A New Take on Tablets
By Eric Svetcov
Nov 15, 2004 5:00 AM
URL:
http://www.techlearning.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=52600730
Until recently, tablet PCs have been niche products that were
underpowered, fragile, lacked compelling software, and didn't
have the functionality of a standard laptop or desktop computer.
This is no longer true. The now-robust technology, once
relegated to the medical and financial services markets, is
finally making inroads in K-12 education at prices comparable to
the traditional laptop. Here, some questions to help you decide
whether tablet computers are in your future.Buyer's
Checklist
Why should I consider a tablet PC?
If you're considering purchasing a notebook computer, you
should at least consider a convertible tablet. A convertible
tablet computer is able to do everything a normal Windows XP
laptop can do and has the added functionality of being able to
directly interact with the screen using a stylus (see next
question).
What can I do with a tablet PC that I can't do with a
laptop?
For this question, let's ask the experts in the field who
have chosen tablet PCs over notebooks. James Polzin, assistant
superintendent of Hinsdale Township High School District 86 in
Illinois cites two primary reasons his district went with
tablets:
- students can use the stylus to annotate documents in the
digital texts they read, and
- the "digital ink" function lets users handwrite directly
on the screen and have notes appear as they are written, or
be converted from handwriting to text.
George Tuttle, technology consultant for the Pocahontas Area
Community School District in Iowa, adds some other reasons:
- with a projector in the classroom, the tablet can
function as a notebook and interactive whiteboard (using a
standard VGA cable, hook your tablet to the projector and
everything you write on the tablet will appear on the wall),
and
- compelling new student learning tools designed
specifically for the tablet PC, such as xThink Calculator
and xThink MathJournal (http://www.xthink.com/).
Almost everything a student can do with a regular piece of
paper can now be done on a tablet PC (except fold it into an
airplane-tablets are not very aerodynamic). Students can take
notes on a tablet and then file those notes using Microsoft One
Note software. They can use new applications like the xThink
products noted above. Teachers can use the tablet as an
interactive whiteboard and then convert the class sessions into
Acrobat files to publish on the Internet. Students can send a
teacher a homework assignment via e-mail and then the teacher
can mark it up just like they always have, albeit with a much
larger color palette.
Can I save money by choosing a tablet over a laptop?
In some situations, yes. As mentioned above, a tablet can be
used as an interactive whiteboard in any classroom outfitted
with a digital projector. Interactive whiteboard solutions range
in price from $600 to over $12,000. From purely a cost
perspective, certainly a tablet is as good as the $600
interactive whiteboard solution. So then the question to
consider is whether an $1,800 tablet provides as much or more
value than a $1,200 traditional notebook computer plus a $600
interactive whiteboard.
What's better: a traditional slate tablet or a
convertible tablet with integrated keyboard?
Tablets come in two basic flavors:
- Traditional tablet or slate tablet with no keyboard or
pointing device (other than the stylus). An external mouse
and keyboard can still be used, but these input devices are
not integrated. Advantage: these tablets are typically quite
light and thin. Disadvantage: lack of integrated keyboard
and monitor stand. Vendors selling traditional slate tablets
include Fujitsu, Gateway, Motion Computing, and NEC.
- Convertible tablets with integrated keyboard and mouse.
These units are heavier and thicker than their slate tablet
counterparts. Most convertibles have a hinged screen that
allows the system to either lie flat in the tablet
configuration or swing around into a traditional laptop
configuration should you need the keyboard. Advantage: fully
featured notebook plus tablet. Disadvantage: weight. Vendors
selling convertible tablets include Acer, Fujitsu, Gateway,
HP, Toshiba, and ViewSonic.
Most of the educators I spoke with feel the convertible
version is a better choice for schools. However, two vendors,
NEC and Motion Computing, only offer a slate tablet. Districts
would be wise to weigh the advantages and disadvantages of both
designs.
Is screen size important?
Once again we turned to the experts. "Hinsdale primarily
looked for portability to allow students to carry the tablet PC
from class to class," says Polzin. "Screen size was not a
priority." On the other hand, Tuttle found screen size to be
very important: "14 inches was key since that is the size of a
normal laptop." Industry representatives we talked to from
Toshiba and Gateway indicated 12.1 inches or larger is
preferable.
What criteria should I use to choose the appropriate
tablet?
Everything is a trade-off when making any technology choice.
All of us would choose a very inexpensive, very light system,
with the fastest processor, largest possible hard drive, and
maximum memory. I've been looking for this computer for a long
time; I just haven't found it yet.
That's where the tablet PC overview matrix below comes in
handy.
It includes most of the feature categories necessary to make
your technology decision. So, for instance, if you are
interested in 1.5GHz or faster sub-$2,000 convertible tablet,
you would be able to narrow it to the Acer TravelMate C300,
Gateway M275E, and Toshiba Portege M200. If you then added a
couple more criteria-under 6 lbs with a 14-inch or larger
screen-you would end up with only one system, the Gateway M275E.
Then again, if weight isn't as important as battery life, you
would choose the TravelMate C300.
Eric Svetcov, CISSP, is president of Palint Technology,
Inc. and former director of technology for St. Ignatius College
Preparatory in San Francisco.
|