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Preferred tablet

 
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n212pj(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 9:25 am    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

Many of you are using tablet portable computers with charts, etc. I've done
some searching through the archives. But perhaps there are new opinions.
Therefore, from your perspective, which is the preferred tablet platform and
why? Assume multiple uses besides in the plane. That is, replacing a
notebook. Also, assume IFR and thus which software product have you found
to be to your likening? It's time to help the economy. Besides, my laptop
just went belly up.

Many thanks in advance.

John Jessen


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wcurtis(at)nerv10.com
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PostPosted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 4:10 pm    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

Sony PRS-700BC eBook Reader. Not a laptop but simpler to use in a cockpit.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B001HHZ1S6/ref=ord_cart_shr?%5Fencoding=UTF8&m=AN8LN2YPKS7DF&v=glance
William
http://nerv10.com/wcurtis/

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PostPosted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 5:03 pm    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

Interesting. What s/w do you use with this?



Sony PRS-700BC eBook Reader. Not a laptop but simpler to use in a cockpit.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B001HHZ1S6/ref=ord_cart_shr?%5
Fencoding=UTF8&m=AN8LN2YPKS7DF&v=glance


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Tim Olson



Joined: 25 Jan 2007
Posts: 2872

PostPosted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 5:38 pm    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

John,

My advice would be if you're going to look for something to use mainly
in the plane, then look at all the models that are available from
some of the aviation software companies, like Golden Eagle Chart Case,
and Seattle Avionics. They sell the models that probably work best
for plane use. I like the motion tablets because you can get the
View Anywhere and Ultra View Anywhere displays, which are nice for
in the daylight. Most average laptops/tablets will get real washed
out in sunlight. So there is benefit to paying more. I just got done
putting a SSD by using a CF card into my LE1600, and swapped memory
up to a 2GB module. The CF Card thing cost me about $110, and the
memory about $25-30. It seems to work pretty good, although in
terms of current horsepower, the dual-core stuff will blow it away.
Those LE1600's with ViewAnywhere screens can be had for about $800
or so, as a cheap way to get into it. One of the guys at
Seattle Avionics really loves his convertable tablet...I think
it may be a fujitsu or something. I think you'll find that
opinions and usages vary wildly.

While this page has some pretty non-current info on it, I did
recently update it.
http://www.myrv10.com/tips/IFR/Chart_Software.html

I'm flying with Voyager software, myself, so have no need for
paper any longer. Interestingly, there was just an article in
Aviation Consumer about the 696, and after reading that, I am
convinced that it really is lacking in filling the real needs
of what pilots of this late decade really need. Turns out they
won't ever be doing geo-referenced charts on it, and there are
literally dozens of features that it won't do compared with
either of the most popular EFB software packages. Either
Chart Case or Voyager EFB really blow it away in capabilities
for the most part. And, it's great to be able to use the
machine for more than just a GPS.

Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
John Jessen wrote:
Quote:


Many of you are using tablet portable computers with charts, etc. I've done
some searching through the archives. But perhaps there are new opinions.
Therefore, from your perspective, which is the preferred tablet platform and
why? Assume multiple uses besides in the plane. That is, replacing a
notebook. Also, assume IFR and thus which software product have you found
to be to your likening? It's time to help the economy. Besides, my laptop
just went belly up.

Many thanks in advance.

John Jessen


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wcurtis(at)nerv10.com
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PostPosted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 5:49 pm    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

As an eBook reader, it has a proprietary OS with the specific purpose of displaying eBooks and certain other (PDF, DOC, TXT, JPG, BMP, MP3, etc) digital formats. To try it out just put some PDF approach plates on an SD card and take it to a local store (Target, Best Buy, etc) that carries these units. Once you plug in the SD card, the unit will display a listing of all recognized files. Pull up a plate and see how you like it.

The earlier 500 and 505 units worked fine but an approach plate was very tiny on the display. It was legible but very small.

William
http://nerv10.com/wcurtis/

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LarryRosen



Joined: 16 Jan 2006
Posts: 415
Location: Medford, NJ

PostPosted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 6:10 pm    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

The ebook readers are gray scale. They look great in bright sunlight but
require lighting at night.

Larry

William Curtis wrote:
[quote]

As an eBook reader, it has a proprietary OS with the specific purpose of displaying eBooks and certain other (PDF, DOC, TXT, JPG, BMP, MP3, etc) digital formats. To try it out just put some PDF approach plates on an SD card and take it to a local store (Target, Best Buy, etc) that carries these units. Once you plug in the SD card, the unit will display a listing of all recognized files. Pull up a plate and see how you like it.

The earlier 500 and 505 units worked fine but an approach plate was very tiny on the display. It was legible but very small.

