Several months ago, I reviewed Axiotron’s ModBook, the only available Apple Mac Tablet. With a just announced new version of the ModBook, it appears Axiotron is making some real strides to address ...
Conversion of Customer-Supplied MacBook into Modbook Only $699 through March 1, 2010 — Modbook Based on New 2.13GHz MacBook Available for Only $1,649 High-tech manufacturer Axiotron today announced a ...
Built-in GPS. Badass handwriting recognition software accurately renders chicken scratch into coherent words. Durable screen and shell makes porting this pricey device a relatively worry-free ordeal.
We were big fans of the Axiotron Modbook when we tested the MacBook-touchscreen slate conversion back in February last year, and it looks like it'll be getting even better with the addition of Synergy ...
Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. The Axiotron Modbook is the only legitimate Mac OS tablet ...
Winner of Macworld Expo’s 2007 Best of Show Award, Axiotron’s High-End Slate-Style Modbook Integrates the Apple MacBook Computer’s Speed, Power, Usability and Elegance With Advanced Pen-Sensitive ...
I’m glad I have Axiotron’s ModBook for two weeks. I’m going to need the entire two weeks to get my hands around this unique offering. I’ve been holding out on the video review portion until I have a ...
Axiotron made big waves at Macworld Expo 2007 when it announced its first ModBook—a MacBook modified into a tablet computer. Some of the buzz died down as Axiotron took a year to ship the product, but ...
Click to viewIt was exactly a year from the time Axiotron first debuted their touchscreen MacBook at Macworld 2007 to the time we got the first hands-on of it at Macworld 2008, and that year of ...
January 2, 2008 Following its unveiling at last year's Macworld Conference & Expo, Californian based hardware manufacturer Axiotron has announced that the much anticipated Mobdbook™ tablet Mac ...
Apple's sole attempt at making a PDA—the Newton—was the closest thing to an Apple tablet we'd seen until now. Handwriting recognition woes (and the fact that it might have been ahead of its time) ...