A Turning Point for Touch Screens, Says the NYT
The New York Times has a story up on the suddenly brisk market for touch screens and the devices which can make use of them, which it says "has grown quietly for years, both in commercial applications and in consumer devices." Besides the obvious (the iPhone, and Apple's use of multi-touch generally), the article also mentions the recent inclusion of Israeli company N-Trig's version of multi-touch technology in a Dell notebook computer, and some of the other places you can expect to see touchscreens instead of display-only ones in the near future — if the price drops quickly enough.
I've been trying to jam punch cards into my iPhone.
Awwww, come on dude, how else are they supposed to sell Vista except follow in Apple's footsteps again and pretend XP does not have the power to do multitouch? Vista's like that space age OS you've been waiting for because you were afraid owning a Mac would make you gay. Pay no attention to the penguin telling you you could have it without Vista!
Forget the optimus, what about a touch screen keyboard? Sure, there's no feedback (yet) but the user could change the input style at will, using it as a mouse/tablet/music mixing device etc.
I was the design manager on Logitech's Harmony One remote and I fought for a touch screen for the programmable controls - in the past these were physical buttons beside the different controls on the remote. Implementing physical buttons close to an LCD are very difficult to implement correctly. I thought the touch panel would improve the quality of the product and give it much cleaner look to the overall product.
I was half right - it is a gorgeous remote but the touch panel just doesn't match the rest of the remote and the time taken in the mechanical design to product an interface that you don't have to look down at to use. Coupled with the cost of the capacitive touch panel (about 10x what it would cost for poly dome and plastic/elastomer buttons) it really isn't worth it.
I'm very unimpressed with the touch panel for typing on the iPhone and iPod touch so I'm going to be watching to see how companies design their user interfaces to give users as positive an interface as they would have with buttons.
If it's not done well, then I would expect a backlash against touch panels by consumers.
myke
Mimetics Inc. Twitter
what's always bothered me about touchscreen technology is the screen getting dirty. It annoys me when my non-touch monitor gets smudges as it is. I freely admit, however, that I have very little direct experience with touchscreens and perhaps these new ones (iPhone, etc) have some nifty way of dealing with that.
http://transformativeworks.org/
Over the years I think I've touched my screen a little too much.
Seriously, regarding LCD reliability- has anyone studied it after thousands of touches, some low pressure, some higher pressure? When I touch my LCD screen, it turns dark around my finger. Doesn't look good to me.
Touch screens should re-vitalize computer based porn. Think of the possibilities.
I imagine that the first prolonged, day-to-day experience with a touchscreen for a lot of people would be the Nintendo DS. It's got a user base a lot larger, and demographically wider, than that of the iPhone. This isn't to knock Apple's tech and design achievements with that device and their trackpads, but I think the DS was probably pivotal in getting the general public used to operating devices with purely virtual buttons.
No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
More innovative than the iPhone and yet they didn't even mention it in the article...
And now pornography has a whole new platform to work with. awesome.
Do you *promise* men will fuck me in the ass if I get an Apple? It's really not worth the price otherwise...
What happens if I install Linux onto the Apple, does that void the ass raping clause?
UAC: You can not make this thumbnail bigger because the rights holder says you can't. Cancel or Allow?
Cancel or allow what? It was an error message, not a warning with confirmation. If you really insist on insulting Vista, at least do it right.
Anyone posting or moderating in this thread should be aware that twitter and "westbake" are the same person.
I have only one reasonable application where it may be useful, and that is in info kiosks like the ones you can find at malls and in some shops like Barnes&Noble.
Some kid's games may also benefit from the touch screen, but that's a different issue. And for kids you will need a computer resilient against just about anything a kid can do to the computer which means that it has to be able to withstand being run over by a truck or a tank and still have a working touchscreen.
But as you say - the need for precision makes touchscreens very inconvenient. That's why most PDA:s have a pen for input control.
If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
My beloved zaurus is ahead of the current times. It runs linux xfce as well as other rom images ranging from debian to kde or qtopias flavor. It has a Touchscreen. If configured properly, It has all the desktop applications available for it as well as including game emulators. My Current pocket size zaurus has over 64gb diskspace (4gb sd not included). It stores well over Tons of hours of my music cd collection as well as tons of hours of my HD home movies converted easily with avidemux from a xacti high definition hd 1000. iphone is junk! Zaurus has had voice over ip since it's roots. The touchscreen is a must for any screen! It is still well ahead of the current times even for the next 10 years. Too bad sharp discontinued it. Touchscreen is the way of the future!
you already posted in this article with two accounts, please limit yourself to one account per story and don't reply to yourself pretending to be someone else.
