Panasonic 4K Resolution, 20" Tablet Computer, Win 8, with Pen Digitizer

ziggy53ziggy53 Super Moderators Posts: 24,127 moderator
edited March 6, 2013 in Digital Darkroom
From Panasonic:

"OSAKA, Japan, Jan. 8, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- Panasonic Corporation today announced the development of a new tablet computer that features a 20-inch IPS Alpha LCD panel with more than four times the resolution of Full High Definition, as well as a high precision digital pen. With the target to commercialize the new tablet later this year, Panasonic is gearing itself up to propose new business value this feature-rich device will offer to its customers in a wide range of industries. The tablet is on display at the 2013 International CES in Las Vegas from January 8 to 11.

Employing Panasonic's cutting-edge digital technology, the new tablet is designed to create new value for users with a more realistic and intuitive operating environment than paper or a display. This tablet embodies the characteristics of printed media that existing personal or tablet computers cannot provide, such as texture rich rendering, natural hand-writing and a light weight and thinness for easy mobility.

The 20-inch LCD panel delivers "4k" resolution (3840 x 2560, 9.83 million pixels), more than twice the horizontal and vertical resolutions of Full HD (1920 x 1080) and has a density of 230 pixels per inch. With a unique aspect ratio of 15:10, it can display an A3-size paper in almost full size, making it ideal to show content such as newspapers and magazines, as well as pictures with the same aspect ratio. Moreover, the pen input, with a resolution as high as the panel itself, enables natural handwriting on the tablet. Weighing 2.4 kg (5.3 lbs) and 10.8 mm (0.4 inch) thick, the tablet is easy to carry.

These unique characteristics will open up new ways for tablets to be used. The following is an example of its usage in an editorial meeting to finalize a new catalogue:

An editor comes into the room carrying a 4k tablet with him, lays it flat on the table and switches it on to show the catalog data for perusal by the editorial staff. While they check each page of the print-ready catalog by tapping and swiping the touchscreen, the editor jots down instructions for color changes directly on the screen using the digital pen and transfers them to the printing company. The meeting wraps up after they make a final check of the revised data returned from the printer to ensure the changes have been made correctly.

As the above example shows, the 4k tablet offers intuitive operation and ultra-high resolution images with superb color reproduction and a wide viewing angle unique to IPS Alpha panels, bringing an "eco and smart" work style into various business scenes.

The tablet is based on Windows 8 operating system, which enables the user to continue to use reliable applications developed for and business documents created on older versions of Windows. Besides offering an intuitiveness other PCs and tablets cannot rival, this innovative tablet will facilitate an environment in which users can develop business solutions in a timely fashion without losing any business chance.

Panasonic has built up trust with customers in a variety of industries by offering its ruggedized Toughbook laptops and Let's Note mobile notebook PCs, which helped improve operation efficiency and productivity in harsh outdoor working environments where such IT products were rarely found. Building on these achievements, Panasonic will strive to commercialize the 4k tablet, making it available globally to provide new business values to customers."


http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/08/panasonic-reveals-20-inch-4k-resolution-windows-8-tablet/

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ziggy53
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums

Comments

  • cmasoncmason Registered Users Posts: 2,506 Major grins
    edited January 16, 2013
    20" tablet? I would say thats a battery powered all in one instead. A 15" laptop is big enough, holding a 20" tablet would be farcical. This is definitely in the 'build it because you can' category.

    "An editor comes into the room carrying a 4k tablet with him, ....and the entire meeting grinds to a halt as his colleges fall on the floor laughing at him lugging that thing in the door."
  • ziggy53ziggy53 Super Moderators Posts: 24,127 moderator
    edited March 4, 2013
    http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2013/03/02/business/panasonic-developing-4k-tablet-computer-with-microsoft/#.UTVY9qLFVEB

    MAR 2, 2013

    "OSAKA – Panasonic Corp. is developing a tablet computer for business customers that runs on Microsoft Corp.’s Windows 8 operating system under their new business partnership, sources said Friday.

