How not to break your nose reading a Tablet PC
Monday, August 22nd, 2005After encountering this situation on one too many occasion, I decided to do some observation and study into its root causes. I concluded that the problem was that there was no way to easily turn the page from this position; this in turn led to boredom [continually looking at the same page] which lead to a relaxed state of being, [while waiting for the page to somehow turn by itself] which led to slumber, which lead to a near-broken nose while studying.
I did many repeat experiments under similar conditions to validate my findings (which is why there's no photo of my smiling face with this blog entry).
A few years ago, I determined that I should do something about this problem. As a robotics enthusiast, I decided that there must be a way to build a stand to hold my book with an automated page turner. I scoured the Internet for ideas; I even wrote to The Christopher Reeve Foundation to ask for ideas and to offer to share mine. Surely I was not the first person with this interest/need. My initial searches & inquiries returned nothing.
Well, that was a few years ago; I eventually did find a mechanism that would automatically turn the page of a book; I found it in a medical supply catalog for patients with disabilities. Unfortunately, there were approximately 3,950 reasons why it might not work for my application.
A few months ago I purchased Tecra M4 Tablet PC. This allowed me to scan in my text books and other materials that I wanted to study and read them on the tablet from a relaxed position. Once again, I thought back to my book stand/page turner idea. With the Tablet PC, I didn't need the robotic page-turner. I could used timed page turns or use a a Bluetooth mouse or Logitech cordless presenter to let me control the turn of each page. This was great.
But it wasn't. I soon realized that I had another more serious reading hazard to contend with...
A Tecra M4 Tablet PC falling on my face could kill me
Not one to be easily discouraged by technical problems - even in the face of life-threatening risks such as these, I renewed my search for the ultimate Tablet PC stand* - one that would allow me to [safely] read in any position, no matter how relaxed I got.
If you're still reading this far, you'll be delighted to know that I recently found my ultimate Tablet PC stand.* I do not have one - yet- but I've sat in front of one for several days now, and I'm inspired to think about getting/building one for myself soon.
Still interested? Let me know, and I'll post some pictures soon.
* I thought about calling this UTPCS, but I didn't want to torture Marc Orchant and James Kendrick with Yet Another Acronym, so for the time-being, no cute name.







Discussion/Comments (16):
Thanks so much for that Eric. I just pronouncing that acronym and I sprained my tongue!
;^)
Can't wait to see what you've come up with.
Here's a tip: eReader and Microsoft Reader both can be set to autoscroll at a variable speed to allow a continuous scrolling display of the ebook. I do this on my Treo and my Tablet PC - just prop it up and read while eating breakfast for example.
Posted at 8/22/2005 12:10:34 PM by Marc Orchant
Ok, now you're just being a tease, Eric. Can't wait to see the result.
Posted at 8/22/2005 12:14:02 PM by Warner Crocker
I'm sitting here envisioning something like a football helmet with the face mask replaced by a set of arms and clamps for securing the tablet :-)
Posted at 8/22/2005 1:13:40 PM by Richard Schwartz
Eric, I love your acronyms, I just can't spell them. :) I have a simple solution to your problem and it works with the Tecra and also real books.
Sit up when you read. I have one of those pillow chairs that make sitting up and reading in bed very comfortable. And safer for those with your problem.
Posted at 8/22/2005 1:15:13 PM by James Kendrick
Eric, have you not posted the pictures yet because you're waiting for them to be developed? Is this another aProductivity example? M.
Posted at 8/22/2005 3:01:48 PM by Michael Sampson
I came up with a better solution than a stand ...
{ Link }
Posted at 8/22/2005 7:32:03 PM by Rob Stevens
Eric, have you not posted the pictures because you're still waiting for them to be processed at the photo lab? M.
Posted at 8/23/2005 12:34:50 AM by Michael Sampson
Eric - I really have to disagree with you using your children in such a way.
I do hope you allow them to rest every hour whilst holding your books/tablet pc up for you to read and turning the pages!
Posted at 8/23/2005 3:25:01 AM by Steve Castledine
Well, I know which stand I use - and it folds up flat (well almost flat). Could it be the same one? Post Eric!
Posted at 8/23/2005 6:25:06 AM by Walter
There's a pretty cool piece of technology that can effectively solve this problem.
It's called a chair. ;)
Posted at 8/23/2005 10:07:57 AM by Steve Pavlina
For those of you waiting for the photos to go along with my previous post. I now have them. I'm hoping to get two more that will who how the stand can be used in a variety of positions. If I'm unable to do that, I'll post what I have.
Posted at 8/23/2005 11:12:00 AM by Eric Mack
Versatile, too.
Posted at 8/23/2005 11:10:00 AM by Eric Mack
I place the M4 in notebook mode on a small table right next to the bed.(I just got the M4 a week ago and loving it).
Posted at 8/24/2005 1:43:46 AM by Michael K
I'll get them posted tomorrow. Have a great weekend, everyone!
Posted at 8/26/2005 5:58:15 PM by Eric Mack
Seriously - no really - what about a page-turning triggered by a sound, like a click of the tongue? I've found that a timed page-turn or scroll doesn't match my reading speed, which tends to speed up or slow down depending on the material - conversations are fast, for instance, and descriptions are slow.
Posted at 10/21/2005 12:45:07 PM by Jon Jermey
Eric,
Pleeeeaase, send me more information about what you use now and if there´s something useful for reading books, turning pages or holding laptops on the market.
I thank you very much, from Brazil!
Sérgio.
Posted at 12/22/2008 1:35:03 PM by Sergio Pos