Showing posts with label Click. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Click. Show all posts

Saturday, February 28, 2015

Opinion: What wearables need to do to make me click 'buy'

Wearable technology exists to satisfy strange curiosities. We're not talking "anime body pillow" levels, but more to the extent that it's a little odd to want to a camera mounted to your eyeglasses. Wearables aim to fill technological voids where voids don't exist, by putting computers into watches and vibration motors into bangles and earrings. There's no doubt retrofitting these "dumb" gadgets with cutting-edge improvements adds new dimensions of functionality and fashion, but is any of it necessary?

Necessity may be the mother of invention, but wearables somehow exist without it. By veering from this traditional development path, many weird proofs-of-concept have rushed to market. But once smart companies begin to get behind the idea, will wearables have their chance to find solid ground?

Lumo liftCan't see it? The Lumo Lift is that little square

Even if they do stick the landing, I'm still not sure that I can be convinced to buy in. That's not to say I haven't been tempted by a few wearables. My colleagues have caught me in a cold sweat before, hovering over the "buy" button for a Pebble smartwatch several times. I've somehow yet to buckle.

As someone who absolutely loves tech, I want to love wearables. But there are still a few pesky things that make resisting them all too easy.

Wearables are misguided at the moment. After all, the most alluring hook going for them isn't utility - their biggest selling point - but instead stunning design. Taking a few hints from skilled crafters of watches, fine jewelry and eyeglasses - and in the case of the Misfit Swarovski Shine, partnering with them - tech companies are pumping out some seriously attractive products.

LG Watch UrbaneJust a dapper dude and his LG Watch Urbane

Just rattling off a few examples, the LG Watch Urbane, Apple Watch and Google Glass are each delectably crafted and fashionable. And their efforts to break into the fashion-savvy world haven't gone unnoticed. I too enjoy stellar design as much as the next person, but it doesn't distract me from seeing these wearables for what they are: technologies that have come to market bass ackwards. Maybe I'm just strange, but I require function before form and too few wearables have just that.

Wearables aim to ease modern struggles by minimizing the effort and time gap that exists between you and your information. As superficial as that seems on paper, it's easy to get sucked into the idea that wearables will make your life easier. To an extent, some of them do. A product that simplifies a pesky sequence of movements is convenient, but that doesn't necessarily make it innovative.

Smartwatches like the Moto 360 and the upcoming Apple Watch each claim to bring new functionality to the table that smartphones aren't capable of providing. Aside from biometric readings, smartwatches primarily act as a vessel to push smartphone notifications straight to your wrist, eliminating the need to fish your phone out of your pocket.

Sony SmartEyeglass AttachCameras attached to anything is a solid value proposition

Other devices like the Sony SmartEyeglass Attach look to streamline that process even further by abandoning the wrist and moving straight to your face, pushing the info straight to your eyes by integrating a camera and screen into an ordinary-looking set of glasses. The camera nixes the need to yank your phone out to snap a pic and the screen discretely displays notifications.

On a more fashionable note, Kovert Designs makes smart jewelry called Altruis. The concept of putting micro-electronics like a vibration motor inside of a gold necklace is novel, but ultimately each piece of jewelry costs more than $400 and does nothing beyond notify you of alerts on your phone.

Convenience alone is enough to sell some, but I can't be bothered to invest in these expensive devices that only shave just a couple seconds away from the process of checking my phone for notifications or taking photos.

No wearables display a mastery of balancing function and fashion, but a few show promise. So few, that the first company to strike gold with that perfect brew may leave the competition very far behind.

Pebble TimePebble Time keeps it simple

However, until then, the scramble of experimentation will continue. And while I think that only good can come out of this painful but necessary iterative trial period in the evolution of wearables, it's just another reason I talk myself down from investing in wearables in the first place.

Am I suggesting that we should all stop buying wearables? Of course not. It's one of the sectors in technology that I'm most excited about for the future because it is uniquely positioned to help keep us healthy and entertained in fun, new ways. But in its current form, it needs work before I hit the "buy" button.


