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Mike Elgan

The World Is My Office

ASUS may ship two-screen Windows 7 notebooks in Q1

SANTA BARBARA, CALIF. -- Asustek, also known as ASUS -- the people who make the Eee PC -- plans to ship new notebooks that have touch screens on both the top (where the screen normally goes) and the bottom (where the keyboard normally goes) as early as the first quarter of next year, according to a report.

OK, let's back up for a second. First of all, I described in my Computerworld.com column back in June what I believe is the future of nearly all mainstream notebooks from both Microsoft's OEM partners and from Apple. The basic design will be, I believe, one that has screens on both the top and the bottom, just like the next version of the One Laptop Per Child project. If you look at the pictures in that column, you can see the four usage modes: 

1. Tablet mode. Snap the laptop open and flat, and the two screens work together as one giant touch screen. 

2. Laptop mode. Open the virtual keyboard, which appears full-size on the bottom touch screen, and use like a regular clamshell laptop. 

3. Book mode. Open an e-Book and hold it sideways like an open book. One page appears on the left screen and the next page appears on the right. Touch the corner to turn the page. 

4. Two-person mode. Open it flat again like Tablet mode, but click a button to make one screen orient itself for one user and the other toward you. 

This form-factor is useless without an advanced, MPG user interface, which I've written about in my Computerworld.com column as well. MPG stands for multi-touch, physics and gestures. The best known examples of MPG user interfaces are the Apple iPhone and Microsoft's Surface.

OK, enough with the vision. Let's look at the reality. ASUS showed off during Computex 2008 just such a system (see photo below). 

The news today is that Digitimes, which covers Taiwanese manufacturing, claims that a source told them ASUS's touch panel laptops will be launched during the first or second quarters of 2009

These laptops are reportedly designed to work with the upcoming Windows 7 operating system, which Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer promised would include a multi-touch user interface. 

If the report is true, and ASUS does meet its ship target, it does not mean Windows 7 will be ready by then. It's possible that the company may offer an upgrade voucher for buyers to get Windows 7 later on.

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What People Are Saying

BIOS

Would you need to get an external keyboard to go into the BIOS of this thing? Are they going to design this thing so it never ever ever breaks...? Right?

Windows 7 laptop

I have been considering the ASUS laptop for my christmas purchase, so thanks for the info in this article.

i would love to have a

i would love to have a laptop that can be folded as a small book and then be opened as a 10 to 12-inch laptop with a virtual keyboard. this design will make a netbook smaller and thinner.

Uhhhh

Well what do i do if I want to rest my fingers on the keyboard? Plus, when I type one word, I don't use all of my fingers. My other fingers just rest until I need them. I don't want to type with my pointer finger again like I did in 1st grade!

Type as you would on a

Type as you would on a physical keyboard. Rest your fingers wherever you like. Jeff Han demonstrated how effective a full software keyboard can be in his famous TED presentation on his multi-touch interface.

Im sorry but the "new" OLPC

Im sorry but the "new" OLPC designs you talk of are concepts, done by a graphic designer, not anything to do with the actual organisation. They're having enough trouble shipping the first gen ones as it is.

Also your spelling is horrid.

Re: Im sorry but the "new" OLPC

***** Im sorry but the "new" OLPC designs you talk of are concepts, done by a graphic designer, not anything to do with the actual organisation. *****

The designs are conceptual, but reflect the actual goals of the next-gen OLPC, including and especially dual-screens.

***** Also your spelling is horrid. *****

I made a typo (spelling meat instead of meet) but corrected it.

Also: It's "I'm," not "Im."

Mike Elgan

***** Im sorry but the "new"

***** Im sorry but the "new" OLPC designs you talk of are concepts, done by a graphic designer, not anything to do with the actual organisation. *****

The designs are conceptual, but reflect the actual goals of the next-gen OLPC, including and especially dual-screens.

***** Also your spelling is horrid. *****

I made a typo (spelling meat instead of meet) but corrected it.

Also: It's "I'm," not "Im."

Mike Elgan

And it's "organization", not "organisation".
Spell check is definitely a must when calling someones spelling horrid.

RE:

"And it's "organization", not "organisation".
Spell check is definitely a must when calling someones spelling horrid."

Before you try to be the smartass you should check your own statements!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_and_British_English_spelling_differences#-ise.2C_-ize

In British English

In British English "organisation" is correct. Also, when critiquing someone's spelling, you should proofread your text first. It's "someone's" spelling -- you forgot the apostrophe.