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Articles about docking_station: October 7, 2008

A better way to use a Tablet PC at your desk

by Adam Berger on Dec 6, 2006 at 09:50 PM

EVO Tablet ARM Innovative Office ProductsThe EVO Tablet Arm is a floating docking station for tablet PCs and notebooks, allowing the user to create an ergonomic computing station at his/her primary desk. A gas spring arm “floats” the computer above the desk for comfortable viewing, with quick attach and release for work on the go. A full-size keyboard and mouse can be used to recapture the comfort of a desktop PC.

The EVO Tablet Arm is of particular value for tablet PCs, which can be awkward to use, particularly from a seated position—the user must either lay the screen flat on the desk, or cradle it in one arm while writing with the other. The EVO Tablet Arm solves this problem by allowing the user to suspend the screen in a comfortable viewing and writing position. Or, if used with a separate keyboard and mouse, the tablet can simply be used as a monitor.

The EVO Tablet Arm is a product line extension of the EVO LCD mounting arm that was introduced last CES. Winner of the prestigious 2006 red dot design award, EVO levitates flat panel monitors above the work surface, enabling intuitive fingertip adjustment of monitor height and position.

Read [Innovative Office Solutions]




Use your cellphone at home

by Adam Berger on May 3, 2006 at 02:07 AM

UnidenWe all use our cellphones on the go, many can’t even remove their ear from the phone but what happens when you enter your home. For many people their cellphone hits the charger and they pickup the landline. Some you you continue to use your cellphones because you have so many minutes but the majority don’t (so just bear with me). Despite the growth of cellphones, consumers prefer the better reception of their landlines, even though a landline often costs an additional $35 to $50 a month.

But that all may change as a handful of companies are introducing new home devices that get the best of both worlds, portability and reception. Connect a cellphone to the device’s docking station or via Bluetooth and all incoming calls now ring through to a cordless landline phone. You can even call out via your cellular network, taking full advantage of your minutes.

Calls are clearer because the cellphone remains stationary, located in the part of the house that gets the strongest signal, while the caller roams around using a standard cordless phone. When the user is leaving the house, the cellphone can be removed and the cordless phone reconnects to the landline network. Read on for available equipment.


Motorola’s current offering is the SD4500 series ($80 to $100 depending on features). A cellular connection is enabled when the phone is paired with a $100 docking station. The current system works with only a few Motorola cellular models. This spring, Motorola will introduce the Bluetooth-enabled C51 model. In addition to a $99 base station and answering machine, a Bluetooth adapter ($129) is to go on sale in the summer, allowing the unit to work with any Bluetooth phone.

The KH-TH102-M system ($349) from Panasonic includes a two-line base unit with answering machine plus a cordless phone.

When Uniden introduced its ELBT595 model ($200) last year, consumers were not pleased. Next year, the company will introduce a revamped model with a bigger handset, priced from $79 to $129.

For those who want only the cellular docking feature, there is no more elegant solution than Phone Labs’ Dock-N-Talk ($150). It’s a small box that plugs directly into an existing home phone. A compatible cord or Bluetooth module ($80) links the cellphone and the standard phone. When connected to the Dock-N-Talk, the home phone no longer works as a landline phone. The Dock-N-Talk offers one feature its competitors do not: dialing through the cellphone network is done just as one would dial a normal landline phone: pick up a standard handset, listen for the dial tone and dial. The company’s newest model, the Enterprise ($200), combines a full-featured desk phone with cell docking technology. The unit’s screen displays most cellphones’ phone books, as well as caller ID and other information.

Read [New York Times]




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