Tablet PCs are hot. In early 2007, at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas and MacWorld Expo in San Francisco, no less than three landmark tablets made their public debut:
- Flybook A33i - an 8.9-inch foldable touch screen computer by Holbe Dialogue Europe; $2,670 (approx)
- Model 02 - the 60Gb hard drive ultramobile PC by OQO; $1,850
- ModBook - a Mac tablet by Axiotron; $2,279
At first glance the stumbling block that prevents a vintage Stylistic 1000 from becoming a useable modern Tablet PC might seem to be a hardware issue--lack of styli, rechargeable batteries, memory, and hard drives. Not so; all of these issues can be successfully resolved.
The real trick in making a Stylistic 1000 work like a modern Tablet PC is trying to get an operating system to boot. Take your pick: Linux, Windows, DOS, and even Mac each OS attempt is fraught with failure.
And therein lies the tale--a tale of a project gone horribly awry.
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Signing UpStep 1: How to Create a $250 Tablet PC
Time: Days to Weeks
Cost: $217.77 w/o option
Difficulty: Maybe impossible
Parts List
- (1) Fujitsu Stylistic 1000; HSC Electronic Supply #20791; $29.95
- (1) stylus; FinePoint Innovations # KCP6; $75
- (1) battery; Batteryspace.com #NB-LAP03; $79.95
- (1) memory; MemoryTen #FMW3EM16; $19.95
- (1) CompactFlash ATA/PCMCIA adapter & CompactFlash memory card; Amazon.com SanDisk SDDR-64-768 Compact Flash to PC Card Adapter; $12.92
- 512Mb CompactFlash card; Amazon.com SanDisk 512 MB CompactFlash Card, SDCFB-512-A10; $9.99
- PS/2 keyboard; salvaged











































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Also have you been experimenting with partitioning software to set things like "primary partition", "boot" flag and "active partition"? I'm not sure if these surplus tablets also come with drivers on floppy disk...
You are probably referring to 16-bit ports (and older) slots. Trying to fit a newer card in there could be damaging to the unit.
Also - maybe look at your boot order in the BIOS and ensure that it is booting from the hard drive first. This is most likely why it isnt working.
assuming you have a *complete* unit now...what do you do for pen recognition (i.e applications)? Is there a programmer's manual for this unit, particularly specifics regarding the API or whatever that's specific to pen utilization???
the pens are pretty high quality. I bought 3 off the guy over a month ago when they were only 10$ LOL LOL. And no sooner did I obtain the most critical component for the unit did my screen develop a blemish. It's still usable, but I didn't abuse it. I think it was heat related (left it in the car, but not in direct sunlight or anything).
http://www.halted.com/ccp20981-fujitsu-pencentra-130-pen-tablet-computer-pencentra-130-80797.htm
Comes with stylus, battery, 2 screenprotecors, and AC Adapter. No documentation. User Guide PDF from Halted page. Mine has 7 hour battery life. YMMV.
http://popsci.typepad.com/how20blog/2008/01/update-the-form.html
Dave Prochnow