I've used laptops larger an more bulky than my 14" on airplanes with no issues, although, airplane use doesn't matter much to me since I don't really travel like that these days. My 14", like i've said, goes nearly everywhere with me, and with no effort. I often hear people complain about how difficult it is to move and travel with such "big" and "bulky" computers. My experience has been that such people are either too lazy or too out of shape to realize how light and compact these laptops really are.
I've tried smaller laptops, sure. Wanna know how I use that extra space on either side of the computer? To keep the thing on my lap. A 12" laptop slips around and is unstable in my lap unless i hunch myself in as though I were typing on some playing card. Using a 12" LAPTOP on my LAP is very uncomfortable. As for weight, one extra pound really isn't that much. Sure I COULD find a smaller laptop, but to be honest, I only have one bag in which my laptop does not fit well, and that's because it's the smallest gym bag I could find.
The extra palm space does indeed come in handy, since I do use it to rest my palms often, whether it's proper typing or not. And, as surmised, it does come in handy for writing a note or post it.
Brian


On Jan 1, 2005, at 2:15 PM, Andrew F. wrote:

The 15" and 17" PowerBooks are much wider machines than the 12", but the 14"
iBook and older 14" PowerBooks are not wide enough to get any benefit. Of
course, to be wide enough to give some benefit (15 and 17" PB) makes the
machine too wide to be used well as a portable, making it really a portable
desktop.


Personally, I bought my 12" to use as a true portable, a decision I have
never regretted, especially when I see people trying to use bigger laptops
such as Titanium PowerBooks in crowded airplanes. I actually saw some poor
idiot's 17" PowreBook get pushed by a passing flight attendant, the result
was a spilled drink on another passenger, the flight attendant visibly in
pain and the PowerBook face down on the floor with a sickening crunch,
followed by a whole lot of shouting by the fool who tried to use a massive
shelf of a computer in a confined space.


The 12", in contrast, is so small that even if the passenger in front of me
reclines, I won't have my screen crunched. That, and of course I still have
room on my tray table, as opposed to bleeding over into another person's
space. The 15" isn't that bad, but it still can't touch the 12" for
portability and light weight. Of course, the 12" is such a delight to type
on that I've never wished for anything larger for that purpose.


Speaking of RSI, by the way, your hands shouldn't be touching the palmrest
AT ALL, making a wider one of dubious benefit. The only time I can see a
benefit of a large palmrest area is for sliding around a small optical mouse
or as a surface to write rest your post-it pad on for writing real
pen-and-paper notes. The 12", by the way, has a very generous palmrest and
is an ergonomic delight, as far as laptops go with their low screens that
force bent necks.


Andrew


On 1/1/05 11:58 AM, "Marcin Wichary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Hands never rest on the 3/4" strip of plastic on the sides of the
keyboard,
and that space has no ergonomic benefit. The deeper palmrest may have
some
benefit, but the difference is very minor.

That space has no ergonomic benefit indeed, but the corresponding space
on the palmrest has. When you type, you shouldn't have your arms
perpendicular to the space bar, but at a certain, comfortable angle. If
your palmrest is not wide enough, this forces your arms to use a
different angle (people tend to do that subconsciously), which
translates to more chances of RSI in longer run.


Now, I don't say that it's exactly the case with 12" vs. 14" iBook, but
I presume it's the same situation with 12" vs. 15" PowerBook. I have a
PowerBook 15" which is great, and I tried 12" once, but it was just
much less comfortable, for the reason I outlined above.


The only reason the 14" iBook and larger PowerBooks have space
alongside
their keyboards is because those large screens are much wider than the
standard Apple laptop keyboards. Now if Apple used that space by
fitting
larger keys, or on the 17" PowerBook by including a full numeric
keypad,
that would be an ergonomic improvement.

I seriously disagree here. As far as I see, the keys on Apple's laptops
are roughly the same size as standalone keyboards, and I see nothing
but trouble with bigger keys.


With full numeric keyboard, you'd have to have your hands moved to the
left most of the time (for the alphanumerical part), which is just bad
for your posture, would probably necessitate moving trackpad to the
left as well (bad aesthetics), and your left palmrest would be too
narrow, as I mentioned above already.


Marcin Wichary e:\> [EMAIL PROTECTED] w:\> www.aci.com.pl/mwichary >> Attached w:\> www.aci.com.pl/mwichary/gui >> Graphical User Interface gallery w:\> www.10yearsofbeingboring.com >> 10 years of Being Boring w:\> www.usability.pl >> Usability.pl




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