Right, so here's my incredibly important opinion that you must agree with. Apple implemented this nifty multi-touch thing on the iPhone (and consequently on the iPod Touch). What they need to do now is extend this multi-touch thing to the computers as well. Heck, if I can see some darn thing on the screen and I want to drag it around or whatever, why shouldn't I be able to just reach out and do that? There should still be a keyboard and a rat for now. Mouse pads should also incorporate multi-touch. I think the keys on the keyboard should all have tiny displays embedded in them that can display any character. Thus, when you switch languages, the keyboard mapping will change and the keys themselves will show what character they'll type. Push Ctrl, Alt, Fn, Open-Apple, Shift, or whatever, and the keys will immediately change to reflect the characters that will be typed. Thus, lowercase letters will be displayed until Shift is held down, at which point they'll change to uppercase and the number keys will change to the symbols on those same keys. Hit Caps Lock and the appropriate behavior will take place. No more people getting confused why their password isn't being accepted or pushing all kinds of wrong keys looking for that dang ñ key when you're typing in Spanish or whatever. Simple. So, where were we? Oh yeah. Take these computers to the next level. Multi-touch on all computer displays and mouse pads. Keyboards where individual keys display what they will do. And while we're at it, how about a non-broken X implementation like there used to be in Tiger?!?
McCain/Palin '08. Now THAT's hope and change!
'nuff said. There were millions sold, and people were using them quite a lot, even for reading ebooks (for example).
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
Anyone doing outsourced IT work will tell you that Elo brand touch screens are very much alive in the POS (point of sale) market. This article is way out of touch with reality. Where's the "BS" tag when we need it?
Life is not for the lazy.
I guess you never heard of the Nintendo DS.
it still has a freaking BUTTON you need to use all the time. wtf is the point please?
If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
Would make it a good little e-book if you wanted too, and the primary display doesn't get icky finger prints. The keyboard, or secondary screen, could have a texturized surface so that the "keys" have a bit of feel to them too, and maybe use e-ink for battery life.
Touch-screens are generally not that useful for general computing, outside of graphic design work (such as with the Wacom Cintiq drawing screens: http://www.wacom.com/cintiq/index.cfm ).
I'd much rather have a "laptop" that had no screen at all, and a 1200x1600 head-mounted display instead. Less weight, less power, and easier to use in more situations. ~
we hear that it's cool, that's quite a turnaround but only from the M$ dominated technical press.
I'm not sure what technical press you have been reading lately. Multitouch was cool the day the iPhone first shipped.
Sure, there was a lot of hype about a very late to the party M$ table with second rate multitouch
You don't even know what this "M$ table" with "second rate" multitouch is, do you?
the negative press against iPhone has been constant and deafining
Most of the negative press started the day Apple released the 3G, which has a lot of problems. What, are you saying that ArsTechnica and every other tech rag out there that's having trouble with the 3G is somehow bent on a campaign of negative press?
And previously, the negative press was geared mostly towards the lack of carrier choices (let me guess, you work for AT&T or something?) and wireless speed. This is the "Jesus Phone", it sold millions of units in the first few months. What the hell are you talking about?
Most of it was recycled talking points from the effort to kill Palm, RIM and other worthy competitors.
Oh, yes. You are implying that this is a Microsoft conspiracy. Holy smokes.
Yes, practical touch computing is that old and the screens have been as cheap as a $40 Zire.
That's not multitouch, those are pressure-sensitive LCDs. How out of touch can you be here? Are you even for real?
Yes, multitouch is a nice wrinkle on it.
Haha, no, it's not a nice "wrinkle", it's a revolutionary step upwards from LCDs. WTF?
No, it does not solve the primary problem with tablet computers - they see where your hand rests
You have never used a tablet PC, have you?
It's nice to finally see a mainstream review that does not complain about iPhone in one way or another
Is it really? Now you're just karma whoring, aren't you? Oh yes. But now you're suddenly concerned about poor Apple, the iPhone, its alleged negative press and the "M$" factor? Please... Here's another one. Yeah, you sure like Apple.
but it the real difference is that it's from Dell on Vista.
Ah, that's where you should have started.
I'm not impressed.
All things considered, that's quite the understatement.
All our POS products are based on touchscreen technology. And they work very well.
Of course, on modern POS you don't type in numbers as you used to do in yesteryear - that's why we have barcodes and more recently RFID.
Touchscreens allow you to offer a fully dynamic user interface that adopts to the current situation. It work wells, as long as you do not need to do any sort of more-than-occasional data entry.
to provide the entire interface to the application; the button simply works as an "exit application" button.
The article keeps mentioning price as the driving factor, but I say it's software. I think tablets are hella cool, but until someone designs a must-have Linux app for touch screens, I'm not going to plunk down the money, no matter how small the premium is. However, if someone cooks up something really incredible, I'll pay whatever it takes to have it.
Until the iPhone/DS most touchscreens simply mimicked the existence of regular buttons (think ATMs, POS machines, or the Harmony remote). If somebody puts that level of innovation into some laptop app, then everybody will be buying tablets.
They get more and more greasy as you touch them, so you have to clean them all the time and since cleaning them means touching them you end up having formatted your harddrive or something.
