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Friday, May 30, 2008

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Weekend Discussion: What Do You Want Your Mobile Device To Do?

- Warner Crocker

Wow. I blow out a knee and spend a portion of the day dealing with that and some real amazing discussions break out here on GBM. Rob has highlighted them both but I want to use them in a tangential way to springboard into this weekend’s discussion topic. There are two really fascinating and informative discussions going on in comments to previous posts here on GBM that are worth paying attention to. Yesterday Rob posted that The Tablet PC Is Taking Quite a Beating These Days and there are some great responses from a number of readers there. Rob’s also actively soliciting Bill Gates to come have a chat on Rob’s next trip to Redmond about Tablet PCs and how we move forward.

Two days or so ago, Rob put together a great list of possible multi-touch usage scenarios in response to the All Father of Tablet PCs, James Kendrick’s post wherein jk was looking for a multi-touch usage scenario that fit his own usage model. Again, some great thoughts and comments there. There are also some good comments on James’ original post as well.

Mark “Sumocat” Sumimoto has extended that latter conversation with a great essay on his blog, Sumocat’s Scribbles. It is quite a long read, but well worth it and it involves downloading a document to get the entire thing. (You can download the file here in Word format or here in PDF format.)

The passions and the thoughts being tossed about in both conversations remind me of the early days on Tablet PC Buzz when folks were discussing the viability, the attacks on, and the real possibilities of Tablet PCs and I think that is a fantastic thing. Microsoft certainly isn’t making its case for the Tablet PC platform these days behind its Sinofosky wall of silence, and beyond recycled Microsoft Surface demos on a Tablet PC as a teaser for Windows 7, it isn’t doing much to explain why multi-touch could be of much use either.

So, once again, it is left up to the community to do the case building, and perhaps left up to others (Apple? OLPC?) to help define the market. But let’s move on to the weekend discussion topic.

Let’s forget about specific devices and specific form factors. Let’s forget about limitations and marketing miscues. Here’s your chance to dream a little. In your scenario, what do you want and need to do with a mobile device? I’m not going to define mobile device here and I ask you not to as well. Let’s just call them a mobile device in this discussion. Think of the things you need and want to accomplish and spell it out in the comments.

Here’s my list to kick it off.

  1. Be a note taking device.
  2. Be able to search those notes.
  3. Browse the web and be able to connect anywhere.
  4. Write and read email.
  5. Create documents.
  6. Consume media.
  7. Record media.
  8. Share data with other devices.
  9. Have GPS connectivity.

Oh, and by the way, keep those comments coming in those other threads.



Friday, May 30, 2008 5:11:26 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Geez, when did three pages of text (plus ink annotations) become "quite a long read"? Maybe "hefty" or "sizeable". For reference, I pasted Warner's post here into my template and it goes just over one page, so read his post three times to warm-up. :-)
Friday, May 30, 2008 5:16:23 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Almost forgot: tough break with the knee. My mom blew hers out a few weeks back... while on vacation. Really sucked for her. Hope yours gets better soon.
Friday, May 30, 2008 8:16:06 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I really want a tablet PC with instant-on so that part of the experience can be just like working with paper.
Ken Hinckley
Friday, May 30, 2008 8:33:52 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I want to replace my (5x7) paper journals with a mini-laptop that has the features mentioned in Warner's post.
1.
Be a note taking device.
2.
Be able to search those notes.
3.
Browse the web and be able to connect anywhere.
4.
Write and read email.
5.
Create documents.
6.
Consume media.
7.
Record media.
8.
Share data with other devices.
9.
Have GPS connectivity.
The best term I've heard for the device is a Digital Moleskin, and that would be just about perfect.

I'll trade desktop replacement horsepower for LONG battery life and great ink support.

Microsoft's recent announcement for low power mini books was a disappointment as they specifically exclude Ink, Touchscreens, etc. I know they want to keep pushing Vista, but it's just not going to be a good fit for these devices.

