pbray: (Default)
[personal profile] pbray
Four years ago I acquired a Netbook, an EEE PC that I named EEK. The original purpose of EEK was primarily for travel but it soon developed a new use-- as the couchsurfing machine. The perfect tool for answering emails, surfing the web after dinner, or snarking with jpsorrow during Project Runway.

Alas EEK has begun showing signs of dementia, as befits its advanced age (in PC years), and while last week's mishaps where it randomly inserted strings of 9s into the midst of everything I tried to type was annoying, now there are a couple of keys that it no longer recognizes, which means the valiant EEK's days are numbered.

I want something similar, a lightweight tool that's the right size for email, websurfing and the occasional writing stint when I'm away from home. I also don't want to spend a fortune. Tablets appear to be all the rage, and you can't beat them for portability, so I stopped by Best Buy yesterday to check out what was there. The tablets are very shiny, but the whole typing on the glass screen experience wasn't a winner for me. I know you can buy auxiliary keypads, but having to lug around accessories defeats the point of buying the compact tablet in the first place.

So, peanut gallery, any thoughts? Netbook? Tablet? Do touch typists eventually get used to typing on that limited keyboard on the flat screen? Or should I go back to the telephone and mailing handwritten letters?

(no subject)

Date: 2012-08-07 10:55 am (UTC)
tryslora: photo of my red hair right after highlighting (me myself and I)
From: [personal profile] tryslora
I have an iPad and for responding to things online, it's great. I don't mind typing a few paragraphs there. But I've never been fully comfortable with it as a laptop replacement, and keep returning to my Mac to actually write. Oh, and I have a keyboard case for the iPad that I took off recently because I found it unwieldy and the keys didn't strike nicely and it just never quite worked the way I wanted it to.

I kind of want to go find that Asus [livejournal.com profile] suricattus has in a store to look at someday. It sounds like a great compromise tool!!

(no subject)

Date: 2012-08-07 11:36 am (UTC)
lagilman: coffee or die (citron presse)
From: [personal profile] lagilman
I don't think tablets are ever going to be work-replacement items - anything 10" or under just isn't great for long-form work (twist that however you like, my dears). But yeah, for emails or memos or note-taking, the tablet keyboard kinda rocks.


(and I much prefer taking a $300 netbook or tablet on a research trip, rather than a $1000 laptop!)

(no subject)

Date: 2012-08-07 11:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pbray.livejournal.com
and I much prefer taking a $300 netbook or tablet on a research trip

Exactly. Especially since I don't store any files on the netbook so if it gets damaged or stolen it's minimal risk.

(no subject)

Date: 2012-08-07 11:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pbray.livejournal.com
The ASUS Transformer line looks very cool indeed, if a bit more than I want to spend. The TF300T is about four hundred, and the transformer dock (which gives you the keyboard) is in the one fifty range.

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