A Truly Wireless Tablet PC

A great idea in concept (and in science fiction TV shows/movies), the Tablet PC has just never taken off. A major cause is that the hardware has been too bulky to be used as a true paper tablet replacement, but thankfully some companies still haven't given up on the platform.

Toshiba demonstrated a notebook that allowed you to physically detach the monitor and carry it around with you, effectively using it as the tablet. The tablet received all screen data wirelessly over 802.11g from the base of the system (where the keyboard, CPU and HDD are located). The demonstration obviously worked, but we didn't get a feel for whether or not there was any perceivable lag when using the tablet.

The idea of a detachable monitor tablet makes a lot of sense as it addresses the form factor issue of tablet PCs.

Similar to the Seagate demo we saw earlier on at CES, Toshiba also had a Wireless USB/Ultra Wideband demo at their booth. The demo this time around was of a DV camera plugged into a base station rigged with a WUSB antenna. The DV camera then wirelessly streamed the video on its DV tape to a Toshiba notebook, also outfitted with a WUSB antenna.

Once again we have no idea what transfer rate was being achieved and although WUSB has a theoretical maximum of 480Mbps we would expect the real world transfer rate to be far slower in this case since it is streaming off of a DV tape.

HD-DVD: Twin Format Disc Canon and Toshiba Demonstrate SED TVs
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  • andrewln - Monday, January 9, 2006 - link

    some very interesting products..
    SED, 82" LCD?!.. 103" plasma..tiny projector....4K projector
    clear raptor...finally, something new for hard drives
    dual lense camara


    dissapointments? or i'm wrong?
    0.85" 4GB hard drive?...can't they make 4GB sd already, not moving parts and requires less power
    nano clones..? why not make it better rather just cloning?
    wireless tablet....i thought we have those already
    ps3....no coment
  • MrSmurf - Monday, January 9, 2006 - link

    Things like the small HDD are more to impress us with how far technology has advanced. It's a novelity.
  • swtethan - Monday, January 9, 2006 - link

    by samsung... worlds largest... hehehe
  • littlebitstrouds - Monday, January 9, 2006 - link

    I want a 103" plasma
  • swtethan - Monday, January 9, 2006 - link

    sweet stuff!

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