William
http://nerv10.com/wcurtis/

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msausen



Joined: 25 Oct 2007
Posts: 559
Location: Appleton, WI USA

PostPosted: Mon Jan 05, 2009 6:32 am    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

If you are going for a new laptop to replace your current one and also use in the aircraft you will probably want a convertible. The slates are nice as EFB's but can be a pain when you want to use it normally. The down side is the convertibles are a bit more bulky. I have had one of the first Toshiba convertible tablets to come out for many years now and it's always worked well. The Lenovo X61 tablet is very nice but like most Lenovo devices they are business orientated so are a bit utilitarian and expensive but are bulletproof. The HP tx series are more consumer orientated so they are cheaper and have lots of bells and whistles but are also bulkier. They are usually reviewed well also.

If you are looking at a new laptop to also be used in an aircraft, spring the extra cash for a SSD. Tim's idea works well as long as you are not using it as a single purpose device and not as a regular laptop. CF cards, even the newest cards like the Sandisk Extreme IV (45MB/s), are still about 3-5 times slower than the current SATA-1 (150MB/s) or SATAII (300MB/s) SSD's and hard drives and are technically even slower than USB2 (60MB/s and assuming a good thumb drive not the kind you get at a trade show). I've also heard of corruption of CF's and USB sticks if they are really loaded up from say something like opening a Word doc, switching to your email, and having a movie playing in the background. Never mind doing something like that from a CF card or USB device would probably take several minutes.

If your laptop has a standard SATA interface in it you can get lower quality SSD's for sub-$100 prices now and they will still be better performing than even most hard drives. Here is a 30GB SATAII SSD with a USB port also for $75...

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820227372

Michael
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Tim Olson



Joined: 25 Jan 2007
Posts: 2872

PostPosted: Mon Jan 05, 2009 9:28 am    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

Michael's really got some great points. I really myself
believe that you won't be happy with a laptop/tablet that
you try to use heavily as a dual-use device. If you get
something with a SSD, which you really almost HAVE to for
in the plane, you're not going to be as thrilled with it
in use as a laptop. Laptops are slow enough compared to
today's desktops as it is, so when shopping for a PC that
you'll use heavily outside of the plane, you're probably
going to want more drive space, more processor, more speed,
and all that good stuff. When going for something to use
in the plane, you will be more concerned with weight,
form factor, battery life, SSD, and those sorts of things.
Yeah, you can find some that will do "ok" dual use, but
you'll probably be sacrificing on one thing or another...
and that will just make you angry in the end.

My motion LE1600 is now old, but the good things about it
compared to some of the new is that the screen resolution
is good, but not super high, like many new notebooks or
even the LE1700. More pixels means slower in graphics,
in many cases. The new stuff is also expensive, whereas
the older can be had pretty cheap. Taking an older,
HP consumer convertable laptop/tablet can be a good way to
go too, if you can get one with a 2.5" drive, because as
Michael pointed out, 2.5" SataII drives are cheap. In my
case, I had a 1.8" drive....those are pretty pricey especially
with the ZIF connector I had...which is why I used CF.
The ZIF 1.8" commercial SSD's are faster than my Pseudo-ssd,
but tons more expensive.

With a tablet, as opposed to something like a 696, you can
go on a vacation and have a PC to get weather, internet,
email, file flight plans, and all that stuff, and you can
pull it out to the hotel with you. So I think it works
great for travelling. I use a silicone roll-up keyboard
with it that is very light and small, too. (less than $10)
So it does quite well for a traveling machine. But, I would
HATE to use it as my sole laptop. In fact, on some trips,
I KNOW I'll be doing a lot of remote access work, and will
use the VPN heavily, so I just bring my laptop in addition.
But that's because that is my primary PC, and if I plan
to do lots of work, I bring it. But, my tablet also can
get me connected via VPN, and for unplanned work, it does
just fine. So it's really handy to just grab a notepad
binder sized thing and just take it with me whenever I go
to the airport. It serves really well, but I don't consider
it a full laptop replacement.

Another area where I think people would be disappointed is
with permanent mounting of something like an EFB tablet.
Even with mounting it on some sort of fixed holder. The
problem is, while in turbulence I can hold it and touch the
screen with the pen and enter fixes, and click links, and
pull up approach plates, if it were hard mounted, I think in
bumps it would be just plain miserable to try to reach out
with a finger or a pen and tap those links or letters.
You would make so many tapping mistakes it would drive you
crazy.

