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Saturday, April 28, 2007

« I miss the "Wow"Main  | Who Let The Wow Out? »

I miss the Wow, part 2

- Rob Bushway

James Kendrick, of JkOnTheRun.com, wrote a nice rebuttal to my "I miss the Wow" article. He brought up a couple of items that I'd like to address.

First of all, I want to point out that James and I are good friends. Our websites are quite complimentary and share a good raport. So, read the following in the context of some good friends having a healthy debate. All in all, I think you'll find that James and I are not in disagreement on a lot with this issue, but I did want to highlight two items:

I believe James overestimates the impact of Dell coming out with a Tablet PC. Sure, it will impact the enterprise in a positive way and make inroads to markets where IT shops are purely Dell. It will bring awareness to a platform we all feel is superior. This will happen in the same way that Lenovo positively impacted the market. However, when Lenovo entered the tablet pc area, it wasn't earth shattering with every Tom, Dick, and Harry coming in to Starbucks sporting a Tablet PC. What I did see was more drug reps carrying an X41 and that is a good thing for sure. If the Dell Tablet PC rumors come true and they come out with a unit that closely models the D420, my point has been validated about a lack of innovation and design. I welcome Dell to the table with open arms, but can they please come to the table with something yummy to eat rather than a repeat of last night's hamburger?

I totally agree with James that Tablet PCs today are just as powerful as their counterparts, and that is a good thing. They should be. At this point inthe game, we shouldn't expect less. But that is not the innovation I'm talking about. Those are things that put the tablet on par with other notebooks. Where are the features that help set it apart? Are they pushing the envelope design wise? Are they designing for the pen user or just sticking a wacom digitizer on a screen, making it a single spindle machine and calling it a tablet? Where are the mobility enhancements we've come to expect in Vista? Where are the software design innovations from ISVs?

I do admit that my 4 1/2 years in this space might be jading my outlook. New people coming in are totally wowed by the machines - a quick look at TabletKiosks i440D dual touch slate, and they are like " I gotta have it ". But if an honest assessment is made over the past 4 1/2 years, looking at OEMs and what they continue to bring to market ( basically clones of what they've done in the past and what everyone else is doing), looking at software and the slow molasses pace it is moving at, what we have given up in battery life due to Vista and what the performance impact that Vista itself has dictated, I'm still left with that overarching feeling of  "...next".



4/28/2007 10:41 PM MST  

I miss the Wow, part 2     Comments [3]  |  Digg This |  del.icio.us |  Citations 
Sunday, April 29, 2007 1:47:32 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Although their immediate impact will be like "last nights hamburger," their longterm impact will be seen in that more people will have a tablet. And therefore more software will be written for it. Anyhow, I only recently owned a tablet, but I'm definitely not content with what is available now.
Danny
Sunday, April 29, 2007 4:39:52 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I completely agree with Rob and add:

1) MOST IMPORTANTLY: a TabletPC is not about POWER but is about the USER INTERFACE paradigm. If you want an example for what I mean, take a look at the iPhone. What we have today are just regular (boring) notebooks with inking capabilities and even very modest viewability outdoors.
2) TabletPC applications are too modest to become a motivation for using a Tablet. They are mostly adaptations of regular PC applications
3) TabletPC must become MUCH LIGHTER (and thinner) than today to benefit from the advanced user interface (which is not yet here!).

So, all in all, a completely new concept and approach to mobile computing is essential. For a WOW effect, a revolution; not an eveolution (backwards); is necessary!
everbrave
Sunday, April 29, 2007 6:22:47 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Interesting set of articles, and ones I resonate with. I started the jump from Mac to the Tablet PC world when I got my hands on an HP TC1000 through a consulting loan. I mean WOW - want a form factor! Even acknowledging that the things was a performance dog, I was hooked, so much so I laid down hard-earned cash to buy my own, just as they were closing out the line (I wanted to get one before they were gone).

Now, a couple of years later, I still love my TC1100, and it still turns heads (I got stopped going through security at LAX a couple of months ago, because the agent absolutely wanted one of these; I gave here GBM's website to do some research :-). Now, however, I find myself drifting back to the Mac. My new MacBook, with the elegant OS, built-in web camera, instant on from sleep, is just more transparent and effecient to my work flow. I still use the TC1100 - great for interviews, and notating with a pen on my Powerpoint presentations as I show them is a crowded stopper (one person came up and said - after it took my 5 minutes to get back on track with the training - it was like we had just watched fire be discovered).

So I agree - where is the "WOW" that moved me originally? Not the, "more bells and whistles, how much more can we cram into this thing" wow, but the wow of elegance, effeciency and design that just helps me do my job better. I'm still looking...
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