Donald L. Harrison, 55, will undergo prison-based drug rehabilitation during his confinement. He pleaded guilty to two counts of manufacturing meth, each of which could have yielded up to eight years in prison.
But Harrison, who has no prior felony history and was living out of his car when arrested in January, told Chelan County Superior Court Judge Alicia Nakata his own meth addiction led him to lose everything and eventually set up two cooking stills. Nakata assigned him to the Drug Offender Sentencing Alternative, which provides chemical dependency treatment and counseling to criminals whose offenses are related to addiction.
The case began when the multi-agency Columbia River Drug Task Force investigated two small meth labs found in the Leavenworth area last year — one found April 17 on U.S. Forest Service land along Camas Creek Road near Highway 97, another discovered Aug. 19 near an Icicle Irrigation District gate on Duncan Road.
Items collected from the cook sites included plastic buckets and gas cans, empty bags of dry ice, plastic tubing, ammonia compounds, and traces of pseudoephedrine — a chemical precursor that can be rendered into methamphetamine. Samples from both sites showed evidence of meth manufacture, detectives said.
At each site, a Safeway grocery receipt was found, both showing purchases with the same Washington Electronic Benefits Transfer card. A warrant search traced the card to Harrison, who was living in his car in Dryden when arrested Jan. 9.
The first thing you’ll notice when you buy a Dell Latitude 10 is how much of a hybrid between laptop and tablet form factors the unit is. Right from the start, this impression is reinforced when the packaging for the tablet arrives at your office. Apple’s full-sized iPads come in small, roughly A4-sized boxes, commensurate with their size, while the iPad minis come in even smaller boxes almost reminiscent of mobile phone packaging.
Not so the Latitude 10. It comes in one of those traditional Dell laptop boxes, with cardboard packaging inside and a traditional (if small) power brick, ‘resource’ DVD and instruction/warranty manuals all wedged in. Sure, there’s a lot of empty space in the box, but we were immediately struck with how different this was from the premium Apple iPad experience. This is clearly a different class of tablet than the iPad — even if they’re designed in practice for most of the same purposes.
The impression of laptop-ness is reinforced when you pick up the Latitude 10. The first thing you notice is the weight. The model we reviewed clocked in at 684g, which is virtually identical to Apple’s full-sized iPad at 652g (or 662g for the 3G version). However, the Latitude 10 feels bulkier. Part of this is its thickness; it’s 10.5mm thick at its thickest end, compared with the iPad’s 9.4mm, and part of it is also its different dimensions. The iPad and Latitude 10 both have about a 10″ screen, with only a few millimetres’ difference, but where the iPad has an aspect ratio of 4:3, the Latitude 10 goes for an narrower 16:9 footprint.
What you end up with because of this design is something which feels a lot like an elongated iPad, a little heavier and with a tapering rubbery back. It’s not a bad feeling, but it’s definitely not stylised the way the iPad is; it’s very reminiscent of the kind of enterprise-class laptops (such as the Latitude class for which the tablet is named) which have long been a feature of Dell’s range.
The next thing you’ll notice is how brilliant, clear and inviting the Latitude 10′s screen is. It doesn’t have that high a resolution — only 1366×768, compared to the full-sized iPad’s 2048×1536 — and if you get up close, you can see the pixels. However, that doesn’t stop the Latitude 10′s screen from being vivid and lovely, with great viewing angles and a brightness that serves it well even outside in the daytime.
Windows 8′s bright colours play very well into this aesthetic, and we like the combination of Dell’s rubbery dark grey back, hard plastic front and brilliant screen quite a lot. This tablet is quite a looker.
Now let’s get into the ports. If you hold the tablet horizontally facing you, on the right side at the top sits a 3.5mm headphone jack alongside a USB port (we know — a USB port on a tablet — how novel!) and a mini-HDMI output jack. On the left-hand side sits a small rubbery volume rocker, above a small security lock slot. On the bottom sits a largish power connector to charge or dock the Latitude 10, and you can also charge it or sync it with a micro-USB slot next to that.
On the top left is a very large slot for smartcard reading, while on the top right sits a memory card reader, next to a small power light, the unit’s power button, and a screen rotation lock button. Below the screen is a small physical Windows button which returns you to Windows 8′s home screen. Above it is a small front-facing camera. On the back you get a fingerprint reader (we know!), the unit’s main camera and the huge slot for its removable battery. There are also two small speakers on the back.
As with its design, under its hood the Latitude 10 is surprisingly full-featured for a tablet of this nature. It runs on an Intel Atom CPU at 1.8GHz, and comes with 2GB of RAM. We believe our unit came with a 64GB SSD disk drive, of which only 36.5GB was available for use when we received it (it comes with the full version of Windows 8 installed — no Windows RT here).
Apart from that, what you mainly need to know is that its basic battery is a 2-cell 30W/hr model, but you can also get a 4-cell 60W/hr model to swap in, which will pad out the back substantially. The front-facing camera is a two megapixel model and the back is an eight megapixel model. The headphone jack can also be used as a microphone input, and you can also insert a SIM card into the model for mobile broadband. Of course it supports the 802.11 Wi-Fi standards, and the card reader does full-sized SD cards. You can also get a couple of optional docking/stand/keyboard units, although our unit didn’t come with one. And the screen is the ubquitous Gorilla Glass.
And of course, there’s one more important thing to consider here: You also get a full version of Windows 8, which can run every version of every popular Windows app you can think of, and which allows the Latitude 10 to be used as a PC in every sense, especially if you attack a keyboard and mouse.
This is a killer feature which we know many enterprises will really love. You simply can’t easily, without a decent network connection and some virtualisation/emulation software (many people use Citrix) use an iPad as a fully-featured laptop; iOS just isn’t set up to match all of Mac OS X’s features. But the Latitude 10 can be used for that purpose; it’s — frankly — its main advantage over the iPad and the Android tablets.
For starters, its touchscreen is great. As we’ve mentioned previously, it’s vivid, colourful, and you don’t really feel the lack of a higher resolution as you find on the iPad. Touch-navigating around Windows 8 on the Latitude 10 is a breeze and represents one of the best Windows 8 experiences we’ve had so far. It’s even easy to use the touch interface to navigate the traditional Windows desktop environment, and we enjoyed doing so.
The typing interface on the Latitude 10 is particularly lovely, with great sound feedback, and you can easily get up to quite a clip typing on it. We actually like the Latitude 10/Windows 8typing interface a great deal more than we do the touch-typing interface on the iPad — unlike with iOS, it’s pretty close to a full-sized keyboard experience, and you can type a lot faster.
The USB port, a key feature of the Latitude 10, works perfectly — we pulled our Apple keyboard and Logitech gaming mouse out of our iMac and plugged them in to the Latitude 10. They worked perfectly and instantly with no setup, pleasing us mightily.
In general, the performance of the unit’s user interface was very fast, and we had trouble getting it to do anything at a pace we found slow. There wasn’t any jagginess or slowness, and we really enjoyed playing with the unit’s apps and browsing our web sites, taking notes and so on. Videos, including HD videos, streamed fine from YouTube and in general we were very happy.
The usual caveats regarding the performance of the tablet for 3D games applies; its graphics card is labelled as an “Intel Graphics Media Accelerator”; so not hugely powerful ;) You’ll be able to easily play low-end games such as Plants vs Zombies and older games, but don’t expect much at all in terms of 3D graphics performance for modern titles. This is a tablet, not even a proper laptop. And the Atom processor won’t help.
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