Category Archives: Tablet

Re-Thinking Ink with Shawn van Ness

If you have done any work with the TabletPC SDK, you are probably aware that there is a COM API and a managed API, but that the managed API is really just a wrapper to the COM API. You are also probably aware that the Tablet API is VERY tightly bound to the windows API. Everything that you do is through windows handles. If you have tried to add ink to your web pages, you probably learned this lesson well also.

Shawn van Ness was fortunate enough not only to have been born with a pretty good brain, but he was also lucky to be working at the Leszynski Group when they got very involved with doing TabletPC development hand in hand with Microsoft. Do you know that it was the Leszynski Group that wrote the super cool Physics Illustrator app? And that Shawn was one of the authors of that program? Shawn has also authored a great many Tablet PC development articles for MSDN Online.

So I was definitely not surprised to learn in February that he had finally gotten scooped up by Microsoft to ink-enable Avalon. And I was not surprised when his recent blog article came out talking about ink being baked directly into Avalon.

What is interesting is how differently it is all going to work. Because Avalon tosses our dependence on Windows handles, working with ink had to be rethought from the ground up. Shawn is a very good teacher and he offers a great explanation of how and why this will work and how it is compares to our current Tablet PC SDK development experience.

And no, I have NOT played with Avalon yet. Aaargh!

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The $10million tabletPC promotion idea…

Loren Heiny asked “if you have $10million to promote TabletPCs, how would you do it.” Robert Scoble suggests buying 5 tabletpcs for every airline so people can play with them while they are flying. Oddly enough, Don Kiely emailed me the other day to tell me that Lenovo (the makers of the new ThinkPad TabletPC) had a kiosk at one of the airports that he flew through on his latest multi-user group INETA trip and he got to play with it for a while (and was hooked!). It makes perfect sense, all of our best stories about showing Tablets to strangers are those which happened while we were in airports or airplanes.

There is a growing list of comments to Loren’s original post.

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Loren Heiny brings true ink benefit to Visual Studio (and other) developers

Loren is a developer who definitely is a “big brain” when it comes to thinking about WHAT we can do with ink, not just how to use it.

I can’t point to this post of his without quoting him: I’ve heard it said many times: “I’m a developer. I type code. Why do I need a Tablet PC or even ink?”

Check out what he has done (well, is still working out) in regards to inking notes into your IDE code or while debugging. Very cool!



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Funky doodle by Markus Egger

Markus left a groovy little doodle in the gallery of my Doodle Website. Markus is a big tablet user and explorer. As a developer (and I think also an astute business person) he is always thinking about how to make it better – the actual machine or coming up with some good UI standards for ink applications.

There are some other really surprisingly good drawings on there. Like Carl Franklin’s (a truly multi-talented guy) and Mark Miller (okay, so it’s a little sick…)



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Tablet PC Memory Leak fix (and a little iis woes)

I’v been heads down this morning with major IIS problems on my web server. Something about a windows 2003 server patch, Application Pools mucked up, Service Unavailable on everything. Anyway, I uninstalled and reinstalled IIS and am now updating windows 2003 SP1 again, and had a minute to look at blogs and saw lots of pointers to the Tablet PC Memory Leak fix.

When I solve my server problems, I’ll blog about it. Thanks to Brad Kingsley and Mike Campbell for lots of help with that today.

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Tablets the hot item: Fortune Small Business

“The Scoop on Wi-Fi” article in Fortune Small Business this month is all about how businesses are levering wi-fi and becoming REALLY mobile. Tablet PC’s are a highlight of every one of the businesses that were featured in the article. The issues (July/August) isn’t online yet, but last month’s issue with the cover story about Microsoft’s anthropoligists who learn how businesses work is. Just before I received that issue, Rich and I watched a film named Kitchen Stories, about Swedish researchers who were sent to Norway in the 50’s to watch the patterns of single men in their kitchens. They had to be silent observers in the homes of their studies. Wonderful movie. Strange occupation. It seems that Microsoft’s do the same: sit quietly in an office and watch someone work. Hard to pretend they aren’t there.

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