Apple just announced the Tablet is the IPAD – Steve Jobs is busy demonstrating it now. I am waiting for more information, such as dimensions, tech specs, and of course price…

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Brian Conway on January 26th, 2010

Once again there are rumors about the Apple Tablet and the pricing structure that comes with it.
www.Netbooknews.de claims to have caught a German retailer, Media Market, accidentally tweeting about the name and the price…
Media Market Tweet

While there is speculation in the crunchgear writeup that this is a placeholder, I am not so sure.

Lets start with the name – I have always thought that the ISlate moniker was a poor name, and that IPad is more in line with the Apple I line.

Price – 499 Euro with a subscription form T-Mobile. I would think they will stay married to ATT here in the states, and 499 euro works out to 702.39 USD. This is in line with the way Apple prices thei products. It would put it in between the I phone and the Mackbook.
At 899 Euro without the contract, that puts it in the typical Apple laptop range – 1266.13 USD.

At any rate – we should all know more tomorrow.

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Brian Conway on January 4th, 2010

According to the Wall Street Journal, the much rumored Mac tablet will be announced at the end of the month, and will be shipping at the end of March. John Biggs from Crunch Gear mentions a projected price point of under $1000.00, which in line with the bulk of the rumors in circulation. I find myself agreeing with Ben Parr from Mashable, who said that the price was still too steep for this product.

Other items of note are the 10 or 11 inch screen size, making it slightly larger than previously reported, and may include a nationwide WiFi service.

Of course, like all things that are enjoying a healthy amount of hype prior to any official announcement, I found this little tidbit on the Phone Arena website.

Leaked ISlate specs

This is supposed to be a leaked copy of actual specifications for the Apple offering. I revamped the comparison table from my previous post.

Apple JooJoo eDGe
Weight 2+ lbs 2.4 lbs 2.75 lbs
Display 7.1 LCD 12.1 LCD 10.1 LCD
Resolution 1440X1050 1366 × 768 1024X600
Processor 2.26 Intel Core2 Duo Intel Atom Z530 ARMADA 168
Memory 2G 1G 1G
Video GeForce 9400 M GMA 500 Marvel
Storage 120 gig SATA 4 gig SD 3 gig SD
Wi Fi 802.11 b/g 802.11 b/g 802.11 b/g
3g Yes No Yes
Bluetooth Yes Yes Yes
Battery Li-Ion Li-Ion Li-Ion
Usage Time 6 hrs 5 hrs 6 hrs
Software Cloud Leopard Linux Android
Price $899.00 $499.00 $490.00

I have my doubts about the validity of this set of specifications though. My biggest problems are with the screen size and with the standard SATA hard drive. I find it hard to believe that with the common size for e-readers and other tablet offerings is averaging 9 inches. The standard SATA hard drive is a bit fishy as well. All in all I have a hard time seeing these leaked specifications as being plausible for what should be a low power consumption durable device.

I guess that we will know the real deal when Apple makes the official announcement on January 26th.

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It seems that as we move into 2010 the debate over the need for tablet computing is still going strong. Unfortunately, a lot of the meat of the debate from technology pundits like Tech Crunch’s MG Seigler and Joe Wilcox from Betanews are still focused on the rumored Apple tablet as the make or break product for this emerging vector.

In his January 2nd article, “The world doesn’t need an Apple tablet or any other” Joe Wilcox pans not just the still rumored Apple tablet, but the whole concept of tablet computing. He views tablets as a niche product. He cites three distinct reasons what the Apple tablet, or any other tablet for that matter, are just not needed.

“The greater desirability of smaller devices; overlapping functionality with devices above and below it; and functionality too limited without a physical keyboard.”

While his first two points have some merit, they are not a really strong argument against a tablet when you take a closer look at them.

There is a strong desire for the increased functionality of phones like the I-Phone, the Droid, Blackberry and other feature rich phones, and not everyone who wants one of these will want a tablet. That is something I would expect, though. There are a lot of people who desire the smaller devices to consolidate what was becoming an unmanageable plethora of devices that we carried for entertainment. These new devices pull together the elements of music playing, games, radio, video and social networking in a package that fits in your pocket. That is not the market that tablets should be targeting anyway.

Yes, tablets will have overlap with the products above and below it. There is no question about this claim. What I am having trouble understanding is just how this is a good reason to not have the availability of a tablet for people who can take advantage of the feature set that tablets have to offer. This line of reasoning is analogous to saying that the auto industry should have the ultra sub compact and the large SUV. After all, the compact, midsized and full size sedans have all the same feature as the other two.