Hell, I'd be happy with just an instant-on mini-notebook with one note and firefox if the battery could last 12 hours.
jberger
Friday, May 30, 2008 9:14:33 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
It seems like Microsoft may spend more funding creating a platform just for tablet technology. XP, Vista, and Leopard, all these OS, are way too cumbersome for some truly exhilarating note taking experiences compared with a fountain pen or a digital pen as it evolves in better form (Livescribe so far)

I really want to use Inkseine instantly like what Mr. Hinckley said. So far tablet technology is size, weight, and battery restrictive... Unless a person must use a computer for most of his time, people would not prefer to stare in front of a computer too long unless you have already mutated : )

As long as there are diehard fans like you guys sticking to it even though the tablet technology is so horrible and expensive to use, I still have hope.

I am just a little pissed right now that we virtually replaced many things with techonology even the damn personal audio device was so advanced now, namely the iTouch or Iphone. But look at us for some truly productive instruments like writing and drawing... We are as primitive as the time when Da Vinci used ink and paper. That's pretty sad...

CSL
Friday, May 30, 2008 11:34:00 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I need a mobile device to be outdoor viewable, have phone capabilities, be at least semi-rugged so it will stand up to use outside of the controlled environments of home/work. Bluetooth and able to perhaps recieve digital over-the-air TV and radio would be nice.
kingstu
Saturday, May 31, 2008 5:28:00 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I want my mobile device to go into a dock on my desk and be my main computer. The OQO and the Motion LS800 have this vision right. A keyboard and mouse are better for almost everything I do when at my desk, and a tablet is better for almost everything I do when I'm not at my desk.

I want my mobile device to have a pen. Fingers and multi-touch have their advantages, and I'd like the option of using them, but often I want the precision and thinness of a pen (and this is from someone who verges on arachnodactyly).
Saturday, May 31, 2008 5:33:21 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Also, I agree with kingstu that a mobile device should also act as a phone. The iPhone fails on the docking and pen criteria, but by getting the phone part right they have found a good market. Imagine how good a market it would be if it could dock and be your main computer, and also allowed pen input.
Saturday, May 31, 2008 7:06:06 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
My mobile device is a UMPC tablet. My main uses are to take notes in an attempt to replace paper, watch media, connect to the web, write and organise my life. I use it most often while travelling to and from work (a 90 minute journey each way) so battery life is important. Because of what I need it for, the inking and other tablet functions are as important as the keyboard. What I don't need is it to be a phone as well - I need my phone to be something I can slip in my pocket.

One major improvement would be instant on, but my machine runs Windows and that's never going to happen. Plus let's have applications that really are designed for tablet use rather than having tablet functions stuck on top of ordinary functions.

And one nitpick - various apps are built so you can't actually see the whole app (fixed window size, or fixed writing and button positions, etc) on a small screen. I need to rotate the screen before I can see the buttons to let me run a virus scan, for example - ZoneAlarm, I'm looking at you. It's not just a website design issue. Both web designers and application developers need to realise that not everyone is going to use their site / software on a 19 inch widescreen. As more and more mobile devices come out, I hope this is improved upon.
Lex
Saturday, May 31, 2008 9:13:10 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I'd like to point out an entry on Michael Mace's blog that might be of interest to those following this thread.

Look at: http://mobileopportunity.blogspot.com/2006/05/desperately-seeking-info-pad.html

Michael Mace was a VP at Palm and has some interesting insights on the tablet/mobile market. The entry proposes the "Info Pad" device that strongly aligns with the desiderata being discussed here.
Marcelo Rodrigues
Monday, June 02, 2008 7:56:09 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Our posts on this topic can be found at:

http://community.citrix.com/display/~chrisfl/2008/01/16/The+Nirvana+device+a+Smartphone+as+a+PC+alternative

http://community.citrix.com/display/~adamma/2008/02/27/Mobile+Devices+and+The+App+Delivery+Center

While these concepts focus on use of mobile devices by enterprise level organizatiions, a lot of the concepts flow into mainstream use as well.

Adam
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