The iPad from 1998

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Luke Miani

Luke Miani

Күн бұрын

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The Sharp Mobilon Tripad is a very innovative laptop tablet hybrid device... from 1998! This thing is seriously ahead of it's time and vertainly very reminiscent of the modern day iPads! Today let's unbox a sealed vintage tablet and find out what makes this thing so special!
time stamps
0:00 I found a sealed vintage 'iPad'
2:06 Unboxing
4:41 Device setup
6:56 What makes it special?
8:42 Insanely cool features!
11:45 Why did it fail?
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Пікірлер: 410
@lukemiani
@lukemiani Ай бұрын
What are some of the coolest old pieces of tech from this era? Plus, check out FREE Download Filmora 13 PC:bit.ly/3x2eSaj
@edgarwalk5637
@edgarwalk5637 Ай бұрын
The PSION 5mx.
@Nobachu
@Nobachu Ай бұрын
i have no idea
@NexGen-3D
@NexGen-3D Ай бұрын
I had a Laptop made by Canon with a built in injet printer, I think from memory, it was a 486 processor and it was the first machine I ran Linux on...yes I'm old, I think it was called a a NoteJet.
@NexGen-3D
@NexGen-3D Ай бұрын
Oh another one I had, was the Tapwave Zodiac, at the time, this was the most stunning handheld console with almost no games for it, but the few there was, were far better than anything else on the market, and better than anything many years later, ran PalmOS.
@NexGen-3D
@NexGen-3D Ай бұрын
Oh and don't forget about the HP iPAQ and the Dell Axim, I owned these too, the later had an nVidia GPU too.
@iCaveDave
@iCaveDave Ай бұрын
When you asked what Access is I was stunned. That was MS Office’s Database application back in the day, did a bunch of work on that in high school
@OverTheHorizon840
@OverTheHorizon840 Ай бұрын
Now days there are Apple iPads everywhere and you can send mail via the internet.
@calorion
@calorion Ай бұрын
I hated that app so much.
@MrCed122
@MrCed122 Ай бұрын
Back in the day? It's still part of the Microsoft 365 suite, we use it at work to modify our PostgreSQL in a more graphical way and to store temporary data. One of our clients was still using it for time management up until 2021.
@_sabot
@_sabot Ай бұрын
Entire companies were (or still) based on MS Access. There was always this one dude who knew his way around it, fiddled his strange VBA macros together and was therefore irredeemable.
@calorion
@calorion Ай бұрын
@@_sabot You mean "irreplaceable," but I like the idea of Access experts being irredeemable :->
@Cartagena1
@Cartagena1 Ай бұрын
YOOOOO. OK, so I remember seeing a picture of one of these things appearing in a magazine at my mom’s hair salon when I was in middle school. That was the only time I ever saw any evidence of this thing existing and then NEVER heard about it again, but I remember seeing the ad and thinking it was the coolest computer I’d ever seen and for like a year I wanted it more than anything I’d ever wanted in my entire life at that point (it’s since been replaced by a desire for affordable housing and a viable sense of self-worth, but I digress). After awhile I forgot about it entirely and life went on. I randomly thought about it again sometime in my early 20s during the netbook craze and thought about going online to look for one, but I couldn’t for the life of me remember the model number and nobody I asked had any idea what I was talking about. Completely frustrating. When I tell you as soon as I saw the thumbnail for this video my heart STOPPED. I DIDN’T imagine it after all, it really WAS a thing that existed! VALIDATION
@MrGHLover107
@MrGHLover107 Ай бұрын
synchronicity is the concept of meaningful coincidences where events align in a significant way. In this case, it's like the universe or your subconscious mind bringing back something you once encountered but had forgotten about, only for it to resurface unexpectedly when you least expect it.
@miranduri
@miranduri Ай бұрын
I enjoyed your comment so much.
