2-in-1 PC

Microsoft Surface Pro 3, a prominent 2-in-1 detachable.

A 2-in-1 PC is a category of portable computers, containing devices that combine elements of tablets and laptops. Different variants of the term exist, such as 2-in-1 tablet, 2-in-1 laptop, 2-in-1 detachable[1], laplet,[2][3] or simply 2-in-1.

Before the emergence of 2-in-1s, the terms convertible and hybrid were already being used in the computer industry and by technology journalists. Convertibles typically feature some type of keyboard concealment mechanism, in some cases allowing the user to rotate or slide the keyboard behind the back of the chassis, while the hybrid's keyboard is completely detachable without interrupting the running system. Both convertibles and hybrids are crossover devices, combining features of both a tablet and a laptop, however, the 2-in-1 is a sibling class of both these categories, dubbed the 2-in-1 convertible or 2-in-1 detachable respectively, but distinct from other convertibles and hybrids by the support of a full-featured desktop operating system, such as Windows 10 and featuring a number of I/O-ports for extra connectivity to various standard PC peripheral devices.[4]

2-in-1 is an example of a technological convergence. It is built using a standard portable PC components, yet have a light and thin chassis, which can transform 2-in-1 into a slate tablet form. Therefore, 2-in-1s are convenient for a media consumption and typical non-intensive tablet tasks, such as web browsing, in one position, and in another they are useful for resource intensive content production activities, such as a photo editing.[2]

Forms

2-in-1 convertible

2-in-1 convertibles are devices with the ability to hide the keyboard, rotating, folding or sliding it behind or within a chassis. They tend to differ by the type of hinge used. On most devices it is situated near the display and keyboard junction, while on others (like the Dell XPS Duo) there is the additional hinge in the middle of the display, so that the display can be flipped horizontally within its frame. Some 2-in-1 convertibles incorporate a sliding mechanism, allowing the user to slide the keyboard behind or within the display.

2-in-1 detachable

After the inception of 2-in-1 convertibles, many manufacturers looked for ways to further decrease the size and weight of their touchscreen-enabled hybrid laptop devices. 2-in-1 detachables emerged - devices with detachable keyboards. In most cases the keyboard part provides few, if any, additional features (most often a touchpad, as in the HP Spectre x2). However, some manufacturers equip the keyboard part with some features of a docking station: additional I/O-ports, battery, etc. (like the Dell Latitude 13 7000 Series). Some models of the Surface Book have a discrete graphics adapter in the keyboard part, with the ability to automatically connect and disconnect (switching to the integrated graphics in the display part), without the interruption of the running operating system.

After the release of the original Surface, which first made use of a kickstand supporting the main part of the tablet while it stands on a flat surface, a number of other manufacturers incorporated their own versions of a supporting mechanism for their products. For example, the HP Spectre x2's case features a bending frame with a locking mechanism.

Notably, the keyboard parts of some 2-in-1 detachables, while providing essential features, are sometimes deemed an "optional" accessory by some manufacturers in order to minimize the starting price of a device. Nevertheless, in such cases the device is often displayed with its keyboard part in most ads and promotional materials. This is true for all devices of the Surface and Surface Pro lines.

Distinction from traditional tablets and laptops

Even while being considered tablets, 2-in-1s fall in the category of hybrid or convertible tablets, but distinct from other members of this group in the following ways: they run a full-featured desktop operating system, feature a CPU that supports it and have I/O ports typically found on laptops, such as USB and DisplayPort.[5][6] The most prominent element is the keyboard, which transforms the 2-in-1 into a full-fledged laptop.

When a 2-in-1 is being classified as a laptop, it loosely falls in the Ultrabook device category, sharing with it such traits as a light and thin chassis, a power-efficient CPU, and a long battery life. It is distinguished from a traditional Ultrabook by the inclusion of a touchscreen display and a concealable or detachable keyboard.

Devices similar to 2-in-1s

Some aspects of 2-in-1s are found in devices using ARM processors. Such devices are not classified as a 2-in-1s as they usually run mobile operating systems (iOS, Android, Windows RT etc.) instead of a desktop OS (Windows 10, Ubuntu, etc.) and typically have fewer industry-standard I/O-ports.

