Playing with the new HP TouchPad Tablet
Saturday, July 2, 2011 at 8:52PM Just testing now with the free 50GB of cloud storage with each tablet.
It seems in the press now there is a focus on a lot of great and some not great reviews of the 'features'. Like a competitve comparison.
- TouchPad vs iPad/2
- BlackBerry PlayBook
- Galaxy
- other 'droids (both honeycomb and not)
Seams you can't swing a *** without hitting another great review. To me, they have been pretty honest, some really cool aspects (nailed the IU), needs more apps and needs to be faster (etc). All pretty accurate, but there is a tiny nugget in the HP TouchPad.
No, it's not touchstone (but that's way cool and way underrated...coming from a guy who travels and carries 3 laptops, 1 iPad, 2 cell phones which require cables on every trip), not running Flash (which by the way sucks and has nothing to do with HP, Adobe just can't get it right, time to move on, I recommend turning it off, or at least make it ask). It's not cut, copy and paste (which are all there, just gotta figure out how to use them), it's not the webOS butler - which was a hidden (but I am sure very costly) touch that makes it a good 'experience'. By they way I have called and I will give you the details in a future review (let's just say it was like my favorite Chinese food, sweet and sour). It's the real revolutionary part. The game changer part. The second part of the problem. The first is hardware, HP did pretty good...for the time. Unfortunately the time was back a bit. Not a lot, but there is some cool stuff, but it's more third gen and current state of the art is fourth gen (with fifth in the wings). It's the UI. In this case it's webOS. The word on the web was that it's based on Linux. That would be an interesting topic to explore. But regardless, it's smooth and the concept is perfect, next generation. It's how people work. Think of the email story, get an email, click the link, open another page, that's the email app, the email, first webpage, second webpage. All in a stack. Native. Just like you think...then you play a game...it's not in the email stack...doesn't belong...and if you want it there, it's as easy as touch and move it over. Naturally. Ok, cool as that is, that's not the reason for the article. It's the paradigm shift that HP is bringing to the table. My take on the idea of webOS is a connected cloud based OS. That's way ahead of it's time, the TouchPad is just a way to view it. But it could be anywhere on other IT gear. Now the challenge is are we ready for that? I hope so, we are progressing...remember life before an app store? (Don't worry I am sure Windows will get one someday)






Reader Comments