It is the third of his arguments is one of be the biggest concern being voiced about tablets in general, but is easily addressed by spending a few dollars on a travel friendly solution such as the Mertline flexible or the Matias folding keyboard. For a person who is on the go. After all, sometimes having the keyboard attached can be a pain.

If I were asked “What would you use the Apple tablet, or any other, for?” I would say for everything that I use my laptop for, and more. I think with the right tablet I really could set my laptop aside permanently.
Of course, this would only work if one or more of the tablet manufactures produce a well thought out product that has enough power and features to allow mw to keep doing all the things that I need to do daily.

The way I use my laptop is probably represent the average laptop user today. I use my laptop to send and receive e-mail, write documents and spreadsheets, create presentations, blog and social network, web surf, read, listen to music, watch videos and sometimes play games.

When I look at the upcoming tablet offerings for 2010 I see that they can handle all of these things in some fasion (though I may not be able to use the exact same software, or I may have to shift some of my apps I use to cloud based apps). Could I do much of this on something like the I-Phone? Yes. Would I be happy trying to use the I-Phone or any of the other feature rich phones as my primary too for this kind of daily activity? Absolutely not! Why? The screen size is just too small. That is why the tablet has a place in the product mix, and has the potential to be much more than a niche product.

I happen to agree with MG Seigler’s views that the tablet has the potential to be a real paradigm shifting product once it gets into the hands of the right people. I also agree that the whole tablet industry’s success or failure does not rest with the Apple tablet. There are other tablets on the verge of release that could have just a strong an impact on the future computing.

Foremost in my mind is the soon to be launched Edge Dual book, and the JooJoo (or Crunchpad depending on who you talk to). Both of these products share a lot of similarities to the touted Apple tablet. The table below gives us a snapshot of the three (though not all of the specs are confirmed).

Apple JooJoo eDGe
Weight 2+ lbs 2.4 lbs 2.75 lbs
Display 9.6 LCD 12.1 LCD 10.1 LCD
Resolution 1440X1050 1366 × 768 1024X600
Processor PA Semi ARM Intel Atom Z530 ARMADA 168
Memory 2G 1G 1G
Video GeForce 9400 M GMA 500 Marvel
Storage 64 gig Flash 4 gig SD 3 gig SD
Wi Fi 802.11 b/g 802.11 b/g 802.11 b/g
3g Yes No Yes
Bluetooth Yes Yes Yes
Battery Li-Ion Li-Ion Li-Ion
Usage Time 6 hrs 5 hrs 6 hrs
Software OS X 10.6 Linux Android
Price $899.00 $499.00 $490.00

What we see is that all three of these devices have their strong points and weak points. The JooJoo has the largest screen of the three, but lacks in battery life, and expandability of its storage. It is a machine that needs the internet like a fish needs water to survive. The Apple tablet has the most memory, a great video chip, and the most storage, but it will come with the kind of price tag that Apple is known for, and it may have a lobotomized version of OS X powering it (or the I-Phone OS).

The Edge has the least memory of the three, and is the heaviest, weighing in at almost three pounds. The advantage, however, could be the one that gives it the biggest bang for the buck. Unlike the Apple tablet or the JooJoo, the Edge comes with second screen that is a dedicated e-reader with a pen touch interface. This allows the user to do all kinds of interesting things, like mark up pdf files, make noted in e-books, and can interact with the tablet side of the device.

One thing is certain, the coming decade will yield a continued increase in the products that come to market as part of this industry innovative cycle that we are in. Technology companies will have to continue to try new to find new innovative products and different adaptations of existing technologies in an attempt to find the “next have to have” item.

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Brian Conway on November 6th, 2009

As you know, if you have been following my blog recently, I have been following some of the new tablet genre devices that are on the horizon, such as the Crunchpad, Apple’s rumored tablet and the mysterious Microsoft Courier. Today I am going to take a look at another interesting cross over product called the eDGe Dualbook, by enTourage.

The eDGe (not to be confused with the LG Edge phone) is half e-reader,, and half tablet pc (which is why the folks ate enTourage dubbed it the Dualbook). Although not out yet, it was recently panned by Gizmodo’s Matt Buchannon, Ross Miller form Engadget, and Scott Merrill of Crunchgear. In all three articles the writers slam the door on the eDGe. In Matt Buchannan’s article he slams it not on the specs, but rather on how it looks, referring to it as “Hideous” and “ugly little mutant”.

