HP Offers Touch-Screen Vista on New PCs

Jan 9, 2007

HP Offers Touch-Screen Vista on New PCs

HP's new PCs allow users to control Windows Vista through touch-screen commands 
instead of mouse clicks.

Ben Ames, IDG News Service

Tuesday, January 09, 2007 02:00 PM PST

HP reached for the consumer market Monday with two new PCs that allow customers 
to control Microsoft's Windows Vista OS with a touch-screen interface instead
of a mouse.

HP touch-screen PC

The
TouchSmart IQ770 PC
is a desktop computer with a 19-inch screen intended for the tech-savvy mom, 
while the
Pavilion tx1000 ,
with a 12.1-inch screen, is an entertainment-focused notebook for students.

While HP has made tablet PCs and handheld iPaq devices before, the company has 
never used touch screens in desktop or notebook PCs, said Kevin Wentzel,
technical marketing manager for HP's mobility global business unit, at the CES 
trade show in Las Vegas. A finger touch has no effect on most tablet PCs,
since their screens use digitized panels that react only to an active stylus.

Users of handhelds and PDAs will find the Pavilion tx1000's touch-screen 
interface familiar, Wentzel said. HP built the notebook with a hinged screen, so
the display rotates to face away from the keyboard for a sleek movie-playing 
appearance, and it folds completely over the keyboard to become a tablet PC.

To accommodate media-hungry users, the notebook comes with 1GB of RAM and uses 
a dual-core Turion 64 X2 processor from AMD, Wentzel said. One downside of
running Vista on a notebook is the high battery power required to support the 
necessary graphics card, memory, and processor. The tx1000 can play DVDs
for 2.5 hours on a single battery charge, he said.

Future versions of the product will include an integrated wireless WAN card, as 
well as a Sling Media player that allows users to reach content remotely
through a Slingbox device in their home.

Family-Focused PC

The TouchSmart desktop PC takes the touch-screen experience even further by 
running HP's SmartCenter software as the primary interface for Windows Vista.
With large icons, an integrated TV tuner, and shortcuts to other media, the PC 
is built to be the hub of a range of family activities, according to Garret
Gargan, North American product marketing manager for PCs.

Users can write virtual sticky notes for other family members and then touch 
and drag the notes onto an on-screen calendar or bulletin board. Likewise,
photographers can crop or rotate pictures by manipulating them on screen. The 
large monitor completely obscures the computer and optional printer built
behind it. Like the notebook, the desktop uses AMD's Turion 64 X2 processor.

HP will begin selling the Pavilion tx1000 on February 28 through its online 
store for $1299, and will sell the TouchSmart PC by the end of January for 
$1799.
The company also plans to launch the desktop in the UK by February, and then 
roll it out to other countries throughout 2007. Enter your trial subscription

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,128475-pg,1/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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