Make a liitle Pine, please - Printable Version +- PINE64 (https://forum.pine64.org) +-- Forum: Pinebook (https://forum.pine64.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=76) +--- Forum: General Discussion on Pinebook (https://forum.pine64.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=77) +--- Thread: Make a liitle Pine, please (/showthread.php?tid=6578) Pages:
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RE: Make a liitle Pine, please - Luke - 09-27-2018 (09-27-2018, 04:42 AM)soupbowl Wrote: Interesting, I was moaning yesterday about the lack of Linux support for tablet/netbook hybrids. Are there any photos at this point, or is secret squirrel right now? The reason why I didn't post pictures or start a conversation about it in the past on the forum is because all features are a subject to change. Including when the device comes out, how it will looks and what the final specs are. That said, here is a picture of an early prototype I saw 2 months back: RE: Make a liitle Pine, please - soupbowl - 09-27-2018 (09-27-2018, 06:00 AM)Luke Wrote: The reason why I didn't post pictures or start a conversation about it in the past on the forum is because all features are a subject to change. Including when the device comes out, how it will looks and what the final specs are. That said, here is a picture of an early prototype I saw 2 months back: That's a cool prototype. I'm intrigued how it would be detachable, either via magnetic mount points or a more reliable clip mount? Regardless, thanks for sharing! Well aware it's very early stages, but it's something to be excited about and work out my excuse with the missues to buy oneĀ RE: Make a liitle Pine, please - Luke - 09-27-2018 the keyboard is attached via magnets and there are two small guiding knobs that help to keep it in place. Those magnets are quite strong. As for actual IO, the keyboard uses USB 2.0 pogo pins. The keyboard doubles up as a pretty neat sleeve, which wraps the entire tab. The keyboard may change significantly for the production model - although I hope that the key style remains as pictures. We tried 4 different key styles during the meeting and agreed that this works best at this scale. Two things I'd like to see changed: trackpad placement to be centered and physical buttons for the trackpad (although, this is not a biggie). The tab itself has volume up-down rocker, a lock button, headphone jack and a camera in the back(which no-one will use) and a grippy plastic-rubber surface. The screen is quite nice too. The final model may have forward facing speakers. RE: Make a liitle Pine, please - soupbowl - 09-27-2018 (09-27-2018, 07:12 AM)Luke Wrote: the keyboard is attached via magnets and there are two small guiding knobs that help to keep it in place. Those magnets are quite strong. As for actual IO, the keyboard uses USB 2.0 pogo pins. The keyboard doubles up as a pretty neat sleeve, which wraps the entire tab. Oh, I love it already! It will be great to start being able to experience the recent tablet-esque feature pushes like with KDE without forking out an arm and a leg. Camera's in functional tablets I always find a bit strange. I have never used the front camera in any of the tablets I've owned. I'd imagine keeping that out of it would shave down a lot on the cost too, but it's always a democracy when it comes to this. Completely agree with your view in that regard, and I love the fact you guys try and keep it as generic as possible so that bespoke drivers are not needed. RE: Make a liitle Pine, please - Wizzard - 09-28-2018 Wow, it looks very good, almost like some Lenovo product. It it only used some stronger SoC. RE: Make a liitle Pine, please - Luke - 09-28-2018 (09-28-2018, 02:09 AM)Wizzard Wrote: Wow, it looks very good, almost like some Lenovo product. It it only used some stronger SoC. I think we may see something with a more powerful SOC in the future - but at a different price-point of course. It all depends on what you want and need. RE: Make a liitle Pine, please - soupbowl - 10-25-2018 (09-28-2018, 02:14 AM)Luke Wrote: I think we may see something with a more powerful SOC in the future - but at a different price-point of course. Not sure if I'm joined with this, but I'm attracted to Pinebook to the low price point. Would be good if the parts are replaceable (I don't mean easily, but that replacement boards are manufacturered) so you can opt for either a low power cheap spec, or a higher power one. Either way, I'd be happy to see how your tablet project develops! Will it be crowdfunded potentially? RE: Make a liitle Pine, please - Luke - 10-25-2018 (10-25-2018, 08:09 AM)soupbowl Wrote:(09-28-2018, 02:14 AM)Luke Wrote: I think we may see something with a more powerful SOC in the future - but at a different price-point of course. I think that it will follow the Pinebook model of BTO, but I may be wrong. |