Quote from: Niels Woisin on July 01, 2013, 03:38:44
This has potential for greatness...
Lack of a digitizer, even as a paid option is also poor. This would make such a great portable machine for photoshop, painting, drawing, sketching. Sad, sad, so much potential from low hanging fruits wasted...
Yes, I completely agree, Niels. I am looking for a tablet that will support Active Reading and Studying of IT PDF textbooks, such as those from Cisco Press and Microsoft Press. The size of the XPS 18 is, I believe, perfect for this purpose, as it will allow a dual-page view of a PDF book, or a single page view with room on the side for a page of notes.
The lack of a Wacom digitizer seems to be a gross oversight, although I would assume they made a decision to not include the capability. However, it is bizarre from my experience as to why these companies generally bring out devices that leave out some critical features that would make them very compelling. It's like the Acer R7, which also does not have a Wacom digitizer. 15.6" would be okay for Active Reading.
I'm despairing that a suitable product might not come available for me to purchase in the next two weeks. I was going to get the Samsung ATIV Q, but really, at 13.3", it is just too small. It also cannot be inclined at a slight angle that is suitable for long term writing, unlike the Acer R7 and XPS 18.
Yes, the XPS 18 comes so close, but no digitizer is a deal-breaker for me.
Here is an excellent paper about Active Reading, annotating and note taking:
http://www.fxpal.com/publications/FXPAL-PR-98-053.pdf
It is older but articulates very well the requirements of anyone learning from digital books. Written by three Xerox researchers.