Devices whose form factors resemble 2-in-1s but are not classified as such include the Surface RT and Surface 2, whose design and appearance are similar to the Surface Pro and Surface Pro 2, the iPad Pro and ASUS Transformer Pad series devices. They all have optional detachable keyboards, but are still considered as hybrid tablets due to their use of a mobile operating system.

Notable devices

The first device which can be considered a 2-in-1 detachable is the Compaq TC1000 from 2002. It features a 1 GHz Transmeta Crusoe CPU, Nvidia GeForce 2 Go GPU, Windows XP Tablet PC edition, detachable keyboard, and a stylus.

The mainstream public attention was not achieved until the late 2013, when tablet-sized laptops with detachable keyboards, mainly running the Windows 8 operating system on Intel Atom processors, started to appear in the mass market.

Among the first devices from this era were the Asus VivoTab series by Asus, with models with 10.1 inches (26 cm) or 11.6 inches (29 cm) screens. They began to arrive in stores in October 2012, and were succeeded by the ASUS Transformer Book series in October 2013.[7]

Microsoft started its own line of 2-in-1s with the introduction of the Surface Pro series, the first of which was released in February 2013.[8] It had a 10.6 inches (0.0134 ch) display, Intel Core i5 CPU, and a detachable keyboard, which also doubles as a protective screen cover.

A number of prominent laptop manufacturers, such as Lenovo, Dell, Samsung, Acer, and others have also begun releasing their own 2-in-1s.[2]

Criticism

In April 2012 Apple's CEO Tim Cook, answering to the question of the researcher Anthony Sacconaghi about a possible hybrid of iPad and MacBook, compared a 2-in-1 to "a hybrid of a toaster and a refrigerator" that "doesn’t please anyone":

I think, Tony, anything can be forced to converge. But the problem is that products are about trade-offs, and you begin to make trade-offs to the point where what you have left at the end of the day doesn’t please anyone. You can converge a toaster and a refrigerator, but those things are probably not going to be pleasing to the user … you wouldn’t want to put these things together because you wind up compromising in both and not pleasing either user. Some people will prefer to own both, and that’s great, too. But I think to make the compromises of convergence, so — we’re not going to that party. Others might. Others might from a defensive point of view, particularly. But we’re going to play in both.[9]
Tim Cook, Apple's CEO

As of 2015, there are no other pre-installed operating system specifically supporting 2-in-1s, other than Microsoft Windows: 10 and 8. Although some Linux distributions do support some touch features of 2-in-1s, they are unsupported by the hardware vendors. Apple's OS X operating system does not support touch features, since there are no Apple touch-enabled devices, powered by OS X.

A touch-oriented, tablet part of the Windows – the apps and the whole ecosystem with the Windows Store in the center of it, is often criticized as a less convenient, less easy to use and offering a significantly lesser amount of quality apps, compared to more mature ecosystems of Google Android and Apple iOS mobile operating systems.[10][11] However, it is possible to run Android apps in the Windows through the use of an emulator software, such as BlueStacks App Player or American Megatrends AMIDuOS.

See also

References

  1. "2 in 1 Detachable Laptop Tablet Hybrid PCs | HP® Official Site". www8.hp.com. Retrieved 2016-04-17.
  2. 1 2 3 Chang, Alexandra (17 October 2012). "Here Come the Hybrid ‘Laplets.’ Should You Care?". Wired. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
  3. "Microsoft Surface Pro 3 Teardown". IFixit.com. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
  4. "It's a tablet! It's a laptop! It's a laplet! It's a tabtop!". Tech Radar. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
  5. Clunn, Nick. "Laptop vs. 2-in-1: Which is better?". PowerMore.Dell.com. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  6. Wood, Chris (24 November 2014). "2014 Windows 2-in-1 Comparison Guide". GizMag.com. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  7. "ASUS reveals Transformer Book T100 with Windows 8.1 for $349, we go hands-on". Engadget. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
  8. "Growing the Surface Family: Surface Windows 8 Pro Availability Confirmed". Microsoft. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
  9. Peckham, Matt (26 April 2012). "Is Apple CEO Tim Cook Right? Are Laptop-Tablet Hybrids Dead in the Water?". TechLand.Time.com. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  10. Matt Smith. "5 Reasons Why the Windows 8 Store is a Complete Mess". DigitalTrends.com. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
  11. Brad Chacos. "Windows Store versus the world: How do Microsoft's offerings really stack up?". PC World. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
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