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All Tags » Productivity » Tablet PC » Gadgets » Technology (RSS)
  • Windows SideShow in a bag

    This is very, very cool, and I want one now . Imagine, as Kevin puts it, seeing e-mails, contact info or RSS feeds without removing your device from the bag. Simply awesome. The only thing that concerns me is that the Eleksen Wearable Display Module will apparently "offer a gigabyte of memory". Personally, I would rather something that communicated over WiFi and/or Bluetooth with Vista's Away Mode .
  • Addicted to EVDO

    If you listen to Mobile Tech Roundup , you'll know I picked up EVDO a few weeks back. (And if you don't listen to MoTR, well, why aren't you?). I am addicted to EVDO. It might not sound like such a big deal, but it's incredible when you no longer have to think about having a high-speed connection. It's a life-changing event the first time you sit in the doctor's office and you're online. Suddenly, the wait isn't such a big deal. I take the bus instead of the subway now because it's no longer "lost time" - I can sit there the entire time checking e-mail, etc. As much as I hate the idea of carrier lock-in with my laptop, it's making me think long and hard about a lot of the notebooks released recently with embedded WWAN support. The ThinkPad T60 and X60 are both available with embedded EVDO receivers (there is a slight bulge though). If the new ThinkPad tablet has EVDO, I might be willing to overlook the lower resolution screen. Of course, an always-on EVDO connection is a great complement...
  • OneNote 12 improvements for the Tablet PC

    OneNote is an amazing application on any computer, but it especially shines on the Tablet PC. The Ink experience within OneNote has improved considerably since the first beta was released in Office 2003. Most recently, SP1 added a number of changes including customizable pens, the scratch-out gesture, and real eraser support. OneNote “12” promises even more dramatic improvements in this space. Chris Pratley discussed some of those changes recently, including the hidden UI while inking, the lasso tool, support for pasting Ink, and a page that automatically expands as necessary. Even in its early beta state, the overall experience definitely feels more natural than it has in the past. When combined with other new features like embedded documents, these improvements are really making a killer Tablet PC application even better.
  • Productivity Tool of the Week: SharpKeys remaps your keys

    Vasanth finds a solution to one of my biggest complaints with my M200. I absolutely despise the location of the Windows key, and even the tilda is in awkward place. I'll probably just swap those two. I was googling for possible solutions like remapping the Alt key in my Tecra M4 to the Windows key. I found SharpKeys . It is a nice app which lets you map any key to another one. The application changes the registry to enable this mapping. This means I need not have it running all the time. There is also no delay because of this. I wonder if this also works in Vista. I'll give it a shot when I get home tonight.
  • Tablet PC Experience Pack

    Scoble just mentioned that the Tablet PC Experience Pack has been released. These are basically updated versions of PowerToys and applications you may have already had. Energy Blue is a theme that most of you probably already had. It looks like they've added a (pen-friendly) WMP skin to the mix. . Ink Art is an updated version (1.3) of the product once known as ArtRage. Ink Crossword is an updated (and much slicker) version of the NY Times Crossword PowerToy. Ink Desktop looks like it might be useful, I have to play with it a bit more. As you might expect, it allows you to write on the screen. (I wonder if it's is based on OrangeGuava ). I haven't played with Media Transfer yet, but I will update the post again when I've had a chance to do so over the next couple of days. As expected, the highly-anticipated Snipping Tool 2.0 is great. All in all, it looks like they've done a great job with this: a compilation of must-have stuff to really get the most out of the Tablet PC experience, all...
  • When OneNote becomes ThreeNote

    As is probably pretty obvious, I'm a huge, huge fan and advocate of OneNote. The promise of OneNote is a good one: I used to have many half-filled notepads in addition to notes in different places on my computer. Now, with OneNote, all of my notes are captured in a single place. Information is easily available to me, which means I can work much faster and be confident that I am making the most informed decisions for my clients. — Darrin Bishop, Senior Technical Specialist Sounds great, right? The only problem is that I use OneNote on three different machines on two different networks - my home desktop, my Tablet PC, and my work PC. As a result, I not have the digital equivalent of a bunch of half-filled notebooks. Those of you who do GTD know the virtues of reducing the number of inputs.... I've tried a number of things to help this as I'll discuss below, but the common problem with all of these solutions seems is that everything is file-based. OneNote .ONE files, however, are a single...