Tabletology does Paris!
Friday, June 9th, 2006Bonjour from Paris! Here we are in Paris where our TC1100 receives a few stares here and there, but it does look awfully pretty in front of the Notre Dame!
From the Seine side
and the front:
Bonjour from Paris! Here we are in Paris where our TC1100 receives a few stares here and there, but it does look awfully pretty in front of the Notre Dame!
From the Seine side
and the front:
As the previous entry tells you Tablet Zero has spawned to 9! What can we learn from looking at this data?
Gender?
Well, all are women except one.
Field of choice?Here is a chart of Tablet PC uptake by field. Technically the chart is more complicated because of cross-appointments etc. But this will do for now.

Where?
All work or teach or study at Canadian universities (mostly Dalhousie University), except for one (the sole male). He is located on another continent.What can be gleaned from this? Well, probably not much except that we influence the adoption of new technology by those with whom we work at the university. And you can infer (backwards) that we work somewhere in the intersection of epidemiology, health policy, medical sociology, bioethics, philosophy, and law!
And another one joins the crowd. Number 9, M, who purchased a TC4200!
Over a hundred photos of our adventures with our Tablet PC’s from Canada’s East Coast and far beyond. See the Tabletology crew at work staging the shots you know and love. Go here to our Tabletology.com Flickr account to see them all.
All the appeals have failed. (See our last-ditch attempt at the Quebec Court of Appeals here.) The TC1100 has been abandoned by HP. We decided it was time to throw in our hats and admit defeat. All we can hope to do is write the history of this sorry course of events.
So the TC1100 got on a plane, flew across the Atlantic. A little cappuccino in the new coach station at Heathrow to fortify us for our adventure.
And the TC1100 took its book proposal for "The betrayal of fantasy: HP and the TC1200 that never was" to the venerable Oxford University Press.
But we didn’t get past the Security.
The letter carrier didn’t seem phased by our antics.