Excellent - It will be nice to see what competitors like Asus, HP and Samsung come up with. Note this is optical touch (IR) not capacitive as I don't think anyone makes capacitive displays bigger then phone screens.
Built in speakers would have been nice too. Would serve well in the kitchen/diner Media Centre useage.
Price will be key though as full touchscreen PC's start at reasonable prices now.
I wonder if they will include OEM only Windows 7 Touch Pack in with this monitor..???
I like the idea of good touch screens for your Home PC. I think they need to look at touch integration in Photoshop, could you image being able to use selection tools around odd shapes just by tracing your fingers rather than fiddling with the mouse!
I like the idea of an Android based competitor to Nokia's internet tablet. On unrelated but Android based news, I've got a T Mobile G1 and it got the 1.6 update this morning. Has anyone else had this? I'm not sure if it is donut but it has the swanky new market place that donut is supposed to have. As well as the search integration with appilcations and contacts.
@Mik, completely agree. The tiniest mark or smudge on my screen annoys the hell out of me - can't imagine how a screen like this would look after even a half hour's work
Having a desktop touch screen would require remodeling the whole desktop. I can imagine reaching over to my flat screen every once in a while, but extensive usage isn't really feasible. You'd need to have the display roughly where the keyboard is in a normal setup.
Oh and using it for Photoshop sounds like a bad idea, as well. Finger input isn't as exact as other input devices (think fingerpainting), so at best you'd be able to very roughly trace the shape and let Photoshop figure it out. If you want an exact, easy-to-use input device for Photoshop just get an entry-level tablet.
@Morsch: You could just use a monitor arm and pull it over when required. If you can find a use for it that's worth wiping off the fingerprints after every use.
I can't see a touch monitor on my desk for quite some time. As has been said, fingerprints and smudges would be horrific.
Grease marks aside, for a monitor to do away with a mouse completely it would have to be flat on the desk like a keyboard, angled up towards the user. Which begs the question: Where does the keyboard go?
I personally don't think most people want a touchscreen keyboard taking up screen real estate so a physical keyboard would likely be integrated into the frame of the display, and I don't think a full size qwerty board stuck on the bottom of the screen makes any sense ergonomically. It could be very interesting to see what comes from this.
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