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Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Hands-on review: Toshiba Satellite Click Mini

The Satellite Click Mini could've turned out very differently. Toshiba lifted the lid on its titular convertible tablet at CES 2015, but instead of emerging as a miniature version of the - quite frankly, ugly - Click 2 it's a surprisingly attractive and portable budget package.

Toshiba's £250 (around US$384, or AUS$492) device arrives in the form of a Windows 8.1 tablet that turns into a laptop when docked into the keyboard. At a fairly uncommon 8.9 inches it straddles the empty space between 8-inch tablets such as the Toshiba Encore 2 and larger 10-inch convertibles with keyboards like the Asus Transformer Book T100.

Toshiba Satellite Click Mini

The Click Mini is a great size for a companion device to use when away from a larger laptop or PC, providing more than enough screen real-estate to get most tasks done while keeping the device plenty portable. It weighs just 999 grams with the keyboard dock attached, and a featherlight 470 grams without.

The Click Mini is one of the few small-to-medium-sized Windows tablets on the market with a 1900 x 1200 pixel-resolution display (toting a healthy 254ppi), which for a long time was exclusive the impressive but costly Lenovo ThinkPad 8.

Toshiba Satellite Click Mini

The display is housed behind a vibrant IPS panel with superb viewing angles and colours that reminded me of the first time I laid eyes on the HP Chromebook 11's punchy pixels. It's just a shame that the thick, almost off-putting black bezel surrounding it is so chunky.

Connectivity-wise, the Satellite Click Mini packs a passable selection of ports into the keyboard, including microSD, full-size SD, micro-HDMI and micro-USB (for charging). Unfortunately Toshiba only managed to cram one full-size USB 2.0 port into the chassis, something you may have to get used to in the impeding one-port future that awaits.

Communication is provided via onboard 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0, and the device is WiDi ready. On its front is a 2-megapixel camera which is complimented by a 5-megapixel snapper around the back.

Toshiba Satellite Click Mini

Powering the Click Mini is an Intel AtomTM Z3735F CPU backed up by 2GB of DDR3 RAM. Storage is provided in the form of 32GB eMMC flash memory, which can be expanded by a further 256GB if each of the SD card slots are used to their full 128GB capacity.

The tablet felt nippy enough during our brief time with the device, opening Windows 8.1 apps and menus without experiencing slowdown.

The most noteworthy spec on the Click Mini's sheet is its touted 16-hour battery life supposedly achievable with the battery-equipped keyboard dock connected (or eight without), something we'll be testing in our full review.

The keyboard clearly isn't going to be as comfortable to type on as tablets for devices 10-inches and above, but it's serviceable enough to carry out light productivity work. It suffers from noticeable flex in the middle region of the keyboard which only adds to its unsuitability for heavier tasks.

Toshiba Satellite Click Mini

Plumping the components into the tablet part of the Click Mini has made it top heavy as you would expect, but it's by no means a problem and doesn't come close to tipping over when you're typing. It's suitable for holding in tablet mode for reading sessions thanks to its lightweight nature and the display's wide viewing angles.

It clicks into the keyboard using a row of mechanical teeth, which proved a little awkward to insert and ironically didn't produce much of a click to signal when attached. Our sample was an engineering work-in-progress according to the Toshiba representative demoing it, so that could have been to blame.

If you're in the game for a keyboard-equipped Windows 8.1 tablet that doubles up a laptop, the Toshiba Click Mini could prove fantastic value for money.

It bears the hallmarks of a great companion device thanks to its portable nature, clear IPS display and potentially excellent battery life. It's less suitable as a main machine due to to its low internal storage and middling keyboard, and those seeking a more durable multimedia system probably won't find what they're looking for here.

The Click Mini undoubtedly resides at a level of quality above the dearth of low-cost tablets flooding the market, and the question will be how it goes up against competing tablets in its price bracket - including the Asus Transformer Book T200 and the Lenovo Yoga Tablet 2.


View the original article here