives you no tactile response?"

    May I introduce you to my wife?

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