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Working and Living with TabletPCs

10/31/09 | by zeuxidamas [mail] | Categories: Daily Commentary

I have been a proponent of the TabletPC platform since its inception. Maybe I am one of the few; the outlyers. To me, the platform and what it does just makes sense. And I do not qualify it with that questionable statement that it has a place in vertical markets or for niche uses. That is just crazy talk. How people can not see the common sense in simply writing, in working in the paradigm that has dominated human culture since the arrival of the written word, and creating that in a persistent digital environment, I just can not fathom. As it is, I frequently find myself alone in looking at a device and seeing the sense in it not having a keyboard.

Follow up:

What I have not done is presented a step-by-step guide to doing the initial configuration and then managing the life-cycle of a TabletPC and integrating it into your work and personal life. And I am not going to have time to that today either.

But one day a few months ago, 5 months into my Motion LE1600's tour of duty as my primary work laptop and the PIM Workstation in the 'WERKZ, it seemed like a good time to take this on as a writing project. Unfortunately, shortly after I startewd that article, I decided that the LE1600 was not cutting it and that I needed more oomph at work. So I upgraded to an HP 2730p Elitebook. The HP is serving with aplomb, and eventually, I will get back the original concept behind this post. We'll do a complete walk-through of how one should expect to employ a TabletPC in every-day life, we'll wrap up with a quick review of what is currently on the market, and some of the more prudent means of going about attaining one.

Until I get back to that original intent, I did want to post what I had written those months ago, as it may be of some use to someone in the market for a slate-style TabletPC:

"First, let's start off with a description of the capabilities and limitations of the LE1600 and why I specifically chose to go with this model over other choices. The LE1600 is a slate-style TabletPC released circa mid-year 2005. The manufacturer is still going today, although I do not know that I could say going strong. A spin-off of Gateway, Motion now operates as a sole corporate entity, continuing to produce high-end TabletPCs for the professional and consumer markets. I say high-end because, despite not having keyboards or screens with high resolutions, slate-style TabletPCs are the more expensive of the genre. With no keyboard included, in order to utilize the LE11600 as a standard notebook, you have to pair it with a USB keyboard or a proprietary board from Motion.

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