Skwinty
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2008
- Messages
- 5,593
Good advice. I think I'll skip the the jewel-encrusted models, then.
Do you get jewel encrusted PC Tablets where you are, or are you just joking
Good advice. I think I'll skip the the jewel-encrusted models, then.
Do you get jewel encrusted PC Tablets where you are, or are you just joking![]()
I wasn't going to get that one.Which Dell are you talking about? The Duo? If so that one is a convertible netbook.
For the price of a tablet PC, you could get an AirBook and an iPad. Together they'd still be thinner and lighter, and if you're committed to Windows, you could throw in Parallels.
Just sayin'.
Linda
I'm all for creative solutions, if my options were limited.For the price of a tablet PC, you could get an AirBook and an iPad. Together they'd still be thinner and lighter, and if you're committed to Windows, you could throw in Parallels.
Just sayin'.
Linda
This is also true. Though, I wasn't going to get a netbook.Not strictly true, you can get a convertible tablet Netbook for less than an Ipad. It still runs windows 7 and is a PC.
Apple products do not, in general, appeal to me. I dunno, maybe I'm not snobby enough, or something.
I think I might get a Motorola Xoom. It has an OS designed for tablets rather than cell phones (iOS, Android 2.2) and hardware that totally spanks the iPad (and probably the iPad 2).
Whether is spanks the iPad or not in real use and consumer preference will, remain to be seen, and of course it might, but...
...isn't Android 3.0 (code name Honeycomb) really the first Android aimed specifically at tablets?
Anyway, choice is good - lets see what the iPad2 brings to the table.
I've already ordered a Nook Color for the purpose of "hacking" it (I use that term loosely since I'm not an actual hacker and will instead follow established instructions developed by actual hackers) and using Honeycomb on it (though even Froyo would meet my needs). What I lose in some features (no cameraI think I might get a Motorola Xoom. It has an OS designed for tablets rather than cell phones (iOS, Android 2.2) and hardware that totally spanks the iPad (and probably the iPad 2).
I've already ordered a Nook Color for the purpose of "hacking" it (I use that term loosely since I'm not an actual hacker and will instead follow established instructions developed by actual hackers) and using Honeycomb on it (though even Froyo would meet my needs). What I lose in some features (no camera, only wifi for communication), I more than make up with the price of $250 plus $20 for a 16GB MicroSD card, and it's the right size for me at 7" since I find the 10" tablets unwieldy.
The Xoom looks great and having Honeycomb out of the box would be great, but the price is going to be too high for my taste and the 7" version is farther out than the 10".
For the record, my hacked Nook Color will absolutely be a toy. Frankly, I want it mainly to read comic books.
Mainly I just want to try it out. I wouldn't expect a very unofficial preview build to be fully functional and the hardware obviously wasn't built with Honeycomb in mind.I've read that the port is slow and buggy.
I'm all for creative solutions, if my options were limited.
But, A: I don't want two devices. I have to synch with enough dang systems as it is.
B: Native installs of operating systems are more reliable than VMs. I know this from much experience. And, why would I want to syphon performance to a host OS I am not even going to use?
Well, currently the Nook Color doesn't even expose the operating system at all. You have to root it and install a fresh Android to make it act like any other Android device (though Honeycomb actually doesn't require rooting and runs from the SD card - probably helping to cause the reports of sluggishness you've heard).The Nook doesn't have access to the Android Market? That would be a deal breaker for me. I guess for your intended uses it doesn't matter much though.