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I must say I am highly disappointed in this tablet because I won't be able to use it as a waccom :(

I hope they bring out a pro tablet.
 
I would love to see this tablet be able to function as a universal remote. All other universal remotes I have tried havent functioned the greatest and i would love apple to incorporate it if they can make it work. It would be a cool feature and really bring in a true media experience.
 
one more month to go

I must say I am highly disappointed in this tablet because I won't be able to use it as a waccom :(

I hope they bring out a pro tablet.

Well wacom actually has technology that incorporates capacitive touch AND their typical pen input. The traditional Wacom layer is absolutely essential for doing any serious drawing because those who know about it, know that Wacom's pen input has pressure sensitivity and is much more accurate. I have a tablet pc and hand writing stuff is quiet nice.

This tablet is strongly rumored to run a modified version of iPhone OS. How powerful are the semi-pa chips though? I wonder if programs use graphics acceleration if decent drawing applications can be made.
 
Film/commercial production...Even use with 5d.

The iPhone has taken the production community by storm. With its many apps and features specific to production needs, I could see a tablet this size coming in handy for storyboarding, script notes, slates, etc. (Just imagine a feature film production with these for all of the talent, script supervisors, DPs, producers, editors, etc. Re-writes could sync quickly)

I could also see this being able to remote control and display the HD footage (and stills) from a 5d mkII. A 10 inch HD monitor for under a grand? This would sell like hotcakes!

Just maybe it could control Final Cut Pro/Color as well, as a touch screen interface with programmable functions (like the Euphonix MC Control).

One could only hope. :eek:

- Marty
 
It would be really neat to have most features of OS X, but at least needs a full e-mail, contacts, calendar, and interent. I would not want a cell phone internet. I would just want to use it with wifi.

Jeff
 
I would love to see this tablet be able to function as a universal remote. All other universal remotes I have tried havent functioned the greatest and i would love apple to incorporate it if they can make it work. It would be a cool feature and really bring in a true media experience.

Before this can happen, consumer electronics companies are going to have to join the rest of us in the 21st century and start incorporating Bluetooth/WiFi in their products and stop relying exclusively on IR for their remote controls.
 
Before this can happen, consumer electronics companies are going to have to join the rest of us in the 21st century and start incorporating Bluetooth/WiFi in their products and stop relying exclusively on IR for their remote controls.

or apple could put IR in the tablet and just not wait around.:D

Personally this is a big feature for me. I my iPod touch to control my computer/boxee/basic stuff like that. I would love to be able to program it to control everything.
 
All rumors point to MaxiPod.

Sad if that is the reality of the product. It'll sell, but I won't buy. However, give it some extra computing function and Apple can have a good slice of the laptop crowd eating from their tiny, tablet totin' hand.
 
you know, if apple really isnt making a tablet, and with all these so called "proof" of existence, they are going to have to make one now to avoid disappointment so the stock dosnt go back down to $80 again.:p
 
I don't know if this has been said yet or not, but something I thought would be a "killer feature" for this tablet would be an always on 3G connection with no monthly payments like the Amazon Kindle has..

Though this is very improbable because the kindle only uses the connection to download books and theoretically, this tablet would be able to use it for normal browsing / downloading at a much higher rate. Not very likely, but it'd be cool.
 
We have all seen this...

http://www.macdailynews.com/gfx/article_gfx/080103_patent_app_monitor_dock.gif

Well, what if this turned into something a little different? What if the tablet we are expecting to get in September is nothing more than a shell that will accept an iphone or an ipod touch and give you a larger screen to work on? It could also give you access to a bluetooth keyboard and maybe a fold out stand so you can use it with that keyboard. The idea in the patent is a good one, but people seem to be happy with their laptop screens. What they crave though is a way to release all the power of their little iphone or ipod to use for something more.
Apple would of course have to find a way to allow it to run full OS X and not just the iphone or ipod OS X version.
 
yes but after the public announcement by Apple (in Jan 2007).

in this case, someone is claiming to have seen the device before the existence has even been officially confirmed.

Walt Mossberg is a journalist, who is generally favorable towards Apple. It is in their interest to let him see unreleased products, and he'd be under NDA anyway.

That said, I have no problem with this device having been seen. Note that "having been seen" does not equal "having been showed by Apple." This may have been an unofficial sighting. Not like that hasn't happened before.

Another misinterpretation, or misreading or whatever you want to call it, concerns the size of the device. Everyone is saying and repeating ten inches, but the original WSJ article said "up to ten inches," which would obviously include smaller sizes as a possibility.
 
I don't know if this has been said yet or not, but something I thought would be a "killer feature" for this tablet would be an always on 3G connection with no monthly payments like the Amazon Kindle has..

Though this is very improbable because the kindle only uses the connection to download books and theoretically, this tablet would be able to use it for normal browsing / downloading at a much higher rate. Not very likely, but it'd be cool.
That's not a killer feature, its a nightmare. Kindle is still a problem waiting to happen. A veritable ticking time bomb of scalability and DRM issues waiting to happen. People think the iPhone is "closed" as it is, can you imagine if it had the issues Kindle has? Recently Amazon did what people keep thinking Apple might do... they reached into every Kindle owner's device, and erased a purchased item. People talk about Apple's "kill switch, but they've reserved any such feature for "malware". Moreover, others have talked about Amazon "bricking" devices left and right when its become obvious that the user has taken the device off the grid. The devices become veritable "tombstones" for that user's content. Moreover, one of the things that makes Amazon's Internet connection possible, is that fact that everyone is essentially pooled as one big user billed on Amazon's credit account, with purchases being the number 1 download format. Could people turn a Kindle into a roaming wireless router? Meh. I'm sure Amazon is packet sniffing like crazy to make sure such an attempt isn't wide-spread.

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20090416/0246064526.shtml
Reader Mark points us to a rather disturbing story about Amazon canceling a customer's account for no clear reason, and in doing so, using DRM to turn his Kindle 2 device into a useless paperweight -- such that he couldn't even read the books he'd purchased. This is troubling on a variety of levels. First, it's worrisome that Amazon would just cancel this guy's account with no warning, no full explanation and no method to appeal the decision. Second, it's quite problematic that, in doing so, it would turn his expensive device into a useless box, while disabling ebooks he'd thought he'd "bought." Once again, we see how DRM, rather than "enabling business models" as those who support it insist, tends to only serve to harm legitimate customers.

Apple doesn't need that type of headache. Just make people pay for their connections or use WiFi, and make sure its "unlimited" bandwidth to whatever degree is possible. Business is business. I'm sure Apple doesn't want to get in your way, but has to deal with an ever increasing convergence of technology. --Just recall the "rumble" or "vibrate" feature being something that gets Apple in trouble as game developers use it more and more, crossing over patents from other game system manufacturers. Shazam is the focus of the most recent attack on Apple. If Apple had to respond to customers like Amazon has and do things like disabling "text-to-speech" on certain content, but not on other content... Oy. We'd never hear the end of it.

~ CB
 
Apple needs GREAT SYNC between computers

Kind of Chronosync but simple. Right now different MACs do not sync well. A Sync that simply performs an update on the other MAC through Firewire and moves iPhoto libraries, Mail, Documents, the whole drive.

That will help sales of Tablets and laptops.
 
Kind of Chronosync but simple. Right now different MACs do not sync well. A Sync that simply performs an update on the other MAC through Firewire and moves iPhoto libraries, Mail, Documents, the whole drive.

That will help sales of Tablets and laptops.

FYI: It is Mac, short for Macintosh, and not MAC (which is an acronym).

And actually you can share things like iPhoto and iTunes quite easily. Mail can be synced very well if you don't use POP3 and instead use IMAP. As far as documents you can use either MobileMe or some other online storage for your most frequently updated documents. The only sync that screws up is the System Preferences sync with MobileMe (it corrupts and screws up bad if you have a desktop and a laptop).
 
Raiders of the Lost Tablet

Major Eaton: Doctor Jones, we've heard a lot about you.

Indiana: Have you.

Major Eaton: Professor of Technology. Expert on the OS, and aah how does one say it? patenter of rare technologies...

Indiana: That's one way of saying it. Why don't you sit down you'll be more comfortable. [thuds the Tablet Bible on the desk]

Colonel Musgrove: Yes, you're a man of many talents.

Major Eaton: Now, you studied under Professor Jobs at the 'University of Stanford'.

Indiana: Yes, I did.

Major Eaton: You have no idea of his present whereabouts?

Indiana: uuuh just rumors really. Somewhere in Australia, I think. I haven't really spoken to him in 10 years. We were friends... but aah we had a bit of a falling out, I'm afraid.

Colonel Musgrove: Now, Doctor Jones, you must understand that this is all strictly confidential.

Indiana: I understand.

Colonel Musgrove: Yesterday afternoon our South East Asian sections intercepted a Microsoft communique that was sent from Sydney [AU] to Redmond.

Major Eaton: [interupting Musgrove] You see over the last two years Microsoft have had teams of reverse engineers running around the world looking for all kinds of media artifacts. Ballmer's a nut on the subject. He's crazy, he's obsessed with the archaic computing. And right now, apparently, there is some kind of technological buzz going on in the labs outside of Santa Clara.

Colonel Musgrove: Now we've got some information here but we can't make anything out of it and maybe you can. [speaking clearly, slowly] "Santa Clara development proceeding. Acquire tech piece, Patent of Tablet, Steven Jobs, US."

Indiana: [surprised!] Microsoft have discovered Santa Clara!

Major Eaton: What does that mean to you? 'Santa Clara'.

Indiana: Santa Clara is one of the possible resting places of the Lost Ark.

Colonel Musgrove: The Lost Ark?

Indiana: Yeah, the Ark of Cupertino. The chest the Apple Guru's used to carry the Apple Commandments around in.

Major Eaton: What-do-you-mean the Apple Commandments, you talking about THEE Apple Commandments?

Indiana: Yes, the actual Apple Commandments, the original Newton Tablet that Amelio brought down out of Mount Apple and smashed if you believe in that sort of thing.... Didn't you guys ever go to Sunday School?.... Well Look, Apple took the broken pieces and put them into the Ark. When they settled in Austin they put the Ark in a place called The Temple of Solomon...

Brody: [interupting] In Texas.

Indiana: ...yeah...where it stayed for many years. 'Till all of the sudden, whoosh, it was gone...

Major Eaton: Where?

Indiana: Well nobody knows where or when.

Brody: However, an American pharaoh...

Indiana: 'Jobsy'

Brody: ...yes, invaded the city of Austin around 1997 A.D., and he may have take the tablet back to the city of Cupertino, and hidden it in a secret chamber called 'The Well of Souls'.

Major Eaton: [skeptically] Secret chamber...

Brody: However, a few years after the pharaoh had returned to Santa Clara, the city of Cupertino was consumed by the dot.com sand storm which lasted a whole year. Wiped clean by the wrath of debt...!

Major Eaton: [turns slowly toward Col. Musgrove] Uh... huh.

Colonel Musgrove: Obviously, we've come to the right men. Now you seem to know, uh, all about this Tablet, then.

Indiana: No, no, not really. Steven Jobs is the real expert. Steve did the first serious work on the Tablet. Registered some of its patents. It was his obsession, really..... But he never built a tablet [curiously].

Major Eaton: Frankly, we're somewhat suspicious, Mr. Jobs being mentioned so prominently in a secret Microsoft cable.

Brody: Oh, rubbish. Jobs no Microsofty.

Colonel Musgrove: Well, what do the Microsofties want him for then?

Indiana: Well, obviously, Microsoft are looking for the head piece to Patent of Tablet and they think Steve's got it.

Major Eaton: What exactly is the head piece to the Patent of Tablet?

Indiana: Well, the patent is just information. I don't know, about this much. Nobody really knows for sure how much. And it's...
[turns blackboard to blank side]

Indiana: ...uuuh capped with an elaborate logo, in the shape of an Apple, with a BITE in the center. And what you did was, you take the Patent to a special room in Cupertino, a map room with a miniature of the campus all laid out on the floor. And if you put the Patent in a certain place at a certain time of day, the sun shone through here and made beam that came down on the floor here... and gave you the exact location of the Well of the Souls.

Colonel Musgrove: Where the Ark of Cupertino was kept, right?.

Indiana: Which is exactly what Microsofties are looking for.

Major Eaton: Now what does this Tablet look like?

Indiana: Uh... there's a picture of it right here....

attachment.php


Major Eaton: Force Quit !!

Brody: Yes, that's just what the Apple employees thought.

Colonel Musgrove: [pointing to the touch screen] Uh, now what's that supposed to be coming out of there?

Indiana: Email, Browsing, Video, Media.... Interactive Gaming or somethin'.

Major Eaton: I'm beginning to understand Ballmer's interests in this.

Brody: Oh, yes. patents speak of the iPad leveling marketplaces and laying waste to entire product lines. A CEO which carries a Tablet before him... is invincible... [ominously]
 
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I am quite aware of that.

Great. Nevertheless your comments did not make that fact apparent. In fact, they suggested the contrary. You seemed to be spending a lot of energy finding ways to criticize something you've never even seen before.

How would you type with two hands if the keyboard was split as you describe? You would still have to hold the device with your fingers, and only have your thumbs to type with.

You would type exactly like you do on a Q1 today.

The keyboard would be too spread out for efficient thumb-typing (especially in landscape).

I've use a Q1 and it is not perfect, but ergonomically its no worse than an iPhone.

And don't get me started on the ergonomics of the tablet. Looking straight down at the half-screen that is right above the virtual keyboard while typing a document will do wonders for people's necks, shoulders, and posture.

The same happens today when typing on a netbook or notebook. Even with those devices its not like you can detatch the screen and move it up to eye level where you would normally have a monitor. If you want to sit for a long time and use the tablet, you would attach an external monitor, just as you do with a laptop.
 
I'd bet apple is keeping some things up its sleeve with Snow Leopard development. Streamlining and re-tooling an OS would fit really well with getting it to run on a device like this, or at least some version of the OS. And Windows 7 is getting multi-touch features, so wouldn't Apple like to beat them to the punch? I wouldn't be surprised to see a touch-capable version of Snow Leopard running on this device. Both announced in September...

And the market for this is obviously the netbook market. (Despite the high prices...) I'll look for an iPod Touch with the bigger screen plus some additional basic computing functionality: bigger onscreen keyboard, use with external keyboard or external display (?), digital books, better for watching films, etc...

I think he's on point with this.
 
With all those ports (video out, etc) that would be AWESOME!!!

That would be awesome!! Nice pic. I remember some Apple patents from not too long ago detailing a tablet that would fit into an iMac (don't know if I'm mixing rumor and reality here) - this would have the added advantage of potentially allowing the tablet to share processing power with an iMac making desktop work more powerful. Who knows?

I don't want summer to en, but I can't wait until September.
 
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