Aug 13, 2010 08:42 GMT  ·  By

Axon logic may not have taken the microphone much lately, but it thought to finally enter the spotlight for once and reveal the existence of a certain device that, while common-looking on the outside and even the inside, has a special feature that makes it unique among its peers and rivals.

The device that Axon logic came up with is a media slate, or tablet, depending on how one wants to call it, that has a hidden EFI partition.

What this means is that the slate, dubbed Haptic, can actually load and run Apple's Mac OS operating system.

This ability is one that none of the other tablets so far announced have been able to brag about, and the Haptic actually enables it without the need for major hacking of the hardware and software.

Predictably, the slate is, more or less, similar to all others of its type when it comes to everything else.

For one, it has a 10.1-inch touchscreen with a native resolution of 1,024 x 600 and LED backlighting.

Also, at the heart of the mobile electronic lies an Intel Atom N270 central processing unit with a clock speed of 1.6 GHz, backed up by 2GB of RAM.

What's more, the tablet features a hard disk drive with 320 GB of storage, as well as the range of connectivity and I/O options that customers have come to expect.

To be more specific, the Haptic tablet boasts a 1.3 megapixel webcam, 3G, 802.11 b/g/n WiFi, a card reader and three USB ports.

Finally, the entire machine is powered by a 3000 mAh battery, whose lifespan is not pointed out, and weighs a total of 0.9 kg, or 2 lbs.

The Axon Logic Haptic tablet PC with Mac OS support is already available for pre-order and has a price tag of $750. Full information is available here.