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
In RTSs a touchscreen will beat a mouse any day :D
Probably also in general OS usage.
Your point may be valid for FPSs but Metroid on the DS works decent using the touchscreen to shoot and the arrow keys for moving around. Though the Wii controller are probably even better since you don't cover your screen any more.
I guess a "light pen" would work, something you could use at a small distance.
Yeah? I think you need to figure out that NOT EVERYONE IS YOU!
You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
I think you are right, but for the wrong reasons. The same things applies to voice recognition, it will never replace keyboards in the office.
How fatiguing and tedious would it be to talk to your computer all day? Imagine how noisy the office would be.
Likewise, how about using a touchscreen all day? Your arm would feel like it was ready to fall off. Like it or not, a mouse takes little physical effort and lends itself to the sitting position.
love is just extroverted narcissism
Lack of tactile response is bad enough. It that sense touch screens are no worse then typical 'dishwasher safe' keypads.
But if you lose a key every time you have a little bit of abrasive grit on your fingertip then touch screens are not ready for the world I live in.
It doesn't have to be that bad to be a deal killer ether.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
Most likely installing Linux on a mac will void something. But wouldn't it be worth it?
Human fingers are greasy. Show me a touchscreen that can repel all human grease and then I'll be interested.
Kwisatz Haderach
Sell the spice to CHOAM
This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
In case you don't remember, the first multi-touch product was a keyboard. Apple bought FingerWorks and began incorporating its technology into their projects.
But as I wrote previously, the lack of tactile feedback is a deal-killer for anybody who types in their profession. It just makes typing too slow (55 wpm vs. 120 wpm).
Fortunately, the clever folks at FingerWorks (now Apple) have realized that, and they've been busily working on ways to reconfigure the tactile surface dynamically. I hope they work out -- it was very nice not having to move my hands to mouse.
What's "insightful" about this post? The ignorance of comparing LCDs with multitouch screens? The complete disconnect with tablet PCs? The insane conspiracy theories? Or the ever-fresh "M$" thing? I'm a little lost.
Owning a mac will make you gay. If you install linux, you'll never get laid again, but at least you won't have burly men raping your ass.
Installing Windows won't make you gay, but you'll have the burly man in charge of MS raping your ass anyway.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
tw1tter sockpuppet, mod down.
Using touchscreens all day is fine, I've been doing it at work for nearly two years now, no problem. The only downside is that I sometimes tries to touch onscreen buttons and such on the monitors at home.
You will, of course, still need a keyboard to type comfortably but the mouse can be replaced by a touchscreen for most tasks (mice being better for gaming, mostly).
Using a mouse adds an extra layer of complexity. It's much more natural to point directly to the onscreen button/link, just watch any kid using a computer for the first time. Most of us have however grown accustomed to interacting with mice and that's fine, but it's still more natural to just point and click on the screen itself.
Now that multitouch i$ available from Microsoft Corporation, we hear that it'$ cool, that'$ quite a turnaround but only from the Microsoft Corporation dominated technical pre$$. $ure, there wa$ a lot of hype about a very late to the party Microsoft Corporation table with $econd rate multitouch but then the negative pre$$ again$t iPhone ha$ been con$tant and deafining. Mo$t of it wa$ recycled talking point$ from the effort to kill Palm, RIM and other worthy competitor$. Ye$, practical touch computing i$ that old and the $creen$ have been a$ cheap a$ a $40 Zire. Ye$, multitouch i$ a nice wrinkle on it. No, it doe$ not $olve the primary problem with tablet computer$ - they $ee where your hand re$t$ a$ input that $crwe$ up handwringing recognition. It'$ nice to finally $ee a main$tream review that doe$ not complain about iPhone in one way or another, but it the real difference i$ that it'$ from Dell on Vi$ta. I'm not impre$$ed.
I and a few colleagues are working on just such a thing. It would be employed in a movie we, too, are working on...
Film @ 11...
.
Microsoft Surface doesn't need a touchscreen - it doesn't need to be touched - it only needs a rear (or front?) projection screen.
That can be scaled easily and cheaply to any size.
It means that the replacement screen may be nothing more than the tempered glass tabletop or acrylic panel you could order custom-cut from Home Depot.
Surface can read coded objects like game pieces. It can communicate with devices like digital cameras - set the camera on the table and the photos stream out in front of you.
I'd like to see mouse-pads being turned to touch-screen-pads.
Forget touch screens altogether. What I want is a Wacom-like stylus to paint on my screen. Make it small (and light) like a mini-laptop and add an (optional) bluetooth keyboard and I will be happy.
I've got a touchscreen laptop at home. You don't realize how awful touchpads and joysticks (like the Lenovo trackpoint) are as pointing devices until you have a laptop that has a touchscreen.
OTOH, I think a dedicated MOUSE is slightly superior. But you don't always have a flat surface handy.
"Use a stylus or your fingernail."
No. Then there is no point it takes a lot longer.
"First, you're a moron"
So are you. And a coward.
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating