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View Full Version : One Device, Many Form Factors


Hooch Tan
09-19-2010, 02:00 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://www.crunchgear.com/2010/09/16/the-always-innovating-smart-book-might-be-the-ultimate-all-in-one-computing-device/' target='_blank'>http://www.crunchgear.com/2010/09/1...mputing-device/</a><br /><br /></div><p><em>"Remember the Touch Book from last year? The netbook with a detachable screen that can double as a tablet? No? I didn&rsquo;t either. But sure enough, we did a post on the device and it actually shipped to consumers. Well, the company is back with the next generation that takes the multipurpose theme up a notch. The Smart Book is the swiss knife of mobile devices as the demo video shows."</em></p><p><img src="http://images.thoughtsmedia.com/resizer/thumbs/size/600/lpt/auto/1284842733.usr20447.jpg" style="border: 1px solid #d2d2bb;" /></p><p>Ever since I heard of the Metapad from IBM, I loved the concept.&nbsp; A single device that would hook up into various different shells to allow different ways to compute.&nbsp; While the Metapad never saw production, there have been many attempts to follow that concept.&nbsp; There is the Palm Foleo which also never really saw the light of day but the Celio Redfly is still around.&nbsp; Always Innovating seems to be taking the next step, adding a tablet form factor into the mix.&nbsp; As they provide their own hardware, including for the phone, I am unsure as to how popular this could be though running Ubuntu or Android does give it some clout.&nbsp; Of course, the biggest challenge will be competing against cloud computing.&nbsp; Why have one device that you have to snap into different shells, when you can have multiple devices that all hook into the same data backend and give you an optimized interface?</p>

Tony Rylow
09-19-2010, 05:04 PM
That thing is way cool !!

The major drawback I see about this, is the way you remove the mobile device. I really don't like the idea of taking off the entire back to get to it. I would want some sort of a door on the bottom of the tablet that I can open and remove it.

BrotherDave
09-22-2010, 05:08 AM
This doesn't necessarily compete w/ the cloud. This allows you to access your cloud data as good as any of the multiple devices you may have (and maybe/probably with a more consistent experience.) This has the added advantage of letting you access your data when the cloud is not available (it happens.) Add an solid sync story and this is just right.

My worry for this is that it will freak the average person out. Lots of parts which feels like complexity and trouble. If they could get folks used the concept with a package that solved the smartphone and laptop scenarios nicely (and initially defocused the other form-factors), that may be enough to get folks to try it out.