Dell introduced a 27-inch all-in-one PC, a 10-inch tablet with keyboard and a spinning XPS Duo 12 laptop-slate at the IFA trade show.
Dell
joined
Hewlett-Packard and
Samsung
in introducing laptop-tablet hybrids at the IFA 2012 trade show in Berlin Aug.
30, though it did so with a peculiar twist. Or two, actually.
Alongside its new XPS One 27 all-in-one, Dell
showed off the XPS Duo 12, a device with a screen-surrounding machined aluminum
trim that stays in place while the 12-inch display spins 180 degrees, enabling
the device to be closed and used like a slate.
It also showed off the XPS 10, an ARM-based,
10-inch tablet that runs Microsoft's Windows RT operating system and comes with
a keyboard dock.
Samsung and HP, by contrast, introduced
devices that essentially look like laptops, until the display is separated from
the keyboard and operates as a tablet. Both will run full versions of Windows
8. As
Gizmodo
recently put it, "The XPS 10 ... is thinner, lighter and more like a
tablet you'd buy for actually using a tablet. Think 'Transformer Prime' more
than 'laptop stuffed into a slate.'"
Dell has gone easy on the details for these
three, saying little more in its statement than that the XPS will feature
"long battery life" and the ability for businesses to secure and manage
the device on their networks.
Of the XPS Duo 12, it shared that the device
is machined aluminum and carbon fiber, has a Wide Quad HD display that
"will soon be available with touch functionality" and features 97
percent more pixels than a standard high-definition display. For strength, it
also includes Gorilla Glass.
The XPS One 27 features a 27-inch display,
also a Wide Quad HD, which Dell officials say makes it ideal for things like
multimedia creation, as well as entertainment-particularly given its Waves
MaxxAudio 4 audio technology and Infinity Premium speakers.
All three simply-named devices were born out
Dell's bring-your-own-device- (BYOD-) themed conversations with consumers and
business customers. The three XPS devices "represent the culmination of a
deep understanding of the [BYOD] movement ... [and represent] a milestone in
our design and approach to user experience," Sam Burd, global vice president of
Dell's PC Product Group, said in a statement.
Dell's vision for the devices, Burd added,
was about "achieving the perfect balance of amazing design, end-user
productivity and IT enablement."
According to a survey of 8,000 workers, the
statement added, 60 percent said they'd enjoy work more if they had a say in
the technologies they use. Presumably, these are three devices workers would
choose if given a choice.
"With the growing trend of BYOD, we're
seeing traditional corporate policies on personal computer and application
usage, as well as data security being turned on their head," Aongus Hegarty,
president of Dell EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa), said in the statement.
"By enabling flexible working practices and providing companies with the
right tools, Dell is delivering this solution through a seamless, secure and
manageable end-user experience that provides connectivity anywhere, any time-and
access to work and life."