Jumat, 09 November 2012

Lenovo


Lenovo has indeed saved the best for last here at CES 2012. After days of interminable laptop announcements, the company has one more to share: the 13.3-inch IdeaPad Yoga, which opens like a normal laptop but can then flip backwards to become a tablet. Yes, it's as crazy as it sounds, and even better it's running Windows 8. This is the sort of thing that is really best seen in video, so I suggest you scroll on down as soon as possible, but what I can tell you is that the .6-inch thick laptop looks and feels a lot like the IdeaPad U300s (or the new U310 / U410) until you realize you can push the screen back completely and morph it into a Windows 8 tablet.

While the Yoga isn't going to be coming out until Windows 8 is release — likely in the Fall of this year — the version that Lenovo brought to Vegas was actually quite far along, at least on the hardware front. The hinge felt really sturdy when flipping the screen on the back of the keyboard, though the entire process of actually morphing it into a tablet is rather awkward, especially given the 13.3-inch screen size. I actually mistakenly hit the power button on the left edge when trying to get it into tablet mode. It's easier to flip it into an upside-down V-shape stand (tent mode, as Lenovo calls it) or use the keyboard as a stand for the screen. Even though the .67-inch thick / 3.1-pound Yoga is relatively thin and light for a laptop, it's thick and heavy for a tablet. Given that and the sheer size, I'd really envision this as more of a couch-centric device.

The edge-to-edge glass, 1600 x 900-resolution panel can support up to ten points of input, and was very responsive to swipes from the sides to pull up the Windows 8 charms. That speedy touch performance is also aided by the Core i7 processor inside. Since the Yoga is a full-fledged laptop as well, it will be powered by Intel's third generation Core processors, which will obviously be out by the time Win 8 is ready.

Speaking of the laptop mode, Lenovo's brought back the leather palmrest from the IdeaPad U260; not only is it really comfortable on the wrists but Lenovo says it will help protect the keyboard when may use it as a stand and it lays on a desk or table. Other than that, it's really your typical IdeaPad laptop in the laptop mode; it has a comfortable chiclet keyboard (not backlit) and a large ClickPad, which seemed to be working better in Win 8 than it usually does with Win 7. Sadly, we have to wait until Win 8 is ready to get our hands on this thing again, but in better news, Lenovo is saying it hopes to release it for around $1,199. Don't let us down!

READ MORE - Lenovo
READ MORE - Lenovo

OLPC


One Laptop Per Child is unveiling the development road map for its XO low-cost notebook through 2012, including one new XO powered by chips from Via due out in January 2010 and another with an ARM-designed processor aimed at 2011. OLPC also unveiled a one-panel laptop made of flexible plastic that is scheduled for launch in 2012.
One Laptop Per Child, the organization that is aiming to make low-cost laptops available to children around the globe, is laying out its product road map for the next three years, including a single-panel design targeted to be released in 2012.

The non-profit organization's goal in the next three iterations of its XO laptop are designed to increase the system's performance while developing a design that will make it easy to use by children in poor, rural and remote areas.

It hasn't been easy. In early 2008, the OLPC split with Intel, which started developing its own low-cost Classmate PCs. In January, OLPC, struggling financially, laid off half of its staff, partially due to the failure of its G1G1 program, where when a person bought an XO, another would be given to a child somewhere in the world for free.

However, the OLPC's debut XO-powered by an Advanced Micro Device processor and running a slimmed-down version of Fedora Linux-has been distributed to more than 1.4 million children in 35 countries, according to Nicholas Negroponte, OLPC founder and chairman.

"To fulfill our mission of reaching 500 million children in all remote corners of the planet, OLPC will continue to innovate in design and performance," Negroponte said in a statement.

It's with XO 3.0 that OLPC radically changes the design. It will be built on a single sheet of flexible plastic, and will be designed to be unbreakable. It also will have no holes in it, and a ring attached to the upper right corner to make it easier to hold and carry.

READ MORE - OLPC
READ MORE - OLPC
.::BY JUMBHO-MY AT HOME IN THE JEPARA CITY OF BEAUTIFUL::.