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Showing posts with label Touch screens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Touch screens. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Shuttle D10 desktop features built-in touchscreen, little else

Yeah, we have computers system with LCD display already—they are the called laptops. Actually if you increasingly wondered how a conservativedesktop PC immediately would look like with a built-in show, then be unsure no more. Shuttle D10, which was introduced a couple of months ago, is slated for a lunch in Japan this week.

Shuttle D10 desktop features a fixed seven-inch display on body of desktop PC itself. Shuttle D10 desktop is a touch LCD display, actually Shuttle D10 desktop resolution is a mere 800×400 pixels, so if you mean to critically use computer, you still that have to join a monitor to it. For prices opening under $500, you get a substitute in the middle of Core 2 Duo E4000 series, E2000 series, or Celeron 400 series CPU, 2GB to 4GB of DDR2, 5.1 Channel Audio Support, and four USB ports.

The D10 is a basics rig with typical Shuttle form factor, actually adding of a 7-inch touch screen out front makes things a small more attractive. Intel Core 2 Duo, Core 2 Duo E4000 series, Dual-Core E2000 series and Celeron 400 series processors are every one hold up with up to 4GB RAM, and kit ships by means of an Intel GMA 3100 GPU, 5.1 channels auditory and SATA II support.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Double-faced Touch Panel Exhibited at Tokyo Big Sight


Touch screens were quite the rage for sometime but the excitement about them has almost died down. Something extra was needed to bring them back into the limelight. Teraokaseiko Co. Ltd. has displayed a touch panel display that can be sued from either side of the panel. The double-sided touch screen was made by attaching a resistive touch panel to either side of a transparent inorganic EL panel that had been developed by Teraokaseiko. The double-faced touch panel was part of the exhibitions at the Sign & Display Show taking place at the Tokyo Big Sight (Aug 28 to Aug 30, 2008).