Sphinx Tablet Dock Is a Functional Solution for Workplaces

Sphinx Tablet Dock

Who said that tablets are only for gaming? These little gadgets are real life savers in work environments (in certain contexts), and the Sphinx dock improves their functionality even more.

The Sphinx tablet dock uses cloud platforms and remote desktop integration to virtualize input devices. All this is done in order to enable tablet users to use such peripherals as mice and keyboards. After years of using desktop PCs or even notebooks, being as quick at something as when using full-fledged peripherals is quite a challenge for tablet owners.

Dock2Office’s CTO Leendert van der Plas explained that “The unique thing we are doing is connecting mouse and keyboard (and additional devices in future) directly to remote computer (through the cloud). So there is no direct interconnection between tablet, mouse and keyboard. Our solution also works with iPad, which has no options to connect mouse (iOS does not support mouse.”

Van der Plas added that “All existing docking stations for tablets are only to power them, all devices (mostly keyboards) which can be used with tablets are using some type of direct connection (Bluetooth mostly). The Sphinx is mainly developed for use with remote computing solutions. This can be your own PC, but in business environment this is mostly a Windows Terminal, VDI or Daas environment.”

Splashtop, Teamviewer, LogmeIn, PocketCloud, Microsoft Remote Desktop and Real VNC are only some of the remote desktop apps that work with Dock2Office’s Sphinx. Most important, van der Plas emphasized that the lag is barely perceptible, which makes using the Sphinx dock a real pleasure.

What claims to be the world’s first intelligent tablet dock is currently a project on Kickstarter, so the mass production of this gadget is not yet a certainty. Backing the project with $145 will help people secure a Sphinx Lite for themselves, assuming that the project gets funded. When these and the ones reserved to the Early Birds are gone, people will have to pay $185 for the dock, which is quite a steep price, even considering its revolutionary functionality.

The Dutch developers of the Sphinx intelligent tablet dock had at press time 31 more days to reach the $150K goal. Whether it will do so or not depends on whether people will think that the device is worth the price.

Be social! Follow Walyou on Facebook and Twitter, and read more related stories about Cannon Security’s RadioVault iPhone dock and the Sarvi dock that charges iOS and Android devices even with their cases on.

Atom-powered Acer Iconia W510 on sale November 9th for $500 and up

Acer Iconia W510

Acer recently announced pricing and availability for its Iconia W700, and now its other Windows 8 tablet, the Iconia W510, is getting that same treatment. The 10.1-inch slate will ship for $500 and up when it goes on sale November 9th.

The W510 sports an IPS display with a 1,366 x 768 resolution, and that panel is coated in Gorilla Glass 2 for some extra scratch resistance. Unlike the Ivy Bridge-packing W700, this device runs a 1.5GHz dual-core Intel Atom Z2760 processor (from the Clover Trail series) with 2GB of RAM and up to 64GB of solid-state storage. Connections include a microSD card reader, micro-HDMI and a micro-USB 2.0 port. Acer also offers a $150 keyboard dock, which connects to the tablet from the top and offers a full-size USB 2.0 port. Without the dock, the tablet is rated for up to nine hours of battery life; the dock adds another nine. We got a chance to play with an early unit of the W510 -- head over to our in-depth preview for a closer look.

Continue reading Atom-powered Acer Iconia W510 on sale November 9th for $500 and up

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Atom-powered Acer Iconia W510 on sale November 9th for $500 and up originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Oct 2012 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS outs dockable Windows 8 Vivo Tab and Vivo Tab RT

ASUS outs dockable Windows 8 Vivo Tab and Vivo Tab RT

It looks like IFA will be where many Windows 8 devices shown back at Computex get (more) official. Exhibit A is ASUS, which today pulled the curtains on the Vivo Tab and the Vivo Tab RT, previously known as the ASUS Tablet 810 and the ASUS Tablet 600, respectively. There's still no pricing info available, but the company has filled in some of the remaining spec gaps.

As we previously knew, the Vivo Tab sports an 11.6-inch IPS display with a 1,366 x 768 resolution and supports a Wacom digitizer input in addition to 10-point multitouch. The tablet runs an Intel Atom CPU with 2GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. The Vivo Tab measures 0.33 inches thick and weighs in at 1.5 pounds. There's also an 8-megapixel camera with autofocus and LED flash, plus a 2-megapixel shooter up front. As we learned back in Taipei as well, an NFC sensor will be on board.

Then there's the Vivo Tab RT, which is slightly smaller, at 0.33 inches thick and 1.1 pounds, and with a 10.1-inch screen. Like its non-RT brother, it boasts an IPS display with a 1,366 x 768 resolution, but it runs a Tegra 3 processor and a 12-core GPU, with 2GB of RAM and 32GB of internal storage. The RT tablet includes the same cameras and NFC sensor as the Vivo Tab.

Of course, these two slates also come with a Transformer-like dock, which adds a full QWERTY keyboard, trackpad, two USB ports and a second battery. The missing element to this equation is still pricing and availability: check back for those details, and in the meantime hit up the press release below the break.

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ASUS outs dockable Windows 8 Vivo Tab and Vivo Tab RT originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Aug 2012 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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More slides on Dell’s Windows 8 Latitude 10 tablet surface, detail docking station and launch window

More slides on Dell's Windows 8 Latitude 10 tablet surface, detailing launch timeframe and docking station

A slide detailing a Dell Latitude 10 tablet running Windows 8 surfaced late last month, and today more information about that slate has hit the internet. Neowin's "insider source" provided additional slides pertaining to the Dell Latitude 10, rounding out the product's specs and adding its time-to-market to the picture. According to the leaked roadmap, the 10.1-inch device is slated to ship between mid-November and mid-January, and it looks like Dell will offer a docking station with four USB ports, Ethernet, HDMI, built-in mobile broadband and even an optional stylus. Specs match up with those in the previously published slide, though Neowin says Dell may also release a Windows RT tablet around October. Head to the source link for the complete gallery of Latitude 10 slides.

[Thanks, Brad]

More slides on Dell's Windows 8 Latitude 10 tablet surface, detail docking station and launch window originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jun 2012 11:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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