4angles

I’m sorry Matt. I don’t see the ugly here. It resembles the mill netbooks out today until you open it up, but then, that is the point, isn’t it? The picture below shows a nice shot of the eDGe in ice blue. It will also come in white and red for an additional fee. Of course, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, so I will let you judge for yourselves.

blue

Unlike Matt, Ross and Scott I see the emergence of devices like this as a necessary part of the continuing innovation in the personal electronics industry. Part of innovating is the trial and error process to create a product that fills a need in a way that other products fall short of. Some ideas never make it off the drawing board, some fail during the development phase, and some make it to market only to find that they fell short of the mark in some way. But that is part of the chaotic process that innovation is. There is no telling today which of the quickly growing number of proposed devices will make it across the chasm that Rogers talks about in the “5 stages of innovation adaption”.

Innovation Adaption Curve

I think that what the folks over at Entourage are putting forward as the next generation of netbook style devices is representative of a step in the right direction towards getting the buy in of the innovators and early adapters (such as myself). As someone who comes from a strong IT background. I am always looking for a portable device that can easily handle the host of PDF references and white papers that I am either reading or keeping for reference, my generally extensive list of books that I am reading, and be able to use it in place of a laptop or netbook for web research, document creation, note taking, and whatever else I can get it to do to help me get the job done day in and day out.

Will the eDGe be the one? I can only hope so, and wait for it to come out.

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And, according John Biggs at Tech Crunch, we will have the answer…. “Soon”.
If you are not familiar with what the Crunchpad is I’ll give you a brief rundown. Back in 2008 Michael Arrington, entrepreneur and founder of Techcrunch partnered up with a company out of Singapore called Fusion Garage to make what they had hoped to be a $200.00 tablet PC. Arrington’s project is based on the idea of making a device that is dead simple to use. Within a month or so of announcing the project we got a first glimpse of the “Prototype A” Crunchpad pictured below.

Crunchpad Prototype A

At the beginning of 2009 we got a glimpse of the Prototype B Crunchpad.

Crunchpad prototype B

It is looking a bit more polished ostensibly because of the inclusion of Dynacept in the project as the prototype manufacturer for the device. This prototype sports a VIA Nano processor, 12in LCD and is running a customized Ubuntu OS with a Webkit front end. Things picked up pace a bit after that, with the Prototype C showing up in April, and a near final industrial prototype in June.

crunchtablet-latest art

In July we were told that the price would be closer to $400 per unit, (still not out of the ball park but definitely higher than I wanted to see it) and there would be an announcement for the release in August. Well, August came and went, rumors are flying about usability, hardware configurations possible release dates, and, as was seen on The Business Insider blog, a tweet from a Berry Judge, the chief buyer at Best Buy calling it a “Great Looking Device” and claiming he thinks’ it will be a hit. In September John Biggs did confirm that there were some “bugs” that needed to be addressed and that there would be a delay, and since then the silence has been deafening.

So here it is, November, and after many, many repeated tweets, comments, and emails I have gotten an answer of “Soon”. Will it be soon enough, with more and more diverse products racing to crowd the playing field of the tablet / media / e-reader markets? I guess we will know soon…

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I saw this interesting video over at Techcrunch. Although the video is a bit long, it it worth taking the time to watch. The concept of multi finger touch replacing the more traditional mouse is very innovative.

10/GUI from C. Miller on Vimeo.

The brains behind this is R. Clayton Miller, founder of 10/GUI

You can read the full Techcrunch artical here

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Brian Conway on October 12th, 2009

As many of you who follow my blog may already know, I have been following the ever ripining tablet market, with a particular eye on the Crunch Pad. Both Tech Crunch and Fusion Garage, the company that is doing the OS for the crunch pad, have been mute as to the progress of this device.

During a recent scan of the web for the latest Tablet Computing news I ran across this posting from Dan Frommer at the Business Insider blog (Kudos to them for the embed option)

I can’t help wondering what is going through the mind of Michael Arrington, the brain behind the Crunch Pad. While he and the folks at Fusion Garage have been stone silent, ignoring any media requests for more information, we now hear that the Best Buy CMO has given it the nod.

Not everyone seems to think that there is a need for this type of technology, though. Naysayers say that Net Books and web enabled phones like the IPhone are all that is needed, and these new devices will be nothing more than expensive toys for the gadget croud.

The naysayers couldn’t be more wrong about the value of this type of product. Tablets have a huge potential change the way certain business sectors approach using technology to improve internal processes, and to differentiate themselves from competitors.
Cloud Computing is on the rise, even with the concerns of data security, and devices like the Crunch Pad offer the innovative companies a way to really leverage this new technology to their advantage.

