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Largest Android Tablet In The World (65-inch): Specs and Release Not For Sale
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5:50 PG
Techies who wish to expand their Android slates may check on Ardic Technology’s 65-inch Android powered touchscreen TV.
More specifically, the huge 65-inch touchscreen panel is powered by a smaller 10-inch Android tablet which sits on a dock connected to the LCD display. The contents from the small Android
slate are projected on the OEM TV, but at the same time, the latter
supports two touch sensors allowing its users to make basic gestures
like pinch and zoom. Watch the video below and see how you can play “Fruit Slice” on this monster.
The 65-inch touchscreen display has 1080p support and connects to the smaller tablet through the dock which includes HDMI for audio and video as well as USB for touch input. On the other hand, the 10-inch tablet is running on Android Honeycomb, Tegra 2 processor, 1GB RAM, 16GB built-in storage, HDMI, USB, 3G, Wifi and includes rear and front-facing camera.
Ardic plans to introduce a multi-touch version of the LCD panel (instead of 2 touch sensors) and wireless feature for its touch input (instead of USB). Additionally, the Turkish company is reportedly in talks with education and enterprise customers to bring its ginormous touchscreen LCD solution as a cheaper alternative to smart boards.
The device is still in its prototype stage and availability, for now, is far from happening. But who knows? One of these days, perhaps, we’ll be seeing such devices sitting on our living room. Stay tuned.
The 65-inch touchscreen display has 1080p support and connects to the smaller tablet through the dock which includes HDMI for audio and video as well as USB for touch input. On the other hand, the 10-inch tablet is running on Android Honeycomb, Tegra 2 processor, 1GB RAM, 16GB built-in storage, HDMI, USB, 3G, Wifi and includes rear and front-facing camera.
Ardic plans to introduce a multi-touch version of the LCD panel (instead of 2 touch sensors) and wireless feature for its touch input (instead of USB). Additionally, the Turkish company is reportedly in talks with education and enterprise customers to bring its ginormous touchscreen LCD solution as a cheaper alternative to smart boards.
The device is still in its prototype stage and availability, for now, is far from happening. But who knows? One of these days, perhaps, we’ll be seeing such devices sitting on our living room. Stay tuned.
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