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OCTOBER 29th, 1997 Happy Endings Todd Stauffer ([email protected]) What’s Next for Newton I’m sitting in front of the Seahawks/Raiders game writing this piece on an eMate, Apple’s two-pound notebook computer based on Newton technology. It’s a useful little computer and a pretty good value. It’s not a multimedia presentation machine by any stretch of the imagination, and it could use some software improvements — like a basic word count feature for the word processor. But it does apparently represent the future of the Newton technology. And, in that respect, it’s very promising. MessagePad Movement I’ve been a MessagePad user for a couple years now, working hard to get my MessagePad 100 to be useful for me, then having a chance this summer to use a MessagePad 2000 for a few months — a completely different experience that found me slowly transferring more and more responsibility to the Newton. The latest StrongARM processor and the Newton OS 2.1 made it possible to substitute the 2000 for my PowerBook on many occasions. In fact, the 2000 ended up being a great machine for a writer, allowing me to type out stories on airplanes, record interviews at trade shows and take quick and quiet notes (using handwriting recognition) during meetings. The funny thing is, I’d trade all that for the right eMate. The Right eMate The big difference, though, is a truly detachable keyboard (or, depending upon your point of view, a detachable screen.) Ideally, the "screen" portion of the new eMate design will detach completely from the keyboard, turn sideways and — surprise — it works just like a MessagePad. Cool, huh? If everything still comes in under two pounds and the whole contraption isn’t too unweildy, I think we might get plenty of folks to use these things on the road. Even, dare I say, folks who use Windows machines on their desks. They Will Come Once, Apple seemed concerned that the eMate would take away from PowerBook sales — but let’s be reasonable. Even low-end PowerBooks aren’t particularly affordable ($1,800 and up). If the eMate competes with any PowerBooks, it’s PowerBooks on the used market being snapped up by college students and home users. There is a chance, however, that eMates would compete successfully against lower-end Wintel notebooks, or be seen as a reasonable alternative to corporate Wintel laptops and palmtop Windows CE machines. Here’s How
Make these improvements, design it well and make it cool to own an eMate, and Newton technology might finally fulfill its promise for Apple. It’s easily one of the more promising growth markets to appear for Apple in a while. |