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Submission + - Lenovo's Latest Laptop Has a Rollable OLED Screen (wired.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Laptop screens can feel cramped. But what if you could magically get more real estate without having to carry around a portable monitor? That's precisely the purpose of Lenovo's ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 Rollable AI PC—yes, rollable. It has an OLED display that, with the push of a button, extends the 14-inch screen upward to make for an awkward aspect ratio, but roughly doubles the screen space to 16.7 inches. Two screens are better than one for productivity, but what if one screen could be two but still one? Yes.

It plays a fun animation and some music when it does its rolling thing. You can also activate the rolling action with a palm gesture; once it scans your palm, shift it up or down to raise or lower the screen. (Pressing the button on the keyboard is way faster.) You can take advantage of Windows 11 window snapping features to put apps one on top of the other. I stacked two browser windows, but you can put other apps below too. Considering I'm already that guy who brings a spare portable monitor everywhere, this just seems like a more elegant solution that takes up less space in my bag. And of course, anyone can take advantage of the long aspect ratio to get a better look at documents, PDFs, and web pages.

Lenovo says it has tested the rolling function 30,000 times, and it has performed without flaws, so you can rest a little easier about reliability, though repairing this machine sounds like it will be a task. The whole laptop doesn't feel significantly different from a normal machine, weighing just 3.7 pounds—that's 1 pound less than the 16-inch MacBook Pro. However, walking with your laptop open in your hand might be weird, as it feels a little top heavy. When closed, it's 19.9 mm thin—the 16-inch MacBook Pro is 15.4 mm, so Lenovo's machine is thicker, but not as thick as a gaming laptop.

Comment I broke most of those stories (Score 2, Interesting) 38

As the person who broke both the Nvidia bad bumps story and their ousting from Apple, I can say with authority that the real reason Nvidia is out is the patent trolling rampage they tried to start. I wrote some of it up, a bit blurred to protect friends, here:

https://www.semiaccurate.com/2...

The bad bumps were a big blow but that was just money. The patent trolling threats were a deal breaker for Apple and many other silicon vendors. Go look up the Nvidia vs Qualcomm and Samsung suits for more but the company is not wanted anywhere in the ecosystem. Some HAVE to use them but no one wants to.

      -Charlie

Comment Re:so 2K for an Asterisk box? (Score 4, Interesting) 24

Nope, as of the past couple weeks if you make a call that terminates in the United States, your CID number has to match at least one of your DID numbers at your provider. If it does not then you won't be able to complete your call. I am super bummed about this because I had an Asterisk system that would keep out spammers AND forward calls made to my landline to my cell phone AND it'd show who was calling so nobody ever knew if I wasn't home and I always knew who was calling but now I gotta find another solution and there doesn't seem to be much of an option after this.

Comment Re:student loans need bankruptcy so that banks &am (Score 1) 262

As soon as I read the headline I thought that I ought to suggest they check out our local college, the University of Kentucky, because they did that to such a degree that I'm almost certain that someone there got a LOT of kickback from the deal, but it seems they are damn near the center of the controversy. They even put Tempurpedic brand(not generic) beds in their dorms and we all know that shit ain't cheap. I've got far more than one reason to dislike UK but this is really at the top of the list.

Comment Re:"Accident?" (Score 2) 224

No, they're not. I routinely have to replace breakers of all sizes, brands, and types in my line of work and it is quite easy to get confused as to whether a breaker is on or off. There's a reason that electricians carry either a detector or a multimeter to determine if the power is really on or off.

Comment Because of Facebook (Score 4, Interesting) 127

I have an older Quest of and a mobile one that I just gave away. The Quest was used for a few days and put on a shelf, something I keep meaning to go back and play with. Then I got an email from Facebook saying I needed to make a Facebook account to keep using my hardware that I (didn't actually) pay for (long story, test sample) but did own. FSCK that. There are a few things that are dealbreakers for me in the tech world and a forced Facebook/Meta spyware account is near the top of the list.

At CES this year, VR/AR stuff was in pretty high numbers in high profile areas but the interest seemed a bit tepid. At MWC last week, there was precious little VR/AR and it was mostly ignored. I think we have reached the 3D TV phase of VR and it is all downhill from here. Discounts are telling, not much to save the sector now, it will become an admittedly useful niche device but mainstream is dead. AR is a different story but we are years away from basic usefulness there.

Yawn. It deserves a quick flaming death but VR will drag on for a while yet. The sooner it drops out of the media hype cycle, the better for us all.

              -Charlie

Comment Re:What happened is obvious (Score 1) 148

I liked Ruby for small projects, like a mailing list management system I wrote with it, but Rails was unusable for me. It would take 60 seconds to get Rails loaded and once it was it NEVER worked the way the docs said it would. They'd say "oh the system will do for you so you don't have to". Nope, I had to do it regardless. I gave up on Ruby and Rails in 2008 or so when someone suggested Python as a replacement. It's not perfect but it at least doesn't make claims it can't backup.

Comment Re:You could just run it through two engines (Score 1) 69

A friend of mine was saying he was just going to run ChatGPT's output to Grammarly. That probably would do the trick since services like that aim for removing repeated words, etc. I personally am good enough at proofreading to fix any issues it might have but if you do the right prompting, it seems to do pretty decently. So far the worst I've caught it doing is mixing up singular vs plural in ONE response.

Comment Re:Again? (Score 1) 62

I don't know what evidence you have to the contrary but electrostim is a valid way to get certain muscles into shape. I've used one for 20 years to keep my back muscles toned. I have something akin to scoliosis called hyperlordosis and one of the things that apparently happens in my case is that my back gets weaker if I stand too long. By the end of the day my back will literally try to pull itself out of place. When I tone with my electrostim machine, I don't have that problem as it maintains a minimum that is impossible to achieve with exercises. And as someone above mentioned, Bruce Lee did it with AMAZING results, and he's the reason I started. You're just thinking of the people who tried it and then didn't get ripped in a couple days so they shelved the products. Big difference.

Comment Re:It's Panasonic's own fault (Score 1) 101

I am using one that I got in 2003 from a friend who used it in a Vietnamese restaurant that I also worked at(it's how we became friends) back in 1990, so it's over 30 years old and going strong. We bought a backup from Goodwill a couple years ago when I saw it and recognized it as the same model. I doubt I'll ever need it. For the record, if you eat rice very often you need to check to see if yours might contain arsenic. It's a real problem and if you use brown rice then it's a REAL problem for you. There are soaking methods that help a lot and people ought to look into them if they eat rice more than a couple times a week.

Comment Re:Flood the Internet (Score 2) 82

I'm pretty sure this is what that Pooh horror movie is all about. Disney fought to keep the copyright so badly that now that the original Pooh is in public domain, the way to hurt them for their nonsense is to poison the well when searching for the name by making a horror movie pop up in the search results.

Comment Re:Wondering if the US is behind it (Score 1) 175

I would think it could be the Russians doing this considering they think they could be attacked by a drone BUT the funny thing is there are already methods of getting a drone to a specific location by visual or other cues ala SLAM or Robust Navigation System. This tech has been out for at least 5 years that I know of so I expect the drone attacks will continue as normal.

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