Tablet Computers . . . dumb or dumber?
My good friend (Kickstartnews Contributing Editor) Mario Georgiou and I disagree on the usefulness of tablet computers. He likes them - I don't. While the iPod Touch/iPhone are probably the best currently examples of how a highly responsive touch screen should work, the option of a hardware keyboard option within the same form factor seems to escape the priority list at Apple. So we're left with the heavy, awkward and rather powerful notebook-sized laptop tablets. What I want (hmmm, make that, what many tablet computing fans want) is a tablet which combines the best of all worlds in a form factor that is not much larger than the best netbooks. They're coming. They're here. The HP EliteBook works extremely well and it almost qualifies as an ultralight. With a 12.1" screen, it's very portable - bigger than a netbook; smaller than a typical laptop. This should be considered by business travelers as a great all around workhorse. The Lenovo ThinkPad X200 clocks in slightly heavier than the HP, but noticeably tougher for business use, travel, college/university use and so on. It's our best buy. Lenovo had a few quality control problems which began a couple of years after it took over the ThinkPad line from IBM. Time, focus and attention to detail have put the ThinkPad line back near the top of the heap. The HP Pavillion tx2500z is the least expensive of the good quality 12.1" tablets PCs. It's tough to beat for home use. The Asus Eee PC T91MT netbook tablet has the typical 8.9" netbook screen, but rather than a hard drive for storage features 16GB of SSD/Flash memory. Useful for certain - at home, traveling, and for casual use just about anywhere. Limited storage capacity and the slightly underpowered Intel Atom processor will limit its popularity. A good little machine nonetheless with almost 5 hours of battery life and very light weight. Labels: 12.1" screen, 8.9" screen, Netbook, portable computer, Tablet PC |