@sufferingincorporatedtm1781
@sufferingincorporatedtm1781 Ай бұрын
excellent comment
@vvgr409
@vvgr409 Ай бұрын
Good video and nice device. One thing - Windows CE is not based on Windows 95. It is completely separate codebase based on different kernel, not based on Windows 9x or Windows NT. It was created by Microsoft for devices like PDA, mobile phones (mobile Windows up to Windows Phone 7 was based on Windows CE), embedded devices etc. It also doesn't run desktop Windows software. I guess this was the reason why this device wasn't very popular.
@orangeyellow-me1pz
@orangeyellow-me1pz Ай бұрын
Windows mobile 6.x and lower was very popular and it was running Windows ce.
@ELMASQUELAMONTA
@ELMASQUELAMONTA Ай бұрын
What was the original price
@lpemkz
@lpemkz Ай бұрын
I had a Compaq iPAQ and an HP iPAQ with windows CE. A few years later I bought an HTC Phone with a sliding keyboard. I used them as an MP3 Player, to work with Excel sheets and for directions and maps with the Rand McNally road atlas later I used Google Maps.
@thewiirocks
@thewiirocks Ай бұрын
Exactly this. Windows CE was the kiss of death for any product. No one took it seriously outside of a small handful of enthusiasts. Microsoft tried to bring the same Kiss of Death to the Dreamcast and caused Sega to back away so fast it would make your head spin.
@Epicgamer_Mac
@Epicgamer_Mac Ай бұрын
Microsoft made devices that were PDA? Naughty Microsoft
@Martin_from_SC
@Martin_from_SC Ай бұрын
It failed because it was Windows CE. it was extremely limited.
@_sabot
@_sabot Ай бұрын
And CE didn't based on Win95 (and neither on NT), it was it's complete own thing.
@thelbtlover
@thelbtlover Ай бұрын
Yeah but you could say the same thing about the iPad. iPads didn't run full Windows software yet they took off. Why? Because people actually built programs for them. Windows CE wasn't the problem, it was the lack of apps. The same thing that killed Windows Phone, Windows RT, and what will kill Windows 11 in S mode. Also, the iPad was treated as a standalone device. Apple didn't expect you to have to plug it into a computer in order to do anything meaningful with it. Just the fact that they felt the need to have this device (and all Windows CE devices) plug into a computer shows you that they didn't take Windows CE seriously as a standalone operating system.
@rickiehoxton
@rickiehoxton Ай бұрын
Win CE was garbage! Vastly inferior to palm and psion. Typical Microsoft
@gehteuchnichtsan7911
@gehteuchnichtsan7911 Ай бұрын
lol ipad os is even more limited now hahaha
@kendricrautomusprime
@kendricrautomusprime Ай бұрын
My words exactly 😆👍
@rfog
@rfog Ай бұрын
Luke, the "thing" at minute 2:27 is not a VGA but a RS232 Serial Port, or for a mouse or industrial usage. VGA connector has 3 lines of pins.
@thomas_xsg
@thomas_xsg Ай бұрын
When a gen Y talks about 80/90s stuff and gets half of it wrong 😅
@DavidWasman
@DavidWasman Ай бұрын
So, uh, that dongle is a Serial Port. Not VGA.
@orangeyellow-me1pz
@orangeyellow-me1pz Ай бұрын
Lol, give him a break. He was much too young to really know what it was.
@c0rnd0g_19
@c0rnd0g_19 Ай бұрын
Came down here to say the same.
@TheCatherineCC
@TheCatherineCC Ай бұрын
I hereby call this meeting of the ibuprofen club to order...
@jamestomato1744
@jamestomato1744 Ай бұрын
@@TheCatherineCC (I mean me personally, I'm more of the Acetaminophen club to be honest)...