If there were truly no market for tablets, then Apple and Microsoft wouldn’t both be diligently working on their own (more expensive) version of the crunch pad.

Let’s face it. We heard the same thing about the net book when it came out.

If I had Crunch Pad and an HTC Hero, I could run my small business for next to nothing by using cloud apps in place of a traditional infrastructure. But that will be a blog for another day…

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Brian Conway on October 5th, 2009

WordPress Theme Design by Tessa Blakeley Silver
By PACKT Publishing

WP_Theme_Design180

I recently read WordPress Theme Design by Tessa Blakeley Silver with the hope that it would shed some light on the mysteries of how to create a theme that better represented my site. I am, admittedly, a novice at both WordPress and PHP programming, so I dove into this book with the understanding that I could be getting in over my head.

I was right! I am not ready to design my own themes yet, though I would highly recommend this book to anyone interested in understanding theme design. While I couldn’t follow everything that was covered in the book, it did deepen my understanding of:

• PHP coding by carefully walking me through the process of initial page design in PHP, and the use of loops.
• Coding for multiple browser support
• How the theme is laid out both in CSS and in the directory structure
• Design Methodologies
• Troubleshooting

The author did a great job of carefully going over each step as you are guided through the creation of a magazine style theme. The author also includes a basic reference at the end to help you in your own design process.

The only short falling I saw with WordPress Theme Design is that it is for a slightly outdated version of WordPress now (2.5 and currently WordPress is on 2.8.4) and the lack of a companion CD with the software you would need to host your own local blog for testing (though they do tell you what to download at the beginning if you want to pursue it).

While I did not get the example theme that you are walked through in WordPress Theme Design to be fully functional (yet), this book did help me to understand enough to take an existing theme and begin to tweak it to be more in line with what I want. I have every confidence that I will be able to come back to this book to create my own theme once I have spent some more time working with WordPress .

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ssgconway on October 4th, 2009

(Or, Going wireless with Mac System 7.6.1 on a ‘parts’ PowerBook 1400 cs/117 and 16 MB of RAM)

“Igor!  It…is…online!”
The Frankenputer

Yes, Virginia, you can turn a box of old computer parts into a wireless laptop!  This was an experiment born of curiosity, spare parts and a determination not to let anything Mac go to waste.

Over time, I’d accumulated two non-working spare PowerBook1400s as a source of parts for the one that served as my daily productivity machine until the start of 2008.  They went mostly unused, and were disassembled in the closet for over a year.  One of the PowerBooks had been an upgraded 183 MHZ ‘cs’ (passive matrix) model; the other one was a 117 MHZ model with a non-working ‘c’ screen.

There they lay, gathering dust, until, succumbing to spousal pressure to downsize the Mac museum, I decided to assemble them into two semi-complete computers (minus RAM and processor), and sell them on eBay as ‘parts’ laptops.  Neither sold, even at a price under $10.00, after several tries.

Determined to not let them go to waste, I began trying different combinations of lowers body with the good ‘cs’ screen, the 117 Mhz processor (I’d sold the 183 previously), a spare 3 GB HDD and one piece of 8 MB ’stackable’ RAM, which was all the spare memory that I had.

It powered up, even with a power supply that has been duct-taped together since I bought it three years ago.  Using an OS 7.6 install CD that had been gathering dust for a while, I had the PowerBook set up for the experiment to move forward.  The speed was nothing to brag about, though the use of a 256 MB PCMCIA card in the lower of the PowerBook’s two slots gave the machine an additional 76 MB of RAM (via the ‘Virtual Memory’ option in the System 7.6.1 preferences menu) that added enough zip to make going online practical.  Loading drivers for wireless connectivity was easy, thanks to the easy-to-follow directions at http://www.pennmachine.com/techie/airport1400.html.     The wifi card, a Lucent WaveLan Silver 802.11b, came from an Airport ‘Graphite’ base station.  With everything in place, it was time to test.  After configuring the system preferences to use the wifi card, and using IE 5 as the test browser, I was online fairly quickly.  Pages loaded reasonably fast using our home DSL wireless network, and IE rendered them well enough to be usable for basic surfing.

To sum things up, Apple hardware is almost never beyond redemption for some kind of use, and Apple’s System 7.6 is still viable as a vehicle for basic web surfing.  (With WordPerfect 3.5, now available at no cost, as well as other productivity, multimedia and other apps for download at www.main.system7today.com/, this machine becomes highly usable for basic tasks, even though it is made of parts a dozen years old.

The picture above is of FrankenBook online with Internet Explorer 5.

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