8

Nova5000A new tablet computer, priced at $399-$599 for education-related users, might be just the ticket for reading e-books–at least if the screen res were a little better.

The Nova5000 from Fourier Systems comes with a touch-sensitive 7.5-inch color LCD screen and USB ports and uses Windows CE.NET 5.0. Mobipocket or the forthcoming OpenReader could probably run on it. I haven’t tried a Nova5000, but from afar, it sure looks interesting. Alas, screen resolution is only 640×480. Based on a photo I saw in the p-version of eSchool News, however, the display is sharper than the photo here suggests. I wonder if it can use anti-aliasing and other tricks.

On the positive side, this machine can surf the Web with Internet Explorer and includes Windows Media Player and WordPad, with Word and Excel as options.

The Nova5000 also comes with an ethernet port, a PS/2 port for an external keyboard, and a CompactFlash socket for a WiFi card or memory expansion (I don’t know what the upper limit is). Students can even use infrared to swap data with each other and teachers. On top of that, the styling is kid-friendly, and the battery is supposed to last for an entire school day, with a low-power Intel XScale processor. Dimensions are 9.7″x 5″x 1.2″; weight, a mere 1.8 pounds.

For years I’ve been sold on the idea of each student having a computer, and this looks a very attractive alternative to far-more-expensive laptops. At that price I could even live with the lack of a higher-res screen. I’d really like to see one of these things in person; the view is probably still better than on the old Gemstar machines.

Hey, Fourier, care to do a consumer version of the Nova5000 and give us better screen res when LCD prices drop? And how about the library market? Just how low could you drive down the price if the demand were great enough?

Details: Hasn’t Microsoft talked about a tablet that would be between a PDA and a tablet in size and price? The Nova5000 could be an interesting starting point. Might it be, in fact, a stalking horse for the real thing? I doubt that. Still, if I were Microsoft, I’d keep an eye on the reception that the Nova5000 gets. What’s more, I’d be curious to know how Casey Bisson and other Pepper Pad fans feel. I suspect they would still go for the Pepper–despite the $800 price–because of its use of Linux. But maybe I’m wrong.

Related: District Administration article on K-12 handhelds., as well as an item in the Ed Tech blog.

 
8