@ken1w
@ken1w Ай бұрын
Also known as “Clio” by Vadem, the company that developed it. I owned one, and used it actively for a few years. Quite usable for basic “office” functions, like word processing, spreadsheets, email, etc. I really liked the keyboard feel although not full-sized. I often used my fingernail on the screen instead of the stylus. The location of stick-like battery also served as a handle to make it easy to grip and hold with one hand in tablet mode, unlike recent iPads with “edge-to-edge” screen. When I pulled it out in a public place, people would ask me about it because it was mostly unknown even when new and being sold by Vadem and Sharp. It failed because it ran Windows CE, the light-weight mobile version of Windows that never caught on.
@SvenReinck
@SvenReinck Ай бұрын
This is literally modern archeology ❤
@bionic_warrior
@bionic_warrior Ай бұрын
Bit sad we didn’t see your dads old one get fired up to see what he used it for back in the day! Very interesting device glad I now know it existed.
@takwu0
@takwu0 Ай бұрын
these devices do not have persistent storage, so once the main battery charge is gone, it uses the coin battery to keep the data. once that is gone too, all your data and apps are gone. basically factory reset. you could save some files to flash memory card, but that can be accessed with any card reader in another device.
@hilleldei9174
@hilleldei9174 Ай бұрын
Love the aesthetic.
@mibnsharpals
@mibnsharpals Ай бұрын
From today's perspective it was modest, but not back then. Windows CE ran on many devices that required little power and were designed for specific purposes. Especially, diagnostic devices and POS systems. It was also real-time capable. But it wasn't a universal operating system, but rather modular. If necessary you could also just install the kernel. And this device was probably intended more for warehouse management.
@iblackfeathers
@iblackfeathers Ай бұрын
1998 was in the decade where decent usb ports didn’t exist yet. that form factor was related to the i-opener, an internet appliance with the same form factor but not portable. it was mean to go in the kitchen or desk and hook with a landline for internet. folks back then were hacking it by multibooting it and making a full blown pc for under $200. that was big back then when average pcs were considered very expensive.
@fred-youtube
@fred-youtube Ай бұрын
To the point that the fompany filed for bankruptcy because the I-openets were sold at a loss.
@Garrettdx1988
@Garrettdx1988 Ай бұрын
I had no idea this thing existed and I'm genuinely impressed. Apparently I wouldn't have needed much more power from a computer back in the day because all I did was use Internet Explorer (or AOL) and play those pre-installed games
@belstar1128
@belstar1128 Ай бұрын
you would need more power even for that lol
@paranoidhumanoid
@paranoidhumanoid Ай бұрын
I love this. You see the visionary ingenuity of Japanese companies like Sharp long before these form factors became a mainstay.
@manaphyex3964
@manaphyex3964 Ай бұрын
When the PC RAM was smaller than CPU cache memory of today.
@Fetidaf
@Fetidaf Ай бұрын
I honestly have more RAM than I did storage 10-15 years ago lol Kinda crazy how computers evolve like that and so quickly.
@fred-youtube
@fred-youtube Ай бұрын
Just imagine Win CE on a modern system
@mradford10
@mradford10 Ай бұрын
I’m the same vintage as your Dad so was there at the time. These types of devices failed for a number of reasons. They were outrageously expensive and you could put that money towards a desktop and get way more functionality - mobile computing was a poor experience to say the least. Devices like this tried to sell a dream. They were horrible at networking, as Windows at the time was horrible at networking just in general. They were janky in that there were lots of drivers and updates, installing applications was tedious and not always completely successful and printing was not enjoyable to say the least. So while this device might trick you into thinking it was an iPad of its day, to compare the two devices is like comparing a Tesla to a potato. I’m not shocked they never succeeded.
@karolbabinski
@karolbabinski Ай бұрын
This is just perfect inspiration for a new Magic Keyboard design!
@FactsBeFacts
@FactsBeFacts Ай бұрын
Don't forget about the Toshiba Libretto from 1996 which ran full fat Windows. That was a netbook years before netbooks.
@gabrielgon3408
@gabrielgon3408 Ай бұрын
I love these old devices that got it right decades ago.
