Dell's 'Dual Personality' Laptop
njkobie writes "Dell was the unlikely star of today's keynote at IDF, unveiling a convertible tablet. While that might sound a bit been there, done that, the Inspiron Duo can be used as a tablet or opened up to offer a keyboard. The screen rotates inside the frame, taking it to the netbook form factor. It runs on an Atom processor and will be available at the end of the year, Dell said."
I know I've seen this design before... the only difference is the Dell's screen (glass part) flips instead of the whole top. I feel that I would prefer the other design since it has a bigger hinge, less likely to break then that Dell's.
Attention... all grammer nazi"s! Is they're anything; wrong with: my post,
But that is really cool and innovative. This product fulfills a need that is currently not being met. I'm sure that will be copycaters pretty soon.
Herman Nackaerts. he's a certified wmd magnet.
I know "Duo" refers to being both a tablet and a netbook, but I feel like it's an intentional reference to Intel's Core Duo processors. I don't think it's right to imply that connection if you're going to use an Atom processor. That said, I find myself interested.
Unfortunately, the article is devoid of details. What kind of battery life can we expect? Will it run WIndows 7 or Android maybe? Both? How much will it cost?
Help I'm a rock.
The problem with convertable tablets has always been that desktop OSes suck on a tablet.
You mean they can do twisted pair OR mini-GBIC?!?!? Sweet!
I like this but...
I wonder how many times you can convert it before it breaks.
Does dirt and stuff get in the mechanism?
The rotating screen is a cool idea but the screen itself looks as thick as an iPad, the upper half looks thicker yet and the bottom half about the same as the top making for one chunky looking device.
Given all the griping about the iPad's weight I wonder how much battery they could pack in with all that extra hardware.
It would probably be better if, instead of the screen flipping inside the frame, they had made it so that if you opened the laptop up completely to 180 degrees, you could then just slide the screen down across the keyboard.
Or is that how it was done before?
Technoli
The X41 from IBM did this in 2005 also.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/120592/ibm_turns_its_thinkpad_into_a_tablet_pc.html
We have a couple of these at the office still. They were horribly slow and horribly expensive... a great idea that came way too early for the technology and it never sold well. We'll see if Dell does any better.
So it's a generic convertible tablet PC like we've had for ages, except the screen rotates along the x axis instead of the y axis? Why is this news?
What does this do that my X61t doesn't?
A story about laptops (zzzz), and "Big Data" (whatever that means), and Steve Jobs possibly (but probably not) yelling at Japanese security.
I think I'll submit a story.....
.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
When will they realise that it's not the hardware that matters but the software.
I've seen a convertible laptop/tablet before at a customer site. He was trying to use it to take notes. But thanks to Windows it required a reboot as it wouldn't come out of sleep properly. It's a bit annoying when you all have to sit there and wait to start a meeting while a laptop boots.
Anything tablet like needs to be instant on/off. No HDDs, no x86 Intel processors and a keyboard should be totally detachable for those who don't want to use it.
And looks pretty rubbish loved the crappy input latency on the map app and the fact that they're still using mouse emulation for the touchscreen.... I thought Windows 7 had proper support for touch input.
Other than the fact that it's a Dell, and therefore a complete piece of shit, it sounds great.
Proverbs 21:19
Now that my love affair with Netbooks has ended, I have an overwhelming feeling of "what was I thinking".
This Dell toy will probably be just as slow as those X41 from 2005, IMO Intel Atom is a step in the wrong direction, what we need are i7 with great battery life.
Not only does it sound a bit like been there, done that, it was done ... several times ... by several different manufacures.
They all failed. Touch interfaces fucking suck. Apple has a nice one on the iPhone for what its for, but you don't sit around using an iPhone for hours on end to accomplish things.
Touch is good for short, dedicated, standardized input, like picking a phone number out of a list to call.
Touch freaking sucks for any sort of data input, your hands get tired VERY quickly regardless of how big the screen is. Holding a tablet and trying to input data on it sucks, try holding your laptop while standing and entering data while its closed like you were touching a touch screen. Just stand there for 5 minutes holding it in your arm and you'll be exhausted. When its sitting on a desk with the screen open, now you have to hold you hands in the air to touch the screen, again, your arms will be exhausted in short order.
When you get to the size of a tablet, just using the keyboard is far easier. Smaller than a tablet and it starts to get a little different, but thats because you're going to do less overall on the smaller device so the UI can be streamlined and made more useful and less of a chore, and the entire device gets shrunk and form factored to make holding it not a chore. Think about the scanning guns stock boys use in grocery store, tablet would suck to carry around and work on, but a smaller, fewer option, form factor device is actually good to work with.
Tables fail because, contrary to the current belief, using touch interfaces fucking suck. I was using touch interfaces 20 years ago, they still have the exact same problem, its still a shitty input interface for anything more than a tiny subset of functionality.
Touch tablets are an invention without a use. Touch is great for kiosks that users use for 20-60 seconds max, after that, its a hassle.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
Here's exactly what so many posters on Slashdot complain that they want - a full PC they can install anything on in a tablet form.
I wonder if it will even be around a year from now...
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
A dual personality seems fitting:
http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/10/06/29/1618205/Dell-Selling-Faulty-PCs
boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
...the chip is different but for whatever reason the Windows platform performance is extremely sluggish...
Behold its majesty.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vadem_Clio
I really wanted one when it came out, precisely because of the form factor. Given that it runs Wince 2.1 (Sorry, WinCE 2.1), I was probably better off.
