Looks like many people are preparing for Windows 7.
Anyway, I don't think that would be ergonomic or comfortable. You see, dealing with a touchscreen phone requires the same effort of pressing a physical button i.e. raising a finger and sliding it around.
But raising an arm constantly to type on a touchscreen requires the use of the shoulder muscles, which would get tiresome really quickly. Unless this is for a tablet mini-laptop, I don't think this technology should be in desktop computers.
HP's Jon Rubenstein told us that his company wanted to veer in a new direction, and veer it surely did -- the HP Veer 4G will arguably be the smallest fully-functional smartphone on the market when it goes on sale May 15th.
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Looks like many people are preparing for Windows 7.
Anyway, I don't think that would be ergonomic or comfortable. You see, dealing with a touchscreen phone requires the same effort of pressing a physical button i.e. raising a finger and sliding it around.
But raising an arm constantly to type on a touchscreen requires the use of the shoulder muscles, which would get tiresome really quickly. Unless this is for a tablet mini-laptop, I don't think this technology should be in desktop computers.