@christiancarter7563
@christiancarter7563 Ай бұрын
The fact that the battery worked is just 🤯
@user_data_missing
@user_data_missing Ай бұрын
I would really like to see a teardown of this thing
@RichWithTech
@RichWithTech Ай бұрын
It's gonna be less effort to open than convertable
@NomeIndeciso
@NomeIndeciso Ай бұрын
At 10:30 -- Now that this is older tech, it's actually almost charming and pretty funny how the audio recording and playback sounds like an early-1900's phonograph.
@aarupoudyal1378
@aarupoudyal1378 Ай бұрын
i have a samsung phone from i think 2009 which sounds exactly the same when using the audiorecording and playback
@Alexander0189
@Alexander0189 Ай бұрын
I actually LOVE this form factor. Would love this form factor in a modern laptop.
@ftnetops4264
@ftnetops4264 Ай бұрын
I had the compaq Tablet in School in 2005, and was the only one with a tablet. It was a killer device with onenote and kept me organized.
@mrspocksson9687
@mrspocksson9687 Ай бұрын
I had the MainSteet Networks Clio version of this device. Loved it except for WinCE. Not sure why I don’t have it today as it was a great form factor. Lack of WiFi was also a challenge, so was much more useful with a wifi card. Thanks for allowing me to reminisce. - Typed on a Handspring Prism with the cellular Springboard module.
@petersziraki7672
@petersziraki7672 Ай бұрын
I like these old-tech videos! Please do more :) .
@orlevene9964
@orlevene9964 Ай бұрын
I love the hinge mechanism and the ‏flexible screen positioning
@MichaelBelisarioDG
@MichaelBelisarioDG Ай бұрын
Interesting. I see similarities to the Apple eMate which was out in 1997.
@pankometa
@pankometa Ай бұрын
Nah, it was much better than eMate. eMate was more of a calculator on steroids. This was a full-sized notebook / handheld.
@wesschmunk5783
@wesschmunk5783 Ай бұрын
I had one of these that I bought at a yard sale. It had never been used. I was always amazed at the battery life. I had a serial to usb dongle, which made it easy to interface with a pc.
@neversaynever5157
@neversaynever5157 Ай бұрын
Great Video i wish i had 1 of those at that time , my 1st computer was a Nokia Ngage Phone/Game Deck it took me over a year to learn all the basic features it still runs today i bought it in 2004 i still love to use it for game play when i can even though im 56 🙂👍
@janquieldapper
@janquieldapper Ай бұрын
Fail for 2 reasons... NO Windows 95 / NO GAMES
@elrey7608
@elrey7608 Ай бұрын
hey Luke it would have been cool to review those word/excel/powerpoint pocket editions to see how far/close they are to the desktop counterparts, and if they were anywhere close, it'd definitely one-up the iPad.
@taxineil1
@taxineil1 Ай бұрын
Back in the 90's a friend got a brilliant job testing and selling this sort of gear.One time he came home with a tablet that was A4 size,had a stylus like the s-pen which plugged into the screen.It was nearly 1" thick had its own shoulder bag,weighed a lot! and was never released as it had too many faults.At the time though it was straight out of Star Trek-and he knew it,posing everywhere.He worked for them about six years and retired before he was 40 a full blown millionaire.
@houseoflords2010
@houseoflords2010 Ай бұрын
Do more content like this right here. Great trip down memory lane.
@pinoymusician
@pinoymusician Ай бұрын
I actually grabbed a Vadem Clio badged version of this off eBay to get through last couple couple years of college. Super cheap way to get office suite. I used a PCMCIA to SD adapter for file transfers and then later a PCMCIA D-Link wireless card once I had a home server going. This was around 2007ish when a new vista laptop was $900 and ran like trash out of the box.
@bricktasticanimations4834
@bricktasticanimations4834 Ай бұрын
This is officially the coolest thing that I've seen today so far! WOW!
