Looking back at a early Apple-influenced Tablet

by Kris_Tuttle on January 26, 2010

Back in 1994 I started sport­ing around with the tablet com­puter pic­tured below. At the time I was on the Insti­tu­tional Sales desk of S.G. War­burg on 52nd Street in NYC. So of course every­one thought I was quite the nerd. How­ever it was made by a com­pany we were talk­ing to about research cov­er­age and some­one needed to try it out.

TelePad1a 300px.jpg

The com­pany had these units designed by the same design firm that Apple was using and accord­ing to the CEO even some of the same peo­ple were involved in this project. The device was then man­u­fac­tured by IBM. So the fit, fin­ish and qual­ity was quite good. The sur­face remains very pleas­ant and can be described as a kind of sueded metal overall.

The guts of the machine were pretty stan­dard. Either a 386 or a 486 pow­ers it and it runs Win­dows with all the stan­dard ele­ments. It also has a key­board and a small bar that folds out in the back to allow the unit to stand as you can see in the other pic­ture. Also shown below is the pen which was needed to work with the touch screen.

Basi­cally when at a desk this com­puter func­tions much like a small desk­top. The dif­fer­ence is that when you carry it around the touch screen and pen mean that many oper­a­tions can be per­formed on the go and more eas­ily than would be pos­si­ble with a laptop.

Of course the TelePad didn’t take off and the com­pany is gone now along with their thinly traded stock and war­rants. One obvi­ous prob­lem at the time was the lack of wire­less net­work­ing and devel­op­ment of the Inter­net. Most of the time the main appli­ca­tion run­ning would be Word or Excel.

The dis­play and pen inter­face were also not a joy to use. The screen was not very bright. The pen wasn’t very sen­si­tive and there was no effec­tive hand­writ­ing recog­ni­tion or even ges­ture sup­port back then. So it was a nov­elty. If I remem­ber cor­rectly they were not cheap either. I bought one but was given a spe­cial price, I think I paid around $1,500 for the whole kit.

TelePad2a 300 px.jpg

Now that this lit­tle bit of nos­tal­gia is out of the way what does it mean for the Apple Tablet of 2010?

I’ve seen what appears to be a real set of images on what the Apple tablet will be but I’ll reserve judge­ment until I really know the details. One thing that I noted in the unver­i­fied images is the MacOS screen. If that’s the basis for the user inter­face I think it means that we still have more work to do.

Dif­fer­ent form fac­tors demand dif­fer­ent, more purpose-built, inter­faces. When the Black­Berry came out it had a four line dis­play and had all the con­trols needed to process email effec­tively. Nobody wants Win­dows on a small device.

Apple did a sep­a­rate OS for the iPhone and that has served them quite well. Of course the tablet is in the mid­dle and com­bines fea­tures of a smart phone with those of a small lap­top com­puter. Spe­cial appli­ca­tions like an eReader would come for free in the bar­gain. But the OS should be spe­cial. Com­bin­ing fea­tures of the iPhone with an eReader and maybe a few other ser­vices that will be a good fit for tablet usage. Nobody is going to want to use the Adobe Cre­ative Suite on this or even the Microsoft Office Suite. They may wish to post to a blog, make and show pre­sen­ta­tions, watch movies and videos, play games, etc. The tablet should be dif­fer­ent, not a shrunken lap­top or a big iPhone with a touchscreen.

I’m sure the device is going to be “nice” but so was the Mac­book Air for which there really didn’t turn out to be a mar­ket for. My other worry is that com­pe­ti­tion will mean we may not be able to get every­thing we want. I’d love to see Apple and Ama­zon work together on this.

Like many I’m eager to see the facts which will be out soon enough. I did want to share these pic­tures though. The TelePad is still a very nice lit­tle com­puter, kind of like the Motorola Razor of 10 years ago.

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