Tiqit cPC FlipStart Sony VGN/U OQO
Looks Count.
StoreTags: Handtops, OQO, Flipstart
Author: GreatDane on April 10 2007
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People who enjoyed reading this: GadgetFreak, ArchiMark
Looks really do count! The OQO Model 01/01+ and the Flipstart are two of the best examples of what really works, and what really does not.

No Flipstart bashing here, but it has become increasing evident that the Flipstart's looks, more than any other single factor, are its worst enemy.

Looks are not nearly as subjective as we all might like to think. We are genetically pre-disposed to be attracted to good looking people. Without going into a huge amount of detail, substantial research conducted on newborn babies indicates they have a strong preference for people with good, even, fine-boned facial features, or in other words, classically “beautiful” faces.

There is a strong indication that this preference for good looks extends into every aspect of our lives, although it can be altered to an extent by education and cultural input.

If our preference for good looking things is built in, we can take as a given that form can be attractive or not. Balance, proportions and fitness for purpose also play a roll in how we react to things, but looks are the primary factor.

As a result of this and some other factors, how something looks also engenders in us an expectation of how it should perform.

The OQO Model 01/01+ looked (for most people at least) small, neat and upmarket. Its thin margin's around the screen, the lack of clutter when the unit was closed, its proportions and so forth all contributed to its good looks, and its aura of no nonsense capability. Whether or not it lived up to these expectations is a moot point, a lot of people were attracted to the OQO Model 01/01+ as much by its looks as any other factor. And since we are generally prepared to be more accommodating of people and things we are attracted to, this helped the OQO Model 01/01+ survive some of its weaker points.

The production Flipstart does not have the same charm, looks or overall attractiveness of the Flipstart prototype. It has been called ugly among other things, and even if it is not ugly, it is not drop dead gorgeous. Its lines and form all suggest a bigger unit than it actually is. If one takes four blocks of wood, one cut to the dimensions of the OQO Model 01/01+, one cut to the dimensions of the Flipstart, one cut to the dimensions of the Sony UX , and one cut to the dimensions of a 15” laptop, it is clear that the Flipstart is in fact a very small unit indeed, not much different in size to the Sony UX. But in real life, the Flipstart just looks so much bigger due to what can only, in this context at least, be called a poor design.

It is possibly due to this perception of size and bulk, more than any other single factor, that the Flipstart has had such a negative reaction in certain sectors. There is a attitude of “if it is so big, it should have so much more in it”.

I am not going to argue the technical specifications of the Flipstart here, they are what they are. But the way the Flipstart looks seems to promise much more. It looks like a muscle car, and it has a sub-compact engine. If the design team had styled it differently, even though they kept the same dimensions, our expectations of the unit might have been very different.

If styling and looks are important, and they shapes our expectations, what happens when reality does not live up to those expectations? Generally, we are disappointed. No amount of rationalisation will change that.

If a lesson can be learned from the Flipstart and The OQO Model 01/01+, it is that looks can influence to a much more profound extent than we might like to believe our attitudes towards items, and this in turn has a bearing on how successful those items might be.

It would seem that the best way to produce a world beating Handtop is to first, before all else, make sure that it looks the part. If everything else is acceptable, it will succeed.
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Comments

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The Flipstart is fugly and massive. What about the new OQO?
 

Hi GadgetFreak,

The Flipstart is a good deal larger than the new OQO, but it is not "massive" if compared to a normal laptop, it simply seems to be larger than it really is due to the design choices made by Vulcan. Thats a pity, on top of the weaker than anticipated spec's.

I have not as yet had a chance to have a good look at the OQO Model 02 (production model), but it seems to have, for the greater part, followed in the Model 01's footsteps regarding looks. Possibly a little more glitzy, but still good looking.
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I did a sizeasy comparison based on the dimensions of both handtops and it really is much larger than the OQO. There are already 2 lb laptops out that have pretty nice specs.
 

To me the slide out keyboard is the thing that kills the OQO for me. The model 2 is nice in black, but without a full clamshell design and better keyboard, it is still just a pda on steroids (to me). The Flipstart, while having ugly colors (stick with one color please!) and being a bit portly, it has the better design and keyboard layout. You can have the bubble headed bleach blonde. I will take a hard working, easy to get along with handtop any day!!!
Recent Blog: FlipStart News Flash!!!  

All the hot mobile devices are sliders or bars :
- Nokia N95
- Nokia E65
- OQO Model 02
- OQO Model 01/01+
- Samsung F700
- Samsung d900 (Black Carbon)
- LG KE970 (Shine)
- LG KE850 (Prada)
- Sony UX
- Apple iPhone
- Neonode N2

See?

