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	<title>Personal Technology &#187; Tablet</title>
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		<title>Computer Buyers Have to Consider System Upgrades</title>
		<link>http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20090422/computer-buyers-have-to-consider-system-upgrades/</link>
		<comments>http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20090422/computer-buyers-have-to-consider-system-upgrades/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Apr 2009 01:02:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Walter S. Mossberg</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20090422/computer-buyers-have-to-consider-system-upgrades/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This year, with Microsoft and Apple set to upgrade operating systems, Walt Mossberg's spring computer buyer's guide focuses on buying a machine for the new OS you may soon want.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If you&#8217;re shopping for a computer now, there&#8217;s an added factor to consider. Later this year, both of the major computer operating systems, Microsoft&#8217;s Windows Vista and Apple&#8217;s Mac OS X Leopard, will be replaced with major new versions: Windows 7 and Mac OS X Snow Leopard. And that affects what PC hardware you should choose.</p>
<p>So, in this annual spring computer buyer&#8217;s guide, I&#8217;ll pay particular attention to buying a machine for the new OS you may soon want.</p>
<p>This guide covers both laptops and desktops and is aimed at average users doing typical tasks. It doesn&#8217;t apply to hard-core gamers or video, audio or photo professionals.</p>
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<p><strong>Cost:</strong> Prices on Windows PCs have plummeted. You can buy a Windows desktop for under $300, without a monitor, and a low-end, full-size Windows laptop for around $500. If you are willing to settle for a so-called netbook &#8212; essentially just a small, cheap laptop running the aging Windows XP operating system &#8212; you can get a decent one for $350, or less. Even Apple, which has resisted this cut-rate trend, is offering modestly lower prices or higher specs for the same prices as before.</p>
<p><strong>Timing:</strong> Despite the bargains, you may want to wait to buy, if you can, until the new operating systems emerge. That&#8217;s because it&#8217;s usually easier and cheaper to buy a new machine preloaded with a new OS. You don&#8217;t have to pay extra for the new OS or hassle with performing the upgrade. Neither Microsoft (MSFT) nor Apple (AAPL) has set a date for their new OS releases, but both are likely by the holiday buying season.</p>
<p>This is especially true if you are thinking of buying a Windows Vista machine. Vista is slow and filled with annoying nag screens. Based on my tests of its prerelease, or beta, version, Windows 7 will be a huge improvement.</p>
<p><strong>Windows vs. Mac:</strong> Apple&#8217;s hardware is beautiful and durable, and its OS is faster, easier and more stable than today&#8217;s Windows. Plus, the Mac isn&#8217;t susceptible to the vast majority of malicious software. Windows 7 will narrow this gap considerably, but Snow Leopard could keep Apple ahead, depending on how it turns out.</p>
<p>But Apple computers cost more upfront. The cheapest Mac desktop, the bare-bones Mac Mini, costs $599. And the cheapest Mac laptop is $999. So, if price is your top priority, buy a Windows PC. If speed, ease of use and stability matter more, buy a Mac.</p>
<p><strong>Upgrading:</strong> Microsoft promises that upgrading a Vista machine to Windows 7 will be a straightforward process, preserving all of your files, programs and settings.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a different story for Windows XP. Upgrading from that OS will be a cumbersome, multi-step process, requiring users to offload their files, wipe out the old operating system completely, and then reload the files and reinstall their programs. This is a particular problem for buyers of netbooks, nearly all of which come with XP.</p>
<p>In addition, Microsoft&#8217;s version of Windows 7 for netbooks, called the Starter Edition, is crippled. It can run only three programs at any one time, and won&#8217;t allow any customization of the desktop or the use of Windows 7&#8217;s snazzy graphical features. Microsoft says netbook owners also will be able to run the main Home version of Windows 7, at extra cost, but given the weak processors and graphics chips on netbooks, the experience may not be optimal.</p>
<p>Apple, which doesn&#8217;t make netbooks, claims Snow Leopard will be an easy upgrade on all currently available Macs.</p>
<p><strong>Memory:</strong> Neither company has released the official specs for the two new operating systems, but both are likely to require a minimum of 1 gigabyte of memory. Such specs are usually understated, so I strongly recommend 2 gigabytes, even on cheap machines.</p>
<p><strong>Graphics:</strong> In the new operating systems, adequate graphics chips will be more important than ever, because the computers will offload some tasks typically performed by the main processor onto the graphics chip. So, if possible, spring for what&#8217;s called a discrete graphics processor, which has its own memory. If you can&#8217;t afford this, look for an integrated graphics chip, which shares your main memory, that&#8217;s as powerful as possible. One example is the Nvidia 9400.</p>
<p><strong>Processor:</strong> Microsoft and Apple say current processors will work fine with the new operating systems. The best bet is a dual-core processor. Some bargain machines use an older single-core model, which is OK for light-duty use. Netbooks, and even some laptops and desktops, come with a much wimpier processor called the Intel (INTC) Atom, which struggles at some tasks.</p>
<p><strong>Touch screens:</strong> Windows 7 will include the ability to perform many multitouch gestures on the screen. But this will require a special type of touch screen, different from the ones on most tablet PCs today. A few current models, like Hewlett-Packard&#8217;s TouchSmart desktop, support this, but not many. So, if you&#8217;d like to use multitouch on Windows 7, ask to make sure your PC can handle it.</p>
<p><strong>The bottom line:</strong> Don&#8217;t buy more machine than you can afford, or need. But protect yourself by getting one that can be upgraded to the new operating systems.</p>
<p><em>Find all of Walt Mossberg&#8217;s columns and videos online, free, at the All Things Digital Web site, <a href="http://www.walt.allthingsd.com">walt.allthingsd.com</a>. Email him at <a href="mailto:mossberg@wsj.com">mossberg@wsj.com</a>.</em></p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Multitouch Interface Is Starting to Spread Among New Devices</title>
