Read more.Spain's ImasD is taking pre-orders for this new modular 10-inch slate.
Read more.Spain's ImasD is taking pre-orders for this new modular 10-inch slate.
The problem is that I care about size and weight, and this is bound to be larger and heavier than a standard tablet. In theory it would be nice to be able to upgrade the CPU or RAM, but I don't expect to see such a tablet that will be appealing enough to me as a tablet.
And they expect other companies to build modules for it?!In addition to this limited edition tablet device, with only 1,000 units to be built initially
It'll definitely be thicker than a standard tablet but, being optimistic, perhaps some of that extra thickness can be used to accommodate a larger battery. Personally a little more thickness might not be a bad thing, since that'd make it easier to hold, and undoubtedly more rigid than the current lightweights.
Weight is more of an issue, but I can't see why the limited modularity that ImasD is proposing should add more than a few grams, maybe the weight of one or two AA batteries. And that kind of uplift is not something that is going to bother those, other than the incurably vain, (i.e. "I bought this tablet because it's currently the lightest on the market"). If we want to put a figure on it then I'd say anything below 600g is probably going to be acceptable, (c.f. original iPad is 680g or 730g depending on network capabilities).
I'm less interested in the modular tablet at the moment than the Ara phone, but it's still an interesting direction. Shame that Google couldn't have taken this idea and run with it, as it definitely could do with some big-name support.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)