@kakegarcia8056
@kakegarcia8056 Ай бұрын
It is interesting to see how old devices proven to really be future proof with less technology since they can operate FOREVER without needing updates and just needing batteries to fully operate and do what they were designed for, still so much to learn about what really tech is and how things can last… Bests regards from a Venezuelan follower in Panama!
@rogerlai3197
@rogerlai3197 Ай бұрын
I used a Sharp PDA back in the late 80's and early 90's, and then late 90's I used PDA like HP, NEC, etc running Windows CE, and they weree great products. Of course when come to comparing the iPad launched back in 2007 and later, these vintage PDAs were going nowhere, but they did a great age for mobile Digital Assistants to tons of business executives. Thanks to Sharp and a few good companies like HP, Compaq, Microsoft, etc.
@PaulPhillipsUK
@PaulPhillipsUK Ай бұрын
That's one of the most impressive retro finds I've ever seen
@bubblegumgun3292
@bubblegumgun3292 Ай бұрын
thats really thinking ahead of the curve , what a great design
@wokecults
@wokecults Ай бұрын
Amazing device. I didn't know about it.
@lg.-
@lg.- Ай бұрын
What an excellent video, Luke! Can't believe this thing existed back in 98, way ahead of its time indeed!
@underover101
@underover101 Ай бұрын
That screen made me thought that my screen was too dark for a moment.
@kavierocks
@kavierocks Ай бұрын
You know someone is young when they don't know what Microsoft Access is.
@johngossman1497
@johngossman1497 Ай бұрын
Access was a database. And if your database out grew it used Visual Basic Script (which was very powerful, if a little clunky) and could ODBC into SqlServer, Oracle, etc. I automated my companies entire data production system using it.
@Professorke
@Professorke Ай бұрын
Had I known that this existed then, I would have bought it, but here in Belgium they are always far behind with modern stuff, but with the arrival of the Internet it has improved and so you keep up with the times.
@Rabbit_AF
@Rabbit_AF Ай бұрын
I used a NEC MobilePro in College and it was like a half laptop. I recall using it as a main computer for a while because my VPR Matrix Laptop was always in for repairs.
@f0gman75
@f0gman75 Ай бұрын
My cousin worked at Vadem and brought the Clio to my house that I got to borrow for a couple weeks when it was just released on the market. At the time I had a Newton MP2000 so he knew I would be interested as the PDA niche was extremely geeky. Other than the larger color screen and the nifty folding mechanism, it was inferior to the Newton mostly because of limited software capability. But to this day I still wonder about having an iPad version of the Clio with the obvious silicon improvements made over the last 20+ years.
@absolute_tk
@absolute_tk Ай бұрын
One of my fav videos
@RichardSmithers
@RichardSmithers Ай бұрын
I had one of these. It was great - for a little while. Eventually it was really only useful for very basic word processing and playing what games you could find and that would run at a decent speed. Speed was definitely and issue. Windows CE with lack of compatible apps was another issue. Also connectivity. I remember it being finicky to sync and so very slow when it did work. It does have a PC card slot and I did find a network adaptor that helped with browsing speed. Overall, it was a great idea and design, but the hardware just wasn't quite ready yet rendering it as little more that a big PDA. This was also when Palm Pilot and Windows CE handhelds were on the market. Better supported and more portable.
@dibyadip
@dibyadip Ай бұрын
Hey Luke! Experiencing déjà vu in your video! I distinctly recall Windows XP tablet PCs from the early 2000s, roughly between 2001 and 2003. So, tablet PCs definitely existed back then. It feels like DELL and HP were the top hardware manufacturers during that time.
@junevortexmusic7950
@junevortexmusic7950 Ай бұрын
Waoooo. I remember this . That design was decades ahead of.
@timr.2257
@timr.2257 Ай бұрын
The key thing was how much at launch? And Sharp isn't a niche company lol
@orangeyellow-me1pz
@orangeyellow-me1pz Ай бұрын
Especially back then. The kid just doesn't know.
