
A number of readers responded to our call to describe their perfect notebook. We were pleased to discover they generally agreed with major elements of our WorldBook design, especially the integrated smartphone and the embedded solar panel. We also learned that features we excluded for being too expensive or impractical might have enough market appeal to justify another crack at doing them affordably.
[ View the "perfect laptop" slide show ]
Modularity was a popular theme among the submissions. More than one reader wanted a removable keyboard, a removable screen, a detachable camera and mic, removable wireless speakers, and a removable disk drive that could be easily slipped out of the laptop and into a desktop computer.
Many readers wanted more from our WorldBooks. Wish lists included TV, GPS, a music synthesizer, shortwave radio, a tablet form factor, a keyboard that doubles as a touchscreen, even a fold-out screen or add-on panels to extend the display. Other readers wanted decidedly less: a form factor the size of a paperback book, small enough to fit in a pocket.
Readers loved the idea of the smartphone integrated into our notebooks' touchpad/tablet. The embedded smartphone allows WorldBook users to access EDGE and 3G for Internet connections, as well as the ability to run productivity widgets, play stored and streaming media files, and employ the browser without powering up the notebook or lighting its display. Some readers, including grand prize winner Enrique Gines, wanted this smartphone to be removable. So did we. What nixed modular removal of the smartphone from the original WorldBooks were design challenges that we couldn't address affordably.
Hold the phone
Having a user-removable smartphone module would mean that the notebook would spend some of its time with a giant hole where the touchpad/tablet once sat. We could conceivably create a module that slides into the same space to provide only the pointing device, but wouldn't it make you crazy if you misplaced or damaged this? Whenever you removed the smartphone, your notebook would be useless, with a crater where the pointing device should be. » FULL STORY

Modular Smartphone
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