    The tablet, which will have a 20-inch liquid crystal display panel, will be the world’s first of its kind to come with 4K technology that displays images four times finer than existing high-definition resolutions, the sources said.

    The new product is expected to hit the market in summer, they said."
    ziggy53
    Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
  • babowcbabowc Registered Users Posts: 510 Major grins
    edited March 5, 2013
    20" tablet...

    Size matters? haha
    -Mike Jin
    D800
    16/2.8, f1.4G primes, f2.8 trio, 105/200 macro, SB900.
    It never gets easier, you just get better.
  • David_S85David_S85 Administrators Posts: 13,245 moderator
    edited March 5, 2013
    About five years ago, Microsoft had a promotional video showing a touch enabled screen that was 40 or more inches across. They fabricated the thing as an actual table top that would take user input from any angle. Part of the presentation showed an example of this as a table in a restaurant. You could bring up individual menus (from the restaurant fare), turn pages, order right there by highlighting and selecting your choices, play virtual card games while waiting for the food, or maybe watch videos, move photos around, enlarge, sort, etc. At the time this seemed a bit far fetched, just like some show cars at auto shows. Looking back at that promo now, I believe they had an almost perfect vision of some of the things touch displays could do. Still too expensive in that scenario, for sure, but a few years from now - who knows?
    My Smugmug
    "You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne Gretzky
  • babowcbabowc Registered Users Posts: 510 Major grins
    edited March 6, 2013
    David_S85 wrote: »
    About five years ago, Microsoft had a promotional video showing a touch enabled screen that was 40 or more inches across. They fabricated the thing as an actual table top that would take user input from any angle. Part of the presentation showed an example of this as a table in a restaurant. You could bring up individual menus (from the restaurant fare), turn pages, order right there by highlighting and selecting your choices, play virtual card games while waiting for the food, or maybe watch videos, move photos around, enlarge, sort, etc. At the time this seemed a bit far fetched, just like some show cars at auto shows. Looking back at that promo now, I believe they had an almost perfect vision of some of the things touch displays could do. Still too expensive in that scenario, for sure, but a few years from now - who knows?

    I feel like that would almost kill the wait staff, haha..
    Order via intranet menu, server brings food, and if the patron wants more x, just call the server via screen.

    Sounds convenient, but...
    -Mike Jin
    D800
    16/2.8, f1.4G primes, f2.8 trio, 105/200 macro, SB900.
    It never gets easier, you just get better.
  • David_S85David_S85 Administrators Posts: 13,245 moderator
    edited March 6, 2013
    babowc wrote: »
    I feel like that would almost kill the wait staff, haha..
    Order via intranet menu, server brings food, and if the patron wants more x, just call the server via screen.

    Sounds convenient, but...

    Of course, but MS was trying to sell the concept for large touch screens back then, and perhaps trying to increase their stock price.
    My Smugmug
    "You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne Gretzky
  • ziggy53ziggy53 Super Moderators Posts: 24,127 moderator
    edited March 6, 2013
    Lenovo (formerly the IBM personal computer line) came out with a bigger "Table PC". At 27" and nearly 18 pounds, the "IdeaCentre Horizon Table PC" is more designed for family entertainment. It even comes with some gaming "pucks". I suspect that the digitizer resolution is pretty coarse, making this machine more of a "tablet" experience.


    By comparison, the Panasonic 4K tablet computer uses a high-resolution digitizer matching the screen resolution. When you zoom 100% into an image, you'll be working with individual pixels, much like working with pen/pencil and paper.

    For photographic applications, this could be a serious advantage in productivity and control.
    ziggy53
    Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
  • ziggy53ziggy53 Super Moderators Posts: 24,127 moderator
    edited March 6, 2013
    Wacom sells their "Interactive Pen Displays", currently at 15.6", 17" and 21.5", and their "Cintiq" line, but you need a separate computer to operate the tablet. (They also showed the "Cintiq 24 HD" at this years CES.)

    Still, if you use this method of interactive control, a high-end computer attached to an interactive display could be the solution. (The Panasonic 4K tablet computer would not be very fast for complex and large photo editing.)
    ziggy53
    Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
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