		<link>http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20080131/multitouch-interface-is-starting-to-spread-among-new-devices/</link>
		<comments>http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20080131/multitouch-interface-is-starting-to-spread-among-new-devices/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Jan 2008 00:01:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Walter S. Mossberg</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ptech.allthingsd.com/20080131/multitouch-interface-is-starting-to-spread-among-new-devices/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA["Multitouch," the iPhone-style interface that lets users manipulate lists or objects without a mouse or keyboard, is catching on. Rival companies are scrambling to add multitouch features to laptops and other digital gadgets.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We are now witnessing the emergence of a new user interface for digital devices, including laptop computers, advanced cellphones, wireless portable data gadgets and other types of computing products.</p>
<p>This interface is generally called &#8220;multitouch,&#8221; and it involves using one or more fingers on a screen or touchpad to perform special gestures that manipulate lists or objects on a screen &#8212; without moving a mouse, pressing buttons, turning scroll wheels or striking keys.</p>
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<p>The best-known example of the interface is on Apple&#8217;s iPhone and iPod Touch devices. It allows you, for example, to rapidly flip through photos, lists of emails or song titles by merely &#8220;flicking&#8221; a fingertip on its screen, or to resize a photo by &#8220;pinching&#8221; the image with two fingers. And, this month, Apple moved some of these multitouch features onto a laptop, its new MacBook Air, where fingertip actions are performed on an oversized touchpad rather than on a screen.</p>
<p>Apple didn&#8217;t invent the multitouch concept. Academic and commercial researchers, and small, obscure companies, have been working on it for years. Apple is adapting the concept, adding its own ideas and popularizing it &#8212; just as it did in the 1980s with the mouse and the graphical user interface, which had also been invented elsewhere.</p>
<p>Rival companies are scrambling to add multitouch features to laptops and other digital gadgets. Synaptics, a leading supplier of touchpads for laptop makers who compete with Apple, has announced that shortly it will incorporate several multitouch features into its touchpads. Microsoft is producing a coffee-table-size computer called the Surface, meant for hotels, casinos and retail stores, that uses multitouch finger gestures to move around digital objects such as photos, play games and browse through product options. Hewlett-Packard developed a prototype of a similar multitouch coffee-table computer for home use.</p>
<div class="media-LEFT" style="width: 150px;"><img src="http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/images/MK-AN989_PTECH_20080130172455.jpg" alt="Photo" height="197" width="150" /><br />Rotating a photo on Apple&#8217;s MacBook Air</div>
<p>And, in the back rooms of this month&#8217;s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, various cellphone makers, seeking to emulate the iPhone, were showing off their own unannounced efforts at multitouch. One prominent cellphone maker, Taiwan-based HTC, has already built a phone, called the Touch, which slaps a rudimentary multitouch interface on Microsoft&#8217;s Windows Mobile operating system.</p>
<p>The basic touch screen, of course, is an old and familiar thing. People use them every day to get money from ATMs or to check into flights at airport kiosks. Microsoft&#8217;s Tablet computers and Palm&#8217;s Treo cellphones, among others, use touch screens that employ styluses or fingers to move cursors, select icons and other items, and even to write on the screen.</p>
<p>But multitouch interfaces are potentially much more versatile. They allow you to use your fingers to manipulate virtual objects on a screen as if they were real, sort of the way Tom Cruise&#8217;s character did in the 2002 Steven Spielberg science-fiction film, &#8220;Minority Report.&#8221; For example, Microsoft&#8217;s Surface allows users to rearrange groups of digital photos by just dragging them around on the table top as if they were actual paper prints.</p>
<p>Unlike the touch screens on, say, ATMs, multitouch devices are able to distinguish between the press of a single finger and the press of multiple fingers, and to interpret the motions or gestures you make. They take different actions depending on how many fingers they detect and which gestures a user performs.</p>
<p>On Apple&#8217;s MacBook Air, the touchpad still allows you to use one finger to move the cursor and click like a mouse can. But, optionally, it can do much more using multitouch gestures.</p>
<p>You can rotate photos by just touching two fingers to the touchpad and moving the images on the screen as you wish. You can quickly move back and forth through a series of Web pages or photos by &#8220;swiping,&#8221; or placing three fingers on the touchpad and moving them rapidly sideways. And you can shrink or expand a photo, or zoom in and out on a Web page, by pinching the image.</p>
<p>All recent Mac laptops, not just the new Air, have the optional ability to scroll through a screen without using any button or special zone on the touchpad. You just place two fingers, instead of one, anywhere on the touchpad and drag them across its surface.</p>
<p>In addition to pinching, the new Synaptics touchpads have a feature called &#8220;ChiralMotion,&#8221; which achieves rapid scrolling by moving two fingers in a circle anywhere on the touchpad. Another Synaptics feature, called Momentum, lets you emulate a trackball by flicking a single finger across the touchpad. This gesture can move an object on screen, like a virtual bowling ball in a game, with the illusion of inertia.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s too early to know if the new multitouch approach will ever be as big as the mouse-driven graphical user interface. But it&#8217;s already evident that it offers real advantages on devices where a mouse isn&#8217;t possible or convenient to use, or the decades-old interface of menus and folders is too cumbersome.</p>
<p>Email me at <a href="mailto:mossberg@wsj.com" rel="external">mossberg@wsj.com</a>. Find all my columns and videos online, free, at the new All Things Digital Web site, <a href="http://walt.allthingsd.com" rel="external">http://walt.allthingsd.com</a>.</p>
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