Showing posts with label tablet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tablet. Show all posts

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Impressions of Barnes and Nobel Nook Tablet

I saw a co-worker carrying his Barnes and Noble Nook Color around a lot, so I asked him about it. He said that he was pleased with it. So when the Nook Tablet came out, I compared it with the Amazon Kindle Fire and decided that the Nook Tablet has a better package over all: more RAM (1GB vs. 512MB), more flash storage (16GB vs. 8GB), and the Nook has a microSD slot that the Fire does not. So when B&N offered me a $25 discount as a former Borders' customer, I got one for my daughter.

But now I am starting to have second thoughts. The Nook feels nice when used for reading books purchased from Barnes and Nobel, but that seems to be the only thing it is good for. Since we have not had time to watch videos on it yet, I can't really say much about that except that video streaming from the same providers, Hulu and Netflix, should not differ much from using the same apps on a similar Android tablet.

The main problem is that, the Nook limits user storage to 1GB out of the 16GB in total, which means in practical terms, one can not install much of anything on it. I did install the Amazon App Store on it via side-loading. Now it refuses to install Kindle for Android.

Looks like it's time to root the device -- I was going to wait until the device is out of warranty. I understand that B&N is competing with Amazon. But limiting what the device does for its customers is not the right way to do it.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Time for PoE Powered Tablet

I am a little surprised about not seeing more main stream US retail outlets pushing Android based tablets, although those devices are flooding online shops such as Amazon and eBay. My un-researched guess is that the Chinese manufacturers somehow managed to miss the holiday shopping season in this country in terms of negotiating with the buyers of the large retail chains.

This weekend's local news paper showed a couple of places selling these Androids, including Best Buy, K-Mart and Staples. I went to Best Buy and looked at a couple of them briefly. I liked what I saw. Best Buy showed one live Archos 7. The touch GUI seems a little less responsive than the iPod Touch. Otherwise, I can definitely see using it to read a book or watch a video.

Back to the point in the subject line of my post. I saw a few models on eBay with Ethernet in their specs. In my first ever blog post on Sina.com two years ago, I suggested that someone should come up with a PoE (Power-over-Ethernet) powered notebook or netbook PC. Some of the netbooks were getting close to the 30W an IEEE 802.3at port could supply back then. Today's crop of Android tablets can definitely be powered and probably charged at the same time by a PoE port.

So, here is my free creative idea to the tablet makers: Create one that takes AC power from a PoE switch port. I think a lot of the doctors in my hospital will like it.