It's surface area compared to heat dissipated. WIth a tablet, you've got a lot more surface, so unless you put in some beast of a processor, you should be better off heatwise than with a handset.
He might have been tricked by two-touch in the interface.
A further update... you're spot on Stskeeps
Originally Posted by
Spoke to my colleague today and asked about Rover. he said he thought it was capactive touch because he was able use two fingers to move stuff around on the screen; he said it semed to work very well.....this was months ago.
So looks like I might have made a mistake.
Looking on the bright side, it does appear the touchscreen sensitivity problems of the former tablets may not plague the RX-51.
As long as the touchscreen sensitivity isn't in the toilet like all the previous tablets I don't care whether the RX-51 screen is capacitive or resistive!
man all the cool stuff happens while i'm away from my computer. Luckily I have my trusty nokia N810 with me! So the new photos look great, but I guess we're still left with the question of whether this thing is a phone or just data only. Or has that already been established and I'm just slacking? Also I LOVE the flush mount screen. Trying to click on things on the edge of the screen is a nightmare on the 810.
"Apart from 32GB info, another whould be a 3D task switcher/manager (he compared it with live preview in Windows 7) and that it runs incredibly smooth compared to anything on market at moment (3D acceleration of UI, and that was something we already knew)! For moment that`s all! He wasnt sure anyway about stylus (can`t remember about it) and the QWERTY keypad is much better designed than the one in N97 (wich is a good thing)!"
The above post said that the task switcher/manager is comparable to the windows 7 live preview....
I found a video on the live window preview in windows 7...
The above post said that the task switcher/manager is comparable to the windows 7 live preview....
I found a video on the live window preview in windows 7...
looks nice..
Way back in February, a Russian journalist described a task switcher that sounds a lot like what I think the Fremantle task switcher will look like:
Originally Posted by
...a novel, transparent widget based interface. Each running application gets it’s own semi-transparent widget to put it’s content in. Multiple applications can be stored in memory “for months”. E.g. when you are writing a document or e-mail, just swipe the finger through the screen and semi-transparent panels with active or pre-set applications and their content pop-up. Select one and you can start working with it at once.