@jwmcateer3284
@jwmcateer3284 Ай бұрын
I had one of these and they weren’t cheap compared to a fully powered laptop. I think retail was $1200 and I got mine new/on sale a year or two after they came out for $800. Windows CE was a huge limitation. Basically it was a big Personal Digital Assistant. I absolutely loved the form factor though. I think it was about 3lbs with most of the weight in the hinge/battery. It’d be cool to mod an iPad mini into the screen or something. The keyboard was small but I enjoyed it. Cool to see that dug out of the ashes. I wonder how much Luke had to pay for it?
@paper_gem
@paper_gem Ай бұрын
This is amazing.
@shadowace104
@shadowace104 Ай бұрын
i had a dell inspiron duo around 2011 and at the time i thought it was very futuristic. never thought the exact same idea existed 13 years earlier
@andrewdempsey5312
@andrewdempsey5312 Ай бұрын
I remember when this came out, my first year in the US. I almost bought one but I had to buy a car and furnish an apartment etc. such a cool device for the time.
@Jester5110
@Jester5110 Ай бұрын
After watching the other two, of your videos on the subject (first beeing from July 4th, 2015), I'd say the second one is the best produced one. It's going more deeply into the technical aspect of that device. But one can clearly see, how much you are personally into this little machine, considering you went to the trouble of purchasing a brand new device for your third video. :o)
@silvy7394
@silvy7394 Ай бұрын
Electrical engineer here: If the battery has a proper BMS then it definitely can last this long in storage. Those cells can sit at a low SOC for a long time and still work when you try to recharge them, as long as the BMS or self discharge didnt pull the cells under 2.8v. The only degradation that would happen otherwise is callendar aging, in which these batteries are good for at least 25 years if you dont really use them much during that duration.
@mrocob83
@mrocob83 Ай бұрын
To me this would have been something I'd totally get. It's design is pretty cool. I wonder how videos look playing in it. You could have used it like a tablet in the car
@Tech_NO_Tech
@Tech_NO_Tech Ай бұрын
Once the battery was completely charged did it work unplugged ? And for how long ? Great video 👍👍👍
@SeanTheTuner_Official
@SeanTheTuner_Official Ай бұрын
that was so cool!
@skisavoie
@skisavoie Ай бұрын
My favourite at the time was the Psion range of PDA’s. Their Symbian operating system also powered the many Nokia “smart” phones in the late 1990’s early 2000’s, before Apple blew them all away with the first iPhone. Great video, thanks.
@Pasi123
@Pasi123 Ай бұрын
Symbian was still around in the early 2010's too. Nokia 808 from 2012 was the last Symbian smartphone
@abdelali9279
@abdelali9279 Ай бұрын
Quite interesting to see basically the same idea behind the iPad Pro withagic keyboard back in the late 90's
@SamAlexander1
@SamAlexander1 Ай бұрын
I worked at a hospital around 2000 and was tasked to maintain about 30 of these for our medical staff. They were nice, but they had their limits. When the batteries were totally drained they lost all data, that was the biggest catch. Also wireless didn't exist so they had to be wired by ethernet though dialip didn work well. When I went on call I took one with me and used it for a few years with a Windows CE RDP client or Citrix client to dial into network and remote into servers or apps. It was a nice drive and yes way ahead of it's time. If screen was better, fewer issues with batteries, and if wireless was a thing then maybe it would have lasted better. Amazing doe business use, not so much for consumers.
@dewaynehowse231
@dewaynehowse231 Ай бұрын
I had one. It was amazing. Very slow but awesome.
@RKingis
@RKingis Ай бұрын
Definitely one of the coolest WinCE devices around then.
@dctaken
@dctaken Ай бұрын
Reminds me of a Dell Inspiron mini duo that I loved.