Oh, I did just remember one thing that is nicer about
EFB software than the 696, also. The 696's approach plates
do not fit on the screen in full size without panning
around to see the chart. Check the specs on the screen
resolution and a 696 compares closer to an iphone than
a tablet PC. With a tablet/laptop, you can load an entire
approach plate on the screen and see and read the whole thing.
The chart subscription is more than twice as complete as
the 696, also, for a lower cost, and that is comparing
it at the "EFB" level, which includes EVERYTHING. If you
don't care for geo-referenced charts, there are software
packages that cost a bunch less with much cheaper chart
subscriptions.

Anyway, for most people, we still live in a world where
if you're an avid power user, you need 3-4 devices to
tickle your fancy. A full-sized PC with lots of drive
space and power for video editing, and heavy photo editing,
and any real power work, a reasonably powerful laptop
to do your daily work, and use around the house so you
can check email and get work done while laying in your
lazy boy, a tablet or small convertable laptop for use
in the plane if you want charts and those goodies,
and lastly, I'm now totally in love with the iPhone/iTouch
as an ultra-portable way to keep connected when you
don't feel like bringing all that other stuff along.
There's no way the i"Stuff" will ever replace an EFB package,
but man it's handy when you're on the go.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
RV Builder (Michael Sausen) wrote:
[quote]
<rvbuilder(at)sausen.net>

If you are going for a new laptop to replace your current one and
also use in the aircraft you will probably want a convertible. The
slates are nice as EFB's but can be a pain when you want to use it
normally. The down side is the convertibles are a bit more bulky. I
have had one of the first Toshiba convertible tablets to come out for
many years now and it's always worked well. The Lenovo X61 tablet is
very nice but like most Lenovo devices they are business orientated
so are a bit utilitarian and expensive but are bulletproof. The HP
tx series are more consumer orientated so they are cheaper and have
lots of bells and whistles but are also bulkier. They are usually
reviewed well also.

If you are looking at a new laptop to also be used in an aircraft,
spring the extra cash for a SSD. Tim's idea works well as long as
you are not using it as a single purpose device and not as a regular
laptop. CF cards, even the newest cards like the Sandisk Extreme IV
(45MB/s), are still about 3-5 times slower than the current SATA-1
(150MB/s) or SATAII (300MB/s) SSD's and hard drives and are
technically even slower than USB2 (60MB/s and assuming a good thumb
drive not the kind you get at a trade show). I've also heard of
corruption of CF's and USB sticks if they are really loaded up from
say something like opening a Word doc, switching to your email, and
having a movie playing in the background. Never mind doing something
like that from a CF card or USB device would probably take several
minutes.

If your laptop has a standard SATA interface in it you can get lower
quality SSD's for sub-$100 prices now and they will still be better
performing than even most hard drives. Here is a 30GB SATAII SSD
with a USB port also for $75...

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820227372

Michael


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PostPosted: Mon Jan 05, 2009 9:55 am    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

The attached is what Tim was referring to, a hard mounted Motion 1700.

As I've done a more thorough search, I'm unfortunately coming to the same
conclusion as Tim's post, namely there is still no one solution. I built a
screaming desktop to render those HD videos and all the other work (this
Linux stuff is kinda cool... different topic). I need a good, not high end
laptop for traveling on business, but that won't do for the EFB usage on the
plane.

However, check out this nice post about the same topic, which I thought
might be helpful. From Richard Eastman, a Sportsman flyer.

=======================================

I have been a long-time user of the Motion Computing Tablet. I use it in my
office ... my car ... and my plane. There are a number of software programs
that use the Motion Computing tool ... both as an OEM solution and simply
loading the software onto an independently purchased Motion Computing
platform.

The Motion Computing platform is a superb environment. My first machine is
6 years old at this point and serves as both my back-up AND the file-server
that runs my home network. My current machine is three years old. I run
all the standard Office software on it ... my company's computer programs
.. and actually source AOPA's new Internet Flight Planner on it for flight
planning via a Sprint wireless card or a local area network when available.

I have considered putting the Seattle Avionics' Voyager on my back-up for
use in the plane; but the economy has put a bit of a hold on buying new
toys. I was looking at the Voyager software before Glasair's Alan Negrin
moved over there. It's a good package and Seattle Avionics OEM's it on the
Motion Computing platform.

And while I'm pretty impressed with the new Garmin 696, the fact that I have
most of the 696 features in the plane's avionics already, I expect that I'll
end up putting software on my Motion platform.

I should add that I know that the Motion platform can be read in the
airplane as I've actually gone online using the Sprint card while flying to
Apple Valley ... and pulled up the AOPA Flight Planner software en route.
It won't be long before we'll all be able to access flight planning programs
en route via Internet as that technology continues to evolve; particularly
for low-level flying where the GlaStar and Sportsman fly.

