MSI New Dual Screen Netbook Tablet
This isn’t the first time we’ve heard about a device with dual touch screens that folds up, but it’s the first time we’ve actually seen a working demo of one. At its CES booth, MSI is showing off its own dual touchscreen tablet prototype and this one really works.
The device was shown in two sizes, a 7-inch and a 10-inch, though the 7-inch wasn’t working or powered on but the 10-inch unit was working. MSI was kind enough to remove the glass casing over it to let Laptop Mag do a brief hands-on video on Friday and then, on Saturday, to provide a representative to walk them through the tablet’s features.
Tablet Features
The tablet has dual 10-inch capacitive touch screens running at 1024 x 600 each. It sports an Intel Menlow processor, which an MSI rep said was the 1.6-GHz Atom Z530, and runs Windows 7 ($75.99) home premium. The tablet uses an SSD drive (as opposed to a hard drive) which helps it stay slim and power efficient. The storage device that holds your OS, programs, and data.
A utility on the screen allows you to switch between a couple of different screen modes. By default each screen is treated as an independent desktop so a window that’s maximized on one side won’t carry over to the other. However, the utility lets you switch to single screen mode, where Windows see the two displays as one giant display that is effectively double the horizontal or vertical resolution. You can view either single or dual display modes in portrait or landscape orientations.
Viewing angles were a little poor on the demo unit as colors on one screen would be clear while the other appeared washed out if the screen was folded at certain angles. Our rep said viewing angles are a huge concern that MSI will resolve before bringing a product to market.
The capacitive display on the demo unit does not support multitouch, but tapping icons and scrolling through Web pages and PDFs worked well with a single finger swipe. For fast text entry, the tablet features a large, comfortable on-screen keyboard that, when activated, takes up the entire desktop of the bottom screen, assuming you position the tabet in portait mode. Amazingly, the keys offer tactile feedback that makes them feel more like a physical thanks to built-in haptics technology. The MSI rep said that, in the future, users might be able to adjust the level of feedback to suit their tastes.
The system on display did not have a battery, but MSI told us that they are working hard to find a lightweight, high-capacity solution that will keep the weight of the unit low while providing 8 to 10 hours of battery life.
Future of the MSI’s Tablet
Even though the unit on display was a concept design without a name, MSI Director of Sales Andy Tung told Laptop Mag, the company is working hard to to turn the concept it into a shipping product, perhaps in time for the back-to-school season. None of the specs are certain to make it into the final product, the company still has lots of work to do. We can imagine that a final product could have multitouch capability and 3G connectivity, two things the demo lacked. There’s no price yet, either, but Tung said they want the tablet to be extremely affordable.
Several journalists have started to call this device an eReader, but we have to squarely disagree. For certain, its design makes it ideal for reading long texts in portrait mode or placing a different page of a book on each screen in landscape mode. However, because it offers a complete Windows 7 experience, it’s also great for surfing the Web, checking e-mail, and viewing media. We can also imagine social media updaters and bloggers using it to update from the road. Some day soon, we may see bloggers sitting next to us at press events using an MSI dual screen tablet to live blog.
If you’d like to see the MSI dual screen tablet in action, check out the videos at Laptop Mag.
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