Thursday 21 August 2008

Intel's Classmate 3 Laptop Gets a Touch Screen

Intel's Classmate PC has undergone a makeover, featuring new hardware that makes the laptop more user-friendly than its predecessors.
The new Classmate 3 design will be more like a tablet PC, with a touch-screen interface and a display that can be swiveled, company officials said on Wednesday at the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco.
Intel had revealed plans to upgrade the laptop in an interview with the IDG News Service last month.
A stylus or finger can be used for data input on the screen, Intel said. Users can even rest their palms on the touch screen while using it. An accelerometer changes the orientation of the display to horizontal or vertical depending on the laptop's position, the company said.
A demonstration unit felt lighter than its predecessors and included an 8.9-inch screen and Intel's Atom N270 processor, running at 1.6GHz. It also included an integrated camera that can rotate 180 degrees.
The design of Classmate 3 has yet to be finalized, but Intel hopes to provide a longer battery life and more ruggedness with Classmate 3, Intel officials said.
The laptop will be in production by the end of the year, said Lila Ibrahim, general manager of the emerging markets platform group at Intel. The price will be higher than for its current generation of Classmates because of the touch-screen capabilities, but it may come down over time, Ibrahim said.
The Classmate PC was originally designed as an educational laptop for kids in developing countries. The current version, Classmate 2, was announced earlier this year, and Intel expanded its availability to the general market. The Classmate PC is designed as a no-frills laptop that can be used for basic applications such as surfing the Web and checking e-mail.
In India, the laptop is available under the MiLeap brand from HCL starting at Rs. 17,000 (US$390). Actronix is selling Classmate PCs in the U.K. under the JumPC brand, with prices starting at £239 (US$445).
Basic tablet PC features are also included in Classmate's prime competitor, the XO laptop from nonprofit One Laptop Per Child (OLPC). The screen on the XO can be swiveled, but it does not have a touch-screen interface. The next version of the XO laptop, the XO-2, will feature a software-based, touch-sensitive keyboard and two touch-screen displays, according to OLPC. The laptop is due in 2010. XO is an educational laptop for kids in developing countries.
Classmate laptops are designed to use either Windows or Linux. A future user interface for Classmate 3 PCs could be a version of Sugar, originally developed for the XO laptop. The Sugar Labs Foundation, which is involved in the development of Sugar, has assigned a community volunteer to work with Intel on the interface.
The extension of Sugar to Classmate PCs could heat up the well-publicized battle between Intel and OLPC for control of the market for kids' laptops in developing countries. In January, Intel quit OLPC's board of directors after the nonprofit organization asked Intel to give up development of the Classmate PC to focus on the XO laptop.
Intel has seen success with its Classmate PC, recently announcing it would ship about 500,000 Classmates to basic-level education students through the Portuguese government for the upcoming school year।
Reference : http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/150095/intels_classmate_3_laptop_gets_a_touch_screen.html

No comments:

Nasser Hajloo
a Persian Graphic Designer , Web Designer and Web Developer
n.hajloo@gmail.com

Subscribe feeds via e-mail
Subscribe in my preferred RSS reader

Subscribe feeds rss Recent Entries

Advertise on this site Sponsored links

Labels And Tags

Archive

Followers

All My Feeds

Computer And Technology News Blog
Hajloo's Daily Note Blog
Development World Blog
Iran ITIL - ITSM Center Blog
Khatmikhi Press Blog
Khatmikhi Blog
Mac OS X in Practice Blog

Subscribe feeds rss Recent Comments

Technorati

Technorati
My authority on technorati
Add this blog to your faves