Touchscreens obviously aren't anything new. While tapping and swiping on the glass screen has become commonplace on mobiles, the same gestures haven't quite made their way to many notebooks or desktops. That's all going to change with Microsoft's Windows 8 – which famously centers the user experience around a colorful, tile-based grid of apps that's meant to be navigated by touching the screen with your fingers.
Soon enough, we'll see a flood of desktop PCs and notebooks that let you make grand sweeping gestures to scroll through pages, zoom in on photos, and destroy the pigs of Angry Birds.
Lenovo's IdeaCentre A720 is one of these forward-looking devices. The dominant feature here is its giant – and surprisingly satisfying – 27-inch touchscreen.
Interacting with a huge touchscreen like this one is unfamiliar at first. You have to move your entire arm at times. It's an odd sensation, but it grows on you quickly, and actually ends up being quite fun.Interacting with a huge touchscreen like this one is unfamiliar at first. You have to move your entire arm at times. It's an odd sensation, but it grows on you quickly, and actually ends up being quite fun. I can't wait until more devices like this enter the market, which will surely happen when Windows 8 becomes widely available on Oct. 26.
In the meantime, the IdeaCentre A720 is shipping now with Windows 7 onboard, and well-prepared to handle a Windows 8 upgrade. Using it with Windows 7, I found it to be an excellent all-around desktop machine. The display offers full 1080p HD capability and runs at a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels. Of course, Windows 7 doesn't feel as natural to navigate using multitouch gestures, but the desktop also ships with a traditional mouse and keyboard, which I used most of the time.