Quote:
From a maintenance standpoint, I've had virtually no problems with the
Motion Computing platform -- and I'd be considered a "power user" by most

users. I've dropped both of them a number of times ... or had them fall off
of things. The only things that have ever broken were cosmetic plastic
covers.

// Richard

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dmaib@me.com



Joined: 25 Apr 2006
Posts: 454
Location: New Smyrna Beach, Florida

PostPosted: Mon Jan 05, 2009 2:20 pm    Post subject: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

Before I retired, we were using Motion Computing LS800's with the
solid state drive as EFB's on the corporate jets I flew. We had
Jeppesen Flitedeck for charts, Citation performance calculator,
Weight and Balance, Operating Manual, and Aircraft Flight Manual on
the machines. Additionally, we had manuals for all of the various
avionics and training materials loaded. We used a bluetooth
connection to display WSI In Flight wx. The machines were just about
flawless and we used them hard. I will probably buy one for my own
EFB in the -10.

David Maib
40559
Phase 1 finished, in the paint shop.

On Jan 5, 2009, at 12:54 PM, John Jessen wrote:

The attached is what Tim was referring to, a hard mounted Motion 1700.

As I've done a more thorough search, I'm unfortunately coming to the
same
conclusion as Tim's post, namely there is still no one solution. I
built a
screaming desktop to render those HD videos and all the other work (this
Linux stuff is kinda cool... different topic). I need a good, not
high end
laptop for traveling on business, but that won't do for the EFB usage
on the
plane.

However, check out this nice post about the same topic, which I thought
might be helpful. From Richard Eastman, a Sportsman flyer.

=======================================

I have been a long-time user of the Motion Computing Tablet. I use
it in my
office ... my car ... and my plane. There are a number of software
programs
that use the Motion Computing tool ... both as an OEM solution and
simply
loading the software onto an independently purchased Motion Computing
platform.

The Motion Computing platform is a superb environment. My first
machine is
6 years old at this point and serves as both my back-up AND the file-
server
that runs my home network. My current machine is three years old. I
run
all the standard Office software on it ... my company's computer
programs
.. and actually source AOPA's new Internet Flight Planner on it for
flight
planning via a Sprint wireless card or a local area network when
available.

I have considered putting the Seattle Avionics' Voyager on my back-up
for
use in the plane; but the economy has put a bit of a hold on buying new
toys. I was looking at the Voyager software before Glasair's Alan
Negrin
moved over there. It's a good package and Seattle Avionics OEM's it
on the
Motion Computing platform.

And while I'm pretty impressed with the new Garmin 696, the fact that
I have
most of the 696 features in the plane's avionics already, I expect
that I'll
end up putting software on my Motion platform.

I should add that I know that the Motion platform can be read in the
airplane as I've actually gone online using the Sprint card while
flying to
Apple Valley ... and pulled up the AOPA Flight Planner software en
route.
It won't be long before we'll all be able to access flight planning
programs
en route via Internet as that technology continues to evolve;
particularly
for low-level flying where the GlaStar and Sportsman fly.

Quote:
From a maintenance standpoint, I've had virtually no problems with the
Motion Computing platform -- and I'd be considered a "power user" by

most
users. I've dropped both of them a number of times ... or had them
fall off
of things. The only things that have ever broken were cosmetic plastic
covers.

// Richard

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RV-10 #40559
New Smyrna Beach, FL
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Space Cadet



Joined: 10 Jan 2008
Posts: 14
Location: Denver

PostPosted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 11:12 am    Post subject: Re: Preferred tablet Reply with quote

I used a regular old Dell laptop hooked up to a NavAero tPad800 in my Turbo Arrow for several years. Nice low cost solution. tPad is small enough to yoke-mount, but had 800x600 resolution. Down-side is the sunlight readability claim is over-rated, you need to keep it in shade (movable sunshades worked fine).

Never had a problem with the laptop hard drive or software even at altitudes up into the upper teens, or in turbulence. Turn it on, hook up a couple USB ports, and throw it into the seat-back pocket was all we did. Although it has a touchscreen, you'd be better served by plugging in a portable trackball and velcroing it someplace convenient. That would mostly eliminate the concern over control in turbulence. Great having the laptop along to use on the ground too.

For software, I was using RMSTek's Flightsoft and Vista. Low cost, full VFR/IFR geo-referenced (including approach) moving maps, weather, etc. Worked pretty well, but not as fancy or as feature-rich as Voyager, which I am going to switch to for the RV. They kept updating the software regularly to improve it, and support was excellent.

I plan on running a newer laptop into a 10" panel-mounted sun-bright LCD display for the RV. Now, if I can only figure out a way to output the laptop flight plan data onto the EFIS data stream like the Garmin's do...

Dwight


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