But a clever design.
"Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
The whole idea is to move away from ridiculous contraptions with moving parts that add weight!
It would be cooler if you just closed the lid and BAM there was your screen on the outside of the lid. OLEDs would be good for that. Thinner/lighter so two wouldn't add as much weight as two traditional LCD panels.
No sig for you!!
It can do a lot a things as a netbook, but won't be able to as many things as a tablet or as well as a dedicated tablet.
That's the problem with the Windows Tablet (and has been for years) not all the programs available will take advantage of the tablet. Programs that do take advantage of the tablet, do it so poorly that you prefer to run it as a netbook. Thus all you end up with is a netbook with a neat gimmick.
There is something to be said about devices that are dedicated tablets. If it runs in Windows then I'm tempted to make a program that can use a keyboard so I can take advantage of an already large audience. There isn't as much temptation with iOS or Android because even though both have access to a keyboard (iOS via bluetooth) the devices do not have a ready made market of legacy devices that were keyboard centric.
These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
Neat, does this one come with or without exploding capacitors? I could always use another lap warmer.
on how many of them will be returned with the screen hinges busted after the first three months.
Terrorists can attack freedom, but only Congress can destroy it.
Actually, just a ThinkPad X41 Tablet, but you swivel the screen, and presto, tablet. I bought it used, cheap, so it's fun.
It needs a Wacom style pen, but it's a tablet, just not touchisensitive.
And even accounting for the pen, it's not all that.
And this kludge by Dell looks equal parts flimsy and flaky. I give it a C- on sight.
Now the Lenovo S10-3t was interesting. And the U1 was very cool looking. Can I find one?
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
Why are they presenting this to the IDF ? The israeli army is their main customer or what ?
So, a tablet with a wireless "base" that has a DVD drive, keyboard, and touchpad, and which the tablet snaps into to protect the screen when not in use, seems the logical way to go. The main point is co-locate the screen and processor so you don't have the video signal sent through the hinge.
Check out the Always Innovating Touchbook to see what your idea looks like in practice. It has its own issues, mainly that the weight distribution is very unlike that of a laptop, producing a top heavy device which tends to fall over if opened at a nice reading angle. Yes, they've mitigated the problem it by modifying the base, and eventually we might see lighter circuitry (or heavier batteries) remove the issue.
It is a shame that they seem to be mismanaging their opportunity away. They've ran into issues that leave Feb. orders unfilled today. They've also stated that they will not produce more product due to the commitments in developing their "new" version.
Dell's dual personality laptop. Is it a piece of shit or a piece of crap?
The mind conceives, the body achieves, the spirit manifests.
So, you're basically saying that they made a huge smartphone with an Ix86 processor? (HTC Touch Pro 2 has a full QWERTY keyboard, and a touch screen. When you open the keyboard, you can even tilt it so it gives you the laptop form factor. Why does this qualify as "breaking news"? The tech to do this has existed for at least 5 years in the pocket PC market. My cell phone is still smaller, and has just as much capabilities as one of these crap-tastic huge smartphones. Hell, I can even print from my phone it I wanted to.
Get your free Dropbox account with 2 GB Free storage!
with the Lenovo S10-3t tablet/netbook convertible. The Lenovo hardware is for the most part excellent; the Atom processor is a bit slow for some tasks, but the battery life makes that a reasonable trade-off for me. Around the time of the iPad launch, some people were saying the S10-3t might prove to be an iPad killer. It might not have been a killer, but it could have been a contender, but for its Achilles heel: the Windows tablet functionality is so bad that the device is almost non-functional as a tablet. This was true even after I upgraded to Windows 7 Home Premium, which certainly alleviated some of the problems with touch control.
The biggest problem with the device the Windows interface, which wasn't designed for finger input. You can't see window decorations like the close button, because they're under your finger. Controls near the screen edge are hard to work. The Windows solution to this is a kind bizarre ghost mouse that you can configure to appear when you touch the screen. As with a real mouse, it is offset from the cursor, which moves as you drag it along. This kind of works, although the behavior is awkward when you approach the right side of the screen, but it is not configured on by default, probably because it would be too confusing.
The virtual keyboard is unreliable, not always popping when you need it. The solution to that is to have a kind of hotspot at the edge of the screen where it looks like the edge of the keyboard peeps into the frame. You click on the hotspot and the keyboard pops. This hotspot is only a couple of pixels wide, and very hard to activate on a capacitive touchscreen using your finger.
The touchscreen interface to Windows 7 is beyond clunky. It is practically unusable for general purposes... at least with fingertip input. Overall I'd say that anyone who wants Windows 7 on a tablet should opt for a resistive touchscreen with a stylus, which is much closer to the traditional mouse control Windows was designed for. While you lose multi-touch, this set-up has advantage for tasks like drawing or jotting notes longhand.
I like the Lenovo S10-3T overall as a netbook. I frequently use it when I need netbook-like properties (long battery life and compact size), but I almost never use it in tablet configuration, even though that takes only a quck twist of the screen hinge. It would also be possible to design applications for this device that exploit the touchscreen interface although manipulating windows and Windows menus though the Windows interface is not practical.
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
"While that might sound a bit been there, done that, the Inspiron Duo can be used as a tablet or opened up to offer a keyboard."
So...like multiple other tablet/laptops already on the market. Thanks for the Dell commercial.