@sharatwilliams9995
@sharatwilliams9995 Ай бұрын
“…pocket access, whatever that is…” 😂😂😂
@MD-01
@MD-01 Ай бұрын
Impressive. In 1998 , I would definitely have bought it and installed chrome ASAP
@Xpurple
@Xpurple Ай бұрын
I used WinCE for years. It was rather limited, but worked fine for what it did. Granted, I mostly used mine as an eBook reader and to take notes.
@JackStavris
@JackStavris Ай бұрын
People seem to conveniently forget that Microsoft and their partners were in the tablet game for over 15 years before current day Apple was ever making these devices (I say current day because they did have the Newton, but it was also a failure). Between PalmTop PCs, PDAs, and even the Sega Dreamcast, Windows CE was everywhere and was the basis of Microsoft's mobile platform until Windows Phone 7. Even post-Windows CE there was always an effort to run regular Windows on tablets dating all the way back to Windows 3.1 which had a specific version called "Windows 3.1 for Pen Computing". Windows XP had a dedicated Tablet PC Edition as well, and starting with Windows 7, full multi-touch support was added (even though the UI wasn't suited for it). People only remember Windows 8 "copying the iPad" which was never true. Sure, they adapted regular Windows with a mobile-oriented touch UI, but as far as Microsoft's efforts in the tablet game, they've been there since day 0 in the early 1990s. It's a shame they never actually succeeded.
@orangeyellow-me1pz
@orangeyellow-me1pz Ай бұрын
They did succeed for a while. Windows Mobile controlled 42% of the market at one point. That's definitely winning.
@belstar1128
@belstar1128 Ай бұрын
yea but the problem was that windows was clunky with a touch screen and they kept trying to do silly things like handwriting recognition instead of an on screen keyboard. and the screens themselves were bad there is a reason why crts were the norm untill the mid 2000s
@georgeh6856
@georgeh6856 Ай бұрын
I owned an HP convertible laptop around 2006. It was Intel-based and ran full operating systems. The worst feature was its resistive touchscreen. The touchscreen made the actual screen appear much dimmer, had a plastic flexible covering (hence resistive), and you had to press down with the stylus to get it to work. My HP overheated and died about a month after warranty. Ugh. I also had a rental car a few years later with Ford Sync, running MS software on a resistive touchscreen. That was even worse without a stylus while driving.
@NewtonDKC
@NewtonDKC Ай бұрын
Oh I remember that device, or rather the original,it is based on. I believe the original was called the Vadem Clio (updated: oh nostalgia, Vadem licensed their orototu]yep design. To Hsarp, so sharp was first, Vadem re-acquired the license to their design and released 2. Versions of the Clio, both 640x480…a 3 version was planned running the Handheld PC version of WinCE and would have featured upgrades to the screen 800x600 and the switch to an ARM processor! My dream! Sadly it was a dream and never made it to production. Really though, the concept is solid; if Apple could engineer a hinge on the
@kendricrautomusprime
@kendricrautomusprime Ай бұрын
Luke you need to go back in time to 1995 and go forward from there when box computer stores were nearly everywhere you would be amazed what was coming out back then.
@toddkeith
@toddkeith Ай бұрын
Check out the Compaq Concerto. This was my first laptop ever with pen Windows. Awesome device at the time.
@whophd
@whophd Ай бұрын
When I owned and used a Newton eMate 300, this product was the natural choice for a replacement. It would have only got me halfway to the iPad Pro with Magic Keyboard in 2018 though. I suppose the 11-inch MacBook Air could maybe fill the gap in the second decade, but it had terrible battery life compared to ARM, whether in Macs, Newtons or Windows CE.
@user-zd7id9rx3f
@user-zd7id9rx3f Ай бұрын
AT&T released a tablet in 1993 called the EO Personal Communicator.
