BenchmarkXPRT Blog banner

Month: December 2011

See you next year, maybe at CES?

This is just a quick entry to wish everyone a great and productive 2012 and to let you know that I will be at CES. My goal is to meet with as many of you in the Development Community as possible. Please let me know if you have some time and would like to escape the craziness of the show to relax and chat. We’ll have a suite at the Hilton and would love to offer you the opportunity to kick back and talk about HDXPRT, the future of benchmarks, or about the cool things you’ve seen at the show. If you plan to be at CES, but are stuck working a booth or suite, let me know and I’ll try to stop by and say hi. Drop us an email at hdxrpt_CES@principledtechnologies.com and we will set up an appointment.

I hope to see quite a few of you folks there. And, to play with lots of cool new toys! Have a Happy New Year!

Bill

Comment on this post in the forums

The reach of touch

I’ve spent some time over the last week looking into computing devices with touch interfaces. It has become clear to me that touch is not just the next way of interacting with a computing device. As has been the case with earlier input mechanisms such as the punch card, keyboard, and mouse, the interface defines the experience and the whole platform. I have been in the industry long enough to have started on punch cards. When you wrote programs in that environment, you made sure that everything was right before you even attempted to run the program. (You also tried really hard to not drop your deck of punch cards!)

Keyboards and monitors drove command-line interfaces. In those interfaces, I learned how to enter really complex commands to do things like repeat or modify earliercommands. (If !! or !$ mean anything to you, that probably means you understood how to get the most out of the C shell command-line interface.)

The mouse, as an input device, worked naturally with windowed environments. Click, drag, and drop all took on new meaning in the mouse-centric world. The mouse lends itself well to precision but can be cumbersome for something like turning the page in a document—I still often use the page-down key instead.

Touch-based computing devices are beginning to define their environments. Not only does touch determine what is easy (turning a page is trivial, but picking an exact point on the screen is hard), but a way of working. Applications tend to be less complex, and cheaper and easier to get. Consequently, applications (and their usages) are much more disposable. I used the same family of keyboard-based text editors for at least fifteen years (EMACS) before moving to a mouse-based, windowed word-processing environment and have not changed that (Word) for even longer. However, I have used multiple note-taking programs on my iPad in just the last couple of months. In the world of the mouse and windows, deciding on a particular program required a large investment of time and money. In the world of touch and application markets, I try a few programs, pick one I like, and do not hesitate to change when a new one comes out.

All of this, of course, will need to come into play in any attempt to benchmark a touch environment such as Windows 8 Metro. For example, there may be less emphasis on particular applications than on categories of applications. It also means that it will likely be important to have more small, targeted usage scenarios than a few large scenarios. What do you think will be different (or the same) in a touch benchmark?

I, and the HDXPRT team, wish everyone a great holiday! Enjoy some time at home with family. And, enjoy playing with whatever new devices you get this year!

Bill

Comment on this post in the forums

A touch of tomorrow

As is often the case for me, Christmas shopping has given me the chance to look at all sorts of gadgets. (No, I’m not sure who to buy them for, but that isn’t the point.) The wealth of touch-based devices like the iPad, the Kindle Fire, the Galaxy Tab, and phones of all sorts is either incredibly exciting or amazingly confusing. Touch-based interfaces have moved well beyond the devices they started on and are showing up pretty much everywhere. Even my car (a Nissan Leaf) uses a touch interface. When I use a device with a screen, like my camera, and can’t touch the screen, it just feels wrong.

The power of computing devices like the iPad and other tablets is bringing touch into what we traditionally think of as the PC marketplace. The debut next year of Windows 8 with its touch-based Metro user interface will add another serious player to the mix. Touch will be in your desktop and notebook future. (Which for me means a steady supply of cloths for wiping screens will be a necessity, but that’s another story.) I think that touch will be the dominant interface—surpassing the mouse—in the near future.

When I see that kind of shift in the marketplace, and the resulting product diversity, my background makes me think that such an area is ripe for some good tools to compare the products. What do you think? Do we need a new generation of touch-based benchmarks for Metro? For other touch-based platforms?

Back here in HDXPRT Central, I do want to mention that the HDXPRT 2012 design specification is now available. Check it out at http://www.hdxprt.com/forum/2012_design_specification.php!

Bill

Comment on this post in the forums

RFC responses

The official RFC response period ended last week on December 2. We’ve been working our way through the responses and have published all of the comments and our responses here. Please do read through all of them. I wanted to touch on a couple of them here.

First, we heard differing opinions on what the minimum system requirements should be. This is a tough one. On the one hand, we want to keep the benchmark current with the latest versions of applications. Those applications typically increase their minimum system requirements over time. Those system requirements in turn are what we use as the basis for HDXPRT’s requirements. On the other hand, we really want HDXPRT 2012 to be useful on the new class of tablet, netbook, and nettop systems coming out in the next year. Our best idea is to go with the same method for determining the requirements, but to test on those slower systems and try to make sure that they are able to run.

Although we only addressed one in the responses, we heard from multiple people about making HDXPRT 2012 run on versions of Windows other than English. As we are trying to have HDXPRT used around the world, we’d like to make this happen. We face two challenges, however—first, getting systems with OEM images running non-English versions of Windows and second, the effort required for testing and debugging on those systems. You can help with the first by sending us systems. Please contact me if you may be able to help. We will test on any systems we receive and will make it a priority to work out any problems we encounter, but we can’t guarantee that all systems will work.

We are off working on the final design specifications based on the RFC and the responses. While we cannot include your comments in the design specs, we do still want to hear from you. If you have a good idea, we will try to see what we can do to accommodate it in our development cycle. So, please do let us know any comments you may have about either the RFC or the responses to it. Thanks!

Bill

Comment on this post in the forums

Check out the other XPRTs:

Forgot your password?