I suppose there are few hot clamshell mobile devices...:
- Nokia E90
- Nokia N76

The FlipStart is just, well, ugly!

In defense of my current companion, I say that the HTC Universal is a hot clamshell.
OK, so it's Windows Mobile, which is why I'll get an OQO-2, but for what it is, I think the Universal is still the best Windows Mobile out there.

Besides the design looking wrong, the FlipStart is too heavy. It's not going into a pocket, and would you really want to carry it everywhere? My Universal is always on me (except in bed of course), which to me seems to be part of the point of a handtop. Otherwise, why not a laptop? For me the FlipStart crosses the line and screams "Why not a laptop?"

tnkgrl said: "All the hot mobile devices are sliders or bars :
"


At the risk of being a minority of one, the Motorola V3 is a great looking clamshell phone, although now aging. I got one when they were first released, and still carry it three + years later (along with a whole lot of other stuff).
Recent Blog: Performance Capped  

The OQO is a handheld device, not suitable to have sitting on a desk while trying to type. The flipstart is a desktop device, not suitable to have in your hands while trying to type. Two different ways of using a small devices. If the device has a thumb keyboard then I would think its better to be holding it in your hands and using your thumbs. With the OQO you can also hide the keyboard and just use it with a pen. Im sure with a lot more accurate screen the OQO 02 will be more useable with a pen.
 
Perhaps thats whats wrong with the Flipstart? Stop calling it a Handtop, and start calling it a laptop, and it looks a whole lot better.
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It wouldn't fit across your lap... maybe call it a legtop
 

*GreatDane* the Moto V3 is nice but like a good song overplayed on the radio it is now boring

tnkgrl said: "*GreatDane* the Moto V3 is nice but like a good song overplayed on the radio it is now boring "


Old, over played, but still an good, clean design concept.

It would have been very interesting if for example the Flipstart had followed similar styling to the Moto V3.
Recent Blog: Performance Capped  

to add my 2 cents... Greatdane you hit the needle on the head. Looks do sell. This is the basis of commercialism if I may be so bold.

This will fetch flames, but the sole reason Apple was able to make it through the dark days was because of looks (and sadly ignorance on the part of the consumer).

The OQO is a beautiful device. The Flipstart can be more than it currently is.

2d
 

When I was studying psychology we looked at a number of studies about how people responded to other people based on looks. It isn't what you'd think exactly. People tended to respond best to other people who, as best could be determined, were approximately equivalent on a scale of looks. There were many attempts to explain this, but I think the most likely explanation was that, if someone was considerably more handsome or beautiful than you, you tend to see them as unapproachable. So what does this have to do with handtops?

I think, just as people tend to gravitate toward people who are approximately as good (or bad) looking as they are, hardware affecianodos like ourselves tend to gravitate toward equipment that matches our "style." When it comes to hardware, it's difficult to actually define anything near an objective assessment of good looks anyway. (For everyone who thinks apple's whitewashed motif is the standard of good looks, there's another who thinks it all looks like various sizes of Chicklets.)

That said, I'd have to say that the FlipStart is ugly by my standards as well as GreatDane's. A little more attention to aesthetics would have been welcome. (I thought the original FlipStart design was kind of ugly too, but not so much as the one they ended up with.)

Hi MeanSquare,

I am sure that your point is absolutely spot one. Without in any way disagreeing, is this not however more to do with fear of rejection, and aiming for something "attainable", rather than a variation of what is seen as intrinsically beautiful?

The study I mentioned measured the attention span and reaction of babies of less than two months of age to images of various faces displayed on a TV monitor. The basic premise was that these babies would not as yet have had time to become socially aware, either of themselves or of other around them, and so the response to the faces was an inherent one, not one learned. Across the board, the response to the classical Greek almond shaped face with fair skin and very even features was the best, and the worse response was to images of people with very uneven features.

A follow up study then went on to attempt to measure the reaction to shapes, with much more limited success (Colour and texture became a problem). However, they were able to ascertain that even very young children were drawn to "classical" proportions and regular shapes.

It is very difficult to define "good looks", particularly with regards to inanimate objects, and each of us brings our own set of preconceptions with us, so I am happy to accept that factors other than form play their part. However, it would seem that we are all born with a predisposition to favor beauty, and all have a basic concept of beauty, regardless of how that is later modified. As such, an object that is for the most part accepted as beautiful is more likely to be acceptable than one that, for whatever reason, is not seen as beautiful.

Social modification of basic reaction (the old nature v/s nurture argument) makes this a very difficult thing to measure, and your point above is well taken.

That said, the reaction to the Flipstart design and looks has been, as far as I can gauge, more negative than positive. That would seem to indicate that Vulcan have got it wrong, and need to re-think their styling to improve the appeal of the unit.
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