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In public appearances, Ballmer seemed to refocus much of his tablet talk on the future of the form-factor, in lieu of discussing any specific devices. He also defended the stylus as an input method for touch screens, despite the industry’s growing focus on gesture control and virtual keyboards.
Near the end of 2010, rumours circulated that Microsoft would announce a major tablet push at January’s Consumer Electronics Show. Instead, Microsoft used the event to announce that the next version of Windows would support SoC (system-on-a-chip) architecture, in particular ARM-based systems from partners such as Qualcomm, Nvidia and Texas Instruments. In turn, that would give Microsoft increased leverage for porting Windows onto tablets and more mobile form-factors, currently the prime market for ARM offerings.
As with smartphones, Google soon became the operating-system supplier of choice for manufacturers looking to break into the tablet game. There was just one tiny issue: Android had originally been developed for smartphones and their necessarily smaller screens, necessitating the creation of a tablet-optimised operating system. Enter Android 3.0, code-named “Honeycomb,” which first appeared in early 2011 on the Motorola Xoom tablet.
“The webOS is an unbelievably attractive piece of technology, in that it can interconnect seamlessly a number of various devices,” HP CEO Leo Apotheker told reporters during a March 14 press conference. “We see this as a massive, very global platform.”
In March 2011, Apple released the iPad 2, hoping to continue its dominance of the tablet market in the face of these rising competitors. Customer response suggested the general public’s appetite for tablets hadn’t slowed in the past year. That consumer interest bled over into the business sphere, with IT administrators reporting more and more employees interested in integrating tablets into their daily workflow.
But while Microsoft had collaborated with manufacturers to produce a handful of tablets running Windows 7 — which supports gesture control — it refrained from pushing hard into the consumer-tablet market. Current rumours suggest the company will finally make its presence felt in the segment with the release of a tablet-optimised “Windows 8,” perhaps due in 2012.
If the tablet PC’s past few decades are any indication, though, anything can happen.
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Which iPad is that you have which does anything with handwriting? Seems like this perhaps presaged the Newton.
I used a telautograph device at Nashville's (then) Spence Manor Hotel (guitar shaped swimming pool) in the late 1980's. It was used to transmit food orders from the front desk to the kitchen. Fascinating to watch the order appear as if my magic, with the dull "kloonk, kloonk" of the stylus waving around as it wrote on a paper order form.
This is all lies.
The first tablet of any kind was the iPad.
The first gui of any kind was on the Mac.
Anyone who says otherwise will be sued for patent infringement.
Now begone, you and your evil decades of prior art.