
…an alternative to buying an extra personal computer or laptop for different rooms, providing a cheaper, quicker and less-cumbersome way to connect to the web and email at home.
It has no hard drive but rather 128 megabytes of onboard flash memory and a memory card slot. Nokia says the device is not intended as a rival to Apple Computer’s iPod or other MP3 music players. A software update is expected early next year to add features such as voice over internet telephony and instant messaging.
AdvertisementAdvertisementWhile fairly novel in terms of its handheld size, the Internet Tablet can be seen as another variation on a concept that has repeatedly failed to catch on - a device that offers easy internet access and basic tasks such as email for which the computing power of a full-blown PC is unnecessary.
During the internet bubble, prominent names from a wide range of technology industries dabbled with web appliances. Intel, Gateway, 3Com, America Online, National Semiconductor and Honeywell all either launched or promised such devices. Nokia itself weighed in with a tablet called the MediaScreen.
Many were wired devices, such as the “Audrey” from 3Com, though a few like the Airboard from Sony and the WebPAD developed by National Semi used wireless technologies similar to Wi-Fi.
Since the Nokia tablet is meant to be carried from room to room, its 10.41cm screen is considerably smaller than the display on most of these predecessor appliances but also far bigger and sharper compared with most cell phones and handheld computers.
And rather than serving up stripped-down versions of web pages like most mobile devices, the tablet uses an Opera browser to display sites as they appear on any computer.
Weighing 230 grams the Internet Tablet is 1.91cm thick, 14.22cm wide and 7.87cm deep. It includes a loudspeaker but there’s no typewriter keyboard for thumb-typing e-mail as on popular handheld computers such as the Treo and BlackBerry. Instead, the tablet comes with a stylus to tap a virtual keyboard on the screen.
The device is designed primarily to use at home, though its Wi-Fi transmitter can also connect with public and commercial hot spots. There’s also a USB port to connect to a PC and a Bluetooth transmitter that can be used to connect with a mobile phone that has cellular online access.
The Nokia announcement marks the second time in days that a prominent producer of mobile devices has veered into a new product category.
Last week, PalmOne unveiled a $US500 device called the LifeDrive, essentially a cross between a mobile media player, portable hard drive and an organiser. The LifeDrive features 4 gigabytes of internal storage and a high-resolution screen for on-the-road access to music, video, digital photos, e-mail and office documents. It also offers Wi-Fi wireless capability to connect to the web and corporate networks remotely.
Nokia has struggled in its attempts to forge several new product categories. Most prominent among these has been the N-Gage, a cell phone designed specifically for video games. Others include a digital picture frame with a cellular connection to download photos.
Copyright © 2005 Associated Press.
Maybe I’ll be bale to invest in one of these later in the year! I kinda prefer the musical and touch fashion but this is pretty cool. My friend Bruno has had some manly thingie Personal organiser device with everything you can imagine on it that he lets me use when I have to choose a movie we can go and see. It also reads his emails and incoming sms text messages. My othern friend Kevin has some tablet and stylus system he uses to do his stock market speculations on but I can never follow what he is doing - not my strong point.
But I do like the look of this one.



We ran across your item and posted it in our “ersatz blog” about the Nokia 770:
http://www.internettablettalk.com/forums/showthread.php?p=356#post356
It should be released this month. Keep your eyes open!
— Roger Sperberg
Comment by Roger Sperberg — September 3, 2005 @ 12:03 pm