@JoeBruin1999
@JoeBruin1999 Ай бұрын
Your dad was alive in 1998! Impressive. That sounds mathematically... correct. This is the same WinCE I had on my HP Jornada. Look it up. It was super kewl, and impossible to touch type because they forgot one thing: you can't shrink human hands. Same reason the Toshiba Libretto never caught on. Look that up too. It's called "Human Factors" in Psychology or "Ergonomics" in Engineering. The 1990s was the computer miniaturization Inflection Point. We could finally make a laptop and keyboard smaller that the human hands could use. Final example of kewl but too small: HP Omnibook 800. It even had a pop out mouse! But the computer was way too small to use. BTW, you forgot to lose your mind at 3% battery. Cheers.
@NexGen-3D
@NexGen-3D Ай бұрын
I want to buy one of these and swap-out the internals for some modern hardware, I think it looks cool as, the form factor is perfect to be honest, slap in a RPI and newer touchscreen, :)
@johndam876
@johndam876 Ай бұрын
Your videos are amazing! Does the Legend himself reply? 😊🎉
@AshiqurRahman
@AshiqurRahman Ай бұрын
In my opinion, this is the most practical form of a tablet pc. I really need this kind of device. Apple won't make their ipad like this. Because that would make the Macbook obsolete .
@Ntyler01mil
@Ntyler01mil Ай бұрын
I always wanted one of those palmtop computers.
@JessicaFEREM
@JessicaFEREM Ай бұрын
the irony of calling anything "pocket" and having it be "handheld" edition on this behemoth of a laptop
@andrewstones2921
@andrewstones2921 Ай бұрын
You should research the Psion MC400 from almost 10 years earlier.. that was amazing but again let down by the screen
@festtone_
@festtone_ Ай бұрын
the idea of this laptop its verry interesant nowadays! I remember the power point draw idea similar to Canva
@andresbravo2003
@andresbravo2003 Ай бұрын
Geez this was old! Windows CE might not been my favorite, but I would prefer the modern iPad.
@smiththers2
@smiththers2 Ай бұрын
I have a laptop from 1998 with the original battery that works still, so I wouldn't be blown away if that one still works
@fidiak
@fidiak Ай бұрын
Nice, thank you
@KevinTumlinson
@KevinTumlinson Ай бұрын
Right now, among writers, there's a trend of dedicated writing machines. This would be perfect for focused writing.
@TomT-bn1lm
@TomT-bn1lm Ай бұрын
It's mostly about timing and price. This was probably very expensive and ahead of its time. It also ran on Windows CE, which was great, but limited for compatibility to any apps on regular Windows.
@darryljames0111
@darryljames0111 Ай бұрын
😮 It's like a Microsoft surface studio from the 90!
@rickiehoxton
@rickiehoxton Ай бұрын
“What’s access”…? Way to make me feel old!
@karolbabinski
@karolbabinski Ай бұрын
Amazing! 🙂
@ColezVidz
@ColezVidz Ай бұрын
Wow!
@Ntyler01mil
@Ntyler01mil Ай бұрын
I think the most interesting aspect of this device is the unique way the screen is mounted to the body of the laptop.
@Zantsak
@Zantsak Ай бұрын
It is nice to see someone from your generation appreciate what wowed us when we were your age. It is insane though that the Magic Keyboard is not that magic!
@spyharpy
@spyharpy Ай бұрын
So, what about the state of the battery? Did it get to a full charge and how quickly did it discharge?
@atlanticx100
@atlanticx100 Ай бұрын
The device makes me wonder if other companies have noticed it back in the day. My thought tech had not really caught up as regards memory, Processor, and storage. It was as if someone looking at the Star Trek note pads and communicators that Captain Kirk used and thought can we build it. Ironically the flip phone I felt was inspired by the communicator. But what a device that was. A true machine before its time.
@carltonleboss
@carltonleboss Ай бұрын
Cool stuff.
@davec3400
@davec3400 Ай бұрын
Surprise that thing didn't come with an AOL disk. Nice find :D
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