The Xperia Tablet S continues with
the folded magazine design, making it quite easy to hold with one hand for reading.
Not exact matches
The simple but elegant
design means you can transition this diaper bag to a weekend bag or work... MORE tote later - it's big enough to hold a laptop,
magazines, or file
folders.
Smartly
designed and expertly crafted, the Beaded Superior Package Mailbox withstands the weather, year after year, and is large enough to hold
magazines without
folding...
One night, I found myself
folding down almost every corner of the Ballard
Design magazine to show the hubs.
The Sony Tablet S Featuring a unique, ergonomically contoured
design, the Sony Tablet S has been developed to feel as comfortable as a
folded magazine.
Featuring a unique, ergonomically contoured
design, the Sony Tablet S has been developed to feel as comfortable as a
folded magazine.
Gone is the bizarre eyeglass - case
design of the Tablet P and the too - literal «
folded magazine» concept of the leaky Tablet S.
The primary chassis
design of the series made use of a rolled base — meant to evoke the way a
magazine felt in your hand when
folded over — which housed the aforementioned features and was also
designed as the primary means of gripping the tablet.
While the Tablet S sports a «
folded magazine»
design, the clamshell
design of the Tablet P is likely to be more controversial.
The Sony Tablet S (former code name Sony S1) has one 9.4 - inch (240 mm) touchscreen display in a slate layout, and a unique wrap
design inspired by the way some persons
fold magazines while reading them.
Sony calls it «
folding design» and says the tapering form - factor is based on a
folded - back
magazine.
Sony S1 with a curved top much
design like a
folded magazine and it works as infrared remote for the company's TVs (say BRAVIA).
Sony's Tablet S has a unique ergonomic
design that is reminiscent of a «
folded magazine», as the review on TabletPCReview points out, and it houses a 9.4 - inch screen for those who find 10 - inch screens cumbersome.
There's no doubt that today is iPad day, but if you're looking for an Android tablet, you could do worse than Sony's Tablet S, with its quirky «
folded magazine»
design.
Precedents come from fine art,
design, craft, and mass media including paper architecture, paper airplanes, paper dolls, origami, Mad
Magazine fold - outs, exploded machine diagrams and pie charts, Fluxus mail art, the Surrealists» Exquisite Corpse games, and even the complex systems of workshops and apprentices of the Renaissance.
While the Tablet S sports a «
folded magazine»
design, the clamshell
design of the Tablet P is likely to be more controversial.