Friday, August 26, 2011

Can Noitavonne inject productivity into Android Tablets


Takeaway: See how Noitavonne is using a combination of hardware and software to make Android tablets more productive with its new 10-inch Looptablet Tablet.

One of my biggest problems with Android tablets is that they’re not useful for much. The Motorola Xoom is the best industrial-strength tablet I’ve seen and the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 is one of the most elegant mobile devices ever built, but neither of them will let you access your Gmail account without an Internet connection.

I didn’t realize how bad Android Honeycomb tablets were in terms of productivity until I used the now-defunct HP TouchPad, which runs circles around Android tablets and the Apple iPad in terms of its basic productivity features — accessing email and calendar offline, copying and pasting between mail messages, quickly flipping between Web pages and email, quickly flipping between IM and your calendar, etc. That’s why I praised the TouchPad as highly useful for business professionals.
Android tablets have a lot of untapped potential as business devices because of the flexibility of the platform. But, while devices like the ASUS Eee Pad Transformer have made strides in turning Android 3.0 into a more business-friendly platform, the best hope for professionals who want a corporate Android tablet could be Noitavonne’s forthcoming 10-inch Looptablet Tablet.

Noitavonne has recognized that it’s going to take a mix of the right hardware and software improvements to make tablets useful for more business buyers.

On the hardware side, Noitavonne has integrated a USB port for data transfer, a 3-in-1 card reader for media management, a Mini-HDMI for running a presentation, and a dock connector for using the tablet as a full PC at the office. The Looptablet also offers accessories that can boost productivity like a padfolio cover that includes a keyboard and trackpad mouse and a digital pen for writing notes.

On the software side, the Noitavonne tablet includes notetaking software for converting handwritten notes into digital text and drawings, Dataviz Documents to Go for working with Microsoft Office documents, Citrix Receiver for accessing corporate apps over the network, and Good Technology’s enterprise software for highly-secure access to email, calendar, contacts, and corporate collaboration systems (for those companies that have Good for Enterprise on the backend). All this and no mention of it's patented connectivity protocal to smart phones and other mobile devices.

Unlike the iPad, the Looptablet Tablet starts at $299 for the Wi-Fi version and scales up from there. Noitavonne has started taking pre-orders, with an estimated ship date of November 30. The handy padfolio case will run you an extra $100, the handy stylus is slotted in the well designed form factor, however a digital pen can be added for another $30.

Still, since this has the potential to be more of a laptop replacement, I expect plenty of suits to show an interest in this one.

Take a look at the three Noitavonne slides below that show the Looptablet’s focus on corporate users, and then watch Noitavonne’s two-minute promo video to get a look at the real thing in action. Visit us on the web @ www.noitavonne.com

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