Skip to main content

TabletKiosk Intros Sahara Slate Tablet PCs

TabletKiosk Intros Sahara Slate Tablet PCs

TabletKiosk, a maker of slate-style tablet PCs and UMPCs, has announced itsnew Sahara Slate line of touch-screen enabled tablet systems, offering slim profiles, big displays, and substantial connectivity and storage all in slim, lightweight slabs.

The Sahara Slate line includes three models, the i412T, i440T, and i440D. Each feature a 12.1-inch XGA touch screen with a 179° viewing angle, integrated 802.11a/b/g Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.0, a trusted platform module and a fingerprint reader, plus a bevy of connectivity options including two USB 2.0 ports, a IEEE 1394a connector, SATA, gigabit Ethernet, an integrated 56Kbps v.90 model, a PCMCIA slot, and a cradle connector. Storage options range from 60 GB to 80 GB (built-to-order systems can carry 160 GB hard drives), and the systems support up to 4 GB of RAM—all crammed into a tablet measuring 0.98 inches deep and weighing 3.3 pounds (with the battery installed).

Recommended Videos

On the low end, the i412T runs a 1 Ghz Celeron, while the i440T and i440D tout a Core Duo L2500 processor—but the key feature of these systems is the 12.1-inch passive resistive touch screen, designed to respond to menu input via pens or fingers, like you might find in point-of-sale or kiosk-based systems. But taking things up a notch, the screen on the i440D converts from resistive touch screen to an active pressure-sensitive digitizer with the touch of a button.

All three tablets will be available this March with Windows XP Professional, Windows Vista Business, or Linux pre-installed; suggested prices for base configurations are $1,795 for the i412T, $2,195 for the i440T, and $22,95 for the i440D.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Microsoft calls Recall one of ‘the most secure experiences’ it’s ever built
Recall promotional image.

As part of its Ignite 2024 announcements, Microsoft has provided an update on how its AI-powered Recall feature will work in the context of an IT department. Noting that the company has "heard your feedback," specifically in terms of it needing it to be more "secure and controllable," Microsoft claims to have gotten its ducks in a row for the launch of its controversial new Windows 11 feature.

Microsoft says that Recall "will ship with meaningful security enhancements, including additional layers of data encryption and Windows Hello protection, making it one of the most secure experiences we have ever built." Whether or not this will be enough to satisfy the security community, however, is still to be determined.

Read more
Windows 11 is finally coming to the Quest 3 and Quest 3S
A visualization of Windows being used on a headset.

Microsoft has announced that Windows 11 support is officially coming to the Quest 3 and Quest 3S headsets. The announcement comes as part of Microsoft Ignite 2024, which was otherwise focused on updates to its Copilot AI systems. And though not many details were shared on the mixed reality front, it's nice to see the support finally arrive.

According to the announcement, the update will bring "the full capabilities of Windows 11 to mixed reality headsets" through either a local Windows PC or a Windows 365 Cloud PC. The point, of course, is not to bring PC games into VR, but rather to do to work in mixed reality. You'll be able to have multiple virtual monitors all at your disposal to use however you want, regardless of the physical space you're working in.

Read more
With Copilot Actions, Microsoft brings AI agents to Outlook, Teams, and more
microsoft expanding ai agents 365 copilot early 2025 actions2

Microsoft plans to roll out a slew of new features for its business-facing 365 Copilot products starting early next year, the company announced during its Microsoft Ignite 2024 event on Tuesday.

365 Copilot, which was rebranded from just Copilot in September, enables businesses to incorporate Microsoft Copilot generative AI into its Microsoft 365 family of apps (as well as in Teams) for a $30/employee/month subscription.

Read more