Intel converts: Bigger flock than Apple
When Apple converted to Intel in 2005 that was big. But 2008 Intel Atom converts make this look like a small-town baptism.Overall, it was a good year for the Intel faithful despite the Wall Street financial crisis. Intel handily beat Advanced Micro Devices in the PC processor performance war. (Not coincidentally, AMD was forced to spin off its manufacturing operations to save itself.) But that really was last year's news since AMD had not been delivering competitive processors for almost two years.
Intels adaptable Classmate PC
Intel’s Convertible Classmate PC, aka the CTL 2go PC, has made another public appearance before its official CES 2009 unveiling, and both the hardware and software have been tweaked since last time we saw it. Gone is the bile-green lid, replaced with a blue-white pattern, and build-quality is much improved; more impressive is the ways that Intel have made Windows XP pen-friendly, with their new Vision Objects Pen Input
That software offers handwriting recognition and an on-screen keyboard, and coupled with the Classmate’s Quick Launcher interface it looks like one of the more successful ways the OS has been fettled for fingers and styli. Palm-rejection (always tricky for a resistive touchscreen) is good and the display is reportedly responsive. Intel are currently working with educational software providers to make touch-friendly versions of their apps, which is something Microsoft should have been doing with “grown up” software developers for years.
Other improvements include an accelerometer that no longer lags, which should be straightforward but somehow often proves otherwise; hardware specs are still Intel’s 1.6GHz Atom N270 processor with a 60GB hard-drive and an 8.9-inch display.
Intels adaptable Classmate PC
Intel’s Convertible Classmate PC, aka the CTL 2go PC, has made another public appearance before its official CES 2009 unveiling, and both the hardware and software have been tweaked since last time we saw it. Gone is the bile-green lid, replaced with a blue-white pattern, and build-quality is much improved; more impressive is the ways that Intel have made Windows XP pen-friendly, with their new Vision Objects Pen Input
That software offers handwriting recognition and an on-screen keyboard, and coupled with the Classmate’s Quick Launcher interface it looks like one of the more successful ways the OS has been fettled for fingers and styli. Palm-rejection (always tricky for a resistive touchscreen) is good and the display is reportedly responsive. Intel are currently working with educational software providers to make touch-friendly versions of their apps, which is something Microsoft should have been doing with “grown up” software developers for years.
Other improvements include an accelerometer that no longer lags, which should be straightforward but somehow often proves otherwise; hardware specs are still Intel’s 1.6GHz Atom N270 processor with a 60GB hard-drive and an 8.9-inch display.