Gaming Tablet
Video games as engrossing on a bus or in your minivan as it is on your desktop computer? On a tablet computer?
Remember the days of building a computer in your garage (Hello, Apple!), well Shane Lewis, 36, and Justin Dyster, 30, believe their Rogue device, with its ergonomically designed joystick, track ball, triggers and finger buttons and upgradeable components, will be a hit with gaming aficionados.
Rogue would feature an 8.4-inch LCD screen. Lewis projects the Rogue will sell for about $1,500 - the price of a mid-range laptop. It also would function as a tablet computer, one that a user can write into with a stylus.
It's an interesting idea, but the company is trying to raise $20-25 million to get the device into production. It may be a while before we see this one.
Remember the days of building a computer in your garage (Hello, Apple!), well Shane Lewis, 36, and Justin Dyster, 30, believe their Rogue device, with its ergonomically designed joystick, track ball, triggers and finger buttons and upgradeable components, will be a hit with gaming aficionados.
Rogue would feature an 8.4-inch LCD screen. Lewis projects the Rogue will sell for about $1,500 - the price of a mid-range laptop. It also would function as a tablet computer, one that a user can write into with a stylus.
It's an interesting idea, but the company is trying to raise $20-25 million to get the device into production. It may be a while before we see this one.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home