Business
        

Technology

A tablet to cure PC headaches

Updated: 2011-05-27 10:42

By Tuo Yannan (China Daily)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

A tablet to cure PC headaches

Beijing ErenEben Information Technology Co's tablet PC, which uses a pen touchscreen made by the Japanese technology company Wacom Co Ltd. A recent survey indicated that Chinese businesspeople and government officials prefer ErenEben's handwriting recognition software. [Photo/China Daily]

Homegrown device has many advantages going for it, except price

BEIJING - Want to write a love letter to your sweetheart, but don't want to use a steel-cold type font e-mail? Well, now you can use your own handwriting and even draw some red heart patterns then send them through e-mail by using a tablet PC.

Nowadays, almost all tablet PCs look the same: They are all black, have a touchscreen, and run Google's Android system. You cannot tell one from another because the functions and applications they provide are the same, as well.

Recently, I got a different one - the ErenEben tablet PC, manufactured by Beijing ErenEben Information Technology Co.

Although my non-Chinese co-workers have difficulty pronouncing its name, it does have characteristics that greatly distinguish it from Apple Inc's iPad and the iPad copycats.

Related readings:
A tablet to cure PC headaches Lenovo eyes larger tablet market share
A tablet to cure PC headaches A tablet to cure PC headaches
A tablet to cure PC headaches Lenovo looks to take greater share of China's tablet market
A tablet to cure PC headaches Lenovo to bite Apple's profit with tablet PCs

Before I started writing this story, I went to a garden and began using ErenEben's tablet to draw my office building as a test.

Compared with iPad's finger touchscreen, the ErenEben is a much better experience for those using professional sketching software and writing calligraphy, as the touchscreen uses a pen rather than your finger.

When I use the same Autodesk sketch application on my iPad, the experience feels awkward and unnatural.

ErenEben means "Everyone has one" in Chinese. It runs on Google's Android operating system and has a 20.3-centimeter pen touchscreen, produced by the Japanese touch-input technology company Wacom Co Ltd, which also produces 2D animation drawing hardware.

The biggest difference between the iPad and ErenEben is that the Chinese company does not want to change its customers' habits, as is often necessary for successful use of the iPad.

A tablet to cure PC headachesFang Liyong, the chief operating officer of ErenEben, told China Daily that its products are tailor-made for Chinese customers and does not require them to learn new skills, such as digital-keyboard typing and the use of inconvenient device-PC synchronizing software.

Localizing its product has allowed the Chinese company to occupy a 5 percent portion of the Chinese tablet PC market share that does not belong to the iPad.

That share is bigger than those enjoyed by international peers such as Dell Inc and Hewlett-Packard Corp. While Apple has only four retail stores in China, ErenEben provides more than 600 outlets for customers to try their products.

Customers can use ErenEben to compose e-mails, notes and Word files in their own handwriting. The surface of the screen has a more natural feeling compared with writing on the iPad.

A recent survey indicated that Chinese businesspeople and government officials - most of them over 35 and more comfortable with writing by hand than a virtual keyboard - prefer ErenEben's handwriting recognition software.

If you need to make corrections, the other end of the pen functions as an eraser.

To further cater to Chinese customers, the company even provides an application to practice calligraphy.

   Previous Page 1 2 Next Page  

Specials

Birthday a new 'starting point'

China's national English language newspaper aims for a top-notch international all-media group.

Room at the inn

The Chinese hotel industry experiences a building boom, prompting fears of oversupply.

Pearls of wisdom

Chinese pearl farmers dominate the world market but now want to work smarter, not harder

Suzhou: Heaven on Earth
The sky's the limit
Diving into history