Acer Dual-Screen, Multitouch Laptop Leaks Out
An anonymous reader writes "A 15" laptop from Acer that is currently in production features dual-multitouch displays, one for the main display and one as the keyboard/mouse. It has a 2.67GHz Intel Core i5 processor and runs Windows 7. No release date or pricing information yet as this unit is still heavily in production/testing phases."
Replacing a keyboard with a touchscreen sounds like a mixed blessing to me, but not everyone agrees. Witness the (great big) Kno dual-touchscreen e-reader, and the Toshiba Libretto W100 dual-screen mini-laptop, now shipping in Japan.
It's a tried-and-true way to generate buzz, and it's been around a lot longer than Twitter and Facebook.
Isn't a virtual trackpad kinda redundant?
Didn't we all learn the importance of tactile response in a keyboard around the time of the Timex Sinclair?
So let's take a keyboard that doesn't consume battery and replace it with a backlit LCD touchscreen that consumes battery and has no tactile feedback or home key detents. Ok, I'll buy a few of these.
Too bad it's an acer and will most likely fail within 2 seconds past the warranty...
Protip: that's not the target market.
Gee, why would a business want to "maximize sales to the clueless masses"?
The world doesn't revolve around you. Not every product is being specifically created for your consumption. Nobody at Acer is going, "Fuck, we totally misjudged the buying habits of some anonymous slashdot reader."
The contents of a book is only words and pictures.
If you choose paper to store your words and pictures, you can either do it in roll form or in a stack of pages form. You can bind those pages together if you wish, the result being the books we know today.
A book uses both sides of a page because it would be moronic not to do so.
An eBook reader uses dynamic display(s). Putting two screens on an eBook reader is as stupid as wanting to put 500 of them on a hinge to emulate real books. It's a dynamic display, you don't need two pages side-by-side. You can hold an open book with one hand just as well as you can hold a closed one. The only benefit of dual screen on an eBook reader is that it costs twice as much in display parts to manufacture.
Slashdot should auto-coralize the links.