Brier Dudley's Blog
Brier Dudley offers a critical look at technology and business issues affecting the Northwest.
E-mail Brier|
206.515.5687
|
Follow Brier on Twitter|
Microsoft Pri0 blog|
Subscribe | Blog Home
January 28, 2010 8:11 AM
Apple iPad: Father of Microsoft "Origami" slate PC weighs in (updated with video)
Posted by Brier Dudley
The launch of Apple's iPad is bittersweet for Otto Berkes, a Microsoft manager who led the company's earlier effort to develop a handheld, wireless, touchscreen slate computer.
Microsoft's "Origami" project surfaced in 2006 and gave early definition of a new category of devices between phones and laptop computers. It led to the Ultra-Mobile PC category that never caught on after early models were priced over $1,000 and the device was caught in the Windows Vista turbulence.
Berkes, who now works in Microsoft's entertainment and devices group, shared his thoughts on the iPad on his personal blog, where he said the iPad is nicely designed but won't be the last word on the slate computer. He also posted a photo of Bill Gates displaying a handheld device in 2004 that points toward yesterday's arrival of the iPad.
A few tidbits:
Apple gets credit on execution and good packaging of available technology. That said, their thin slate is an unsurprising product in the context of an evolutionary timeline that spans decades of innovation and effort chasing the slate computing dream.
On the size of the iPad:
As a device, the iPad seems somewhat large and ungainly to me. With the 7"-display-based Haiku/Origami, I aimed for greater mobility in the tradeoff between mobility and display real estate. Not having a way to write on a pure slate device the size of piece of paper also seems pretty unnatural to me. One of the iPad demos shows a legal-pad background for note-taking, but then you have to use the on-screen keyboard. Say what? There's a real cognitive disconnect there. Of course, display size is highly subjective (hence the many variations in laptops) as is the relative importance of stylus functionality for different users and uses. There is plenty of room for continued development of and innovation with the slate form factor, and it will be interesting to see how the industry responds to Apple's interpretation.
UPDATE: Here's a video with Otto outlining the history of Microsoft's ultra-mobile PC effort:

nwautos
Dear Tom and Ray: I have a 2007 Toyota Prius. I was hoping you could help me with what I suspect is a cheap sales tactic by my Toyota dealer....
Post a comment

- QFC blocks new liquor stores from some shopping centers
- Seahawks get TE Kellen Winslow in a trade
- Hernandez turns duel into laughter in M's 6-1 victory
- Man accused of hitting noisy kid at Wash. theater
- 'Lucky to be alive,' teen hails rescuers
- Marysville cop charged with manslaughter in daughter's death
- Is the Seattle School Board dysfunctional? U.S. Chamber of Commerce thinks so
- Police: Roommates tortured Utah man with power tool
- What we saw tonight: exactly what Eric Wedge has spent past 16 months drilling into Mariners hitters | Mariners Blog
- Arrest made in post-NBA game shooting that hurt 8
- Mariners and Hector Noesi go for five wins in a row
372 - Catholic groups turn to courts in contraceptive fight
279 - What we saw tonight: exactly what Eric Wedge has spent past 16 months drilling into Mariners hitters
208 - QFC blocks new liquor stores from some shopping centers
200 - In Romneyworld, the JPMorgan Chase debacle would be no big deal
144 - Is the Seattle School Board dysfunctional? U.S. Chamber of Commerce thinks so
140 - NAACP returns to relevance by backing same-sex marriage
136 - Man accused of hitting noisy kid at Wash. theater
116 - Marysville cop charged with manslaughter in daughter's death
90 - CBO warns of US falling off 'fiscal cliff'
82
- Downtown Seattle condos are finally filling up
- Jon Kitna's greatest play: NFL QB to high-school math teacher
- Boy plucked from Wallace Falls: Rescuers 'should feel like heroes'
- UW, WSU expand enrollment in schools' engineering programs
- 20-somethings go home to regroup
- QFC blocks new liquor stores from some shopping centers
- Highlights — and low points — of Chihuly Garden and Glass | Art review
- From slow hikes to high wires, San Juan Island has new treats
- 'Lucky to be alive,' teen hails rescuers
- World War II veteran takes flight into the past on B-17

January
| Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
| 1 | 2 | |||||
| 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
| 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 |
| 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 |
| 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 |
| 31 |

Video
Demo of the Week: TeachStreet.com
Share your thoughts!
Gadgets and games | Fun stuff I've written about lately includes Apple's iPhone, Hewlett-Packard's HDX laptop and Microsoft's Halo3. Also on the radar are new digital video boxes such as the Tivo HD and the Vudu.








