Aug 13

Lenovo announces ThinkPad Tablet 2, its first ...

Lenovo has just revealed most of the details on the ThinkPad Tablet 2, a 9.8mm-thick Windows 8 Pro tablet first shown earlier this year in prototype form whose details we published recently. 3G and AT&T LTE models will be available along with an optional digitizer (for “precision” pen input), keyboard, and dock. It’ll be a full x86 device — Lenovo calls a “joint effort” with Intel and Microsoft — that clocks in at 1.3 pounds with a 10.1-inch 1366 x 768 display. It’s billed to have 10-hour battery life, which would be impressive for a device only 9.8mm thick. The standard model is Wi-Fi-only, but there will also be carrier versions including one with AT&T’s LTE connectivity.

We got to spend some time with the device Lenovo called “the tablet the industry has been waiting for” at an event in new York City today. we came away relatively impressed, despite the fact that Lenovo doesn’t appear to be doing anything differently from other OEMs when it comes to Windows 8. When attached to the keyboard dock the device does legitimately feel like a laptop — the dock uses the same keyboard as many of Lenovo’s recent ultrabooks, which is a very good thing — but by itself the device is a light and sturdy tablet. The pen input works well, though Windows 8 is so gesture-reliant that occupying your whole hand with a pen can be tough. It’s a sturdy and well-made device that’s comfortable to hold in one hand, and as we navigated through Windows 8 and a handful of Lenovo’s own apps everything was fluid and fast.

Unlike many other blue-chip Windows OEMs, Lenovo has been doing very well recently — and the Tablet 2 will likely be expected to do heated battle with Microsoft’s own Surface in the waning months of the year. look for it to launch in October around the same time as Windows 8 (likely even the same day); pricing is yet to be announced.

David Pierce contributed to this report.

Lenovo announces ThinkPad Tablet 2, its first Windows 8 tablet (hands-on)

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Jul 11

Rome’s Blog: Pros and cons Googles Nexus 7 ...

Googles recent gadget release from I/O event makes huge expectation and tablets buyers are waiting for this high end specification Nexus 7 tablet for lowest price. Based on Android powered tablet and smartphone Samsung, HTC and Sony leading this market with high end sales as well as growth too. Google enters 7-inch tablet market to make another huge success along with android Operating system success story and Google Nexus 7 is the best challenger for top branded tablets like samsungs Galaxy Tab, Sony P tablet, HTC and LGs Zoom tablet.

We listed the pros and cons forGoogle Nexus 7 Vs Samsung Galaxy Tab Vs Amazon Kindle Fire

Google Nexus 7specs:

Screen size: 7 inches

Screen resolution: 1280 x 800 pixels

Operating system: Android V.4.1 Jelly Bean

Processor: 1.3 GHz Quadcore processor

Cameras: Front-facing, 1.2 megapixel camera

Battery life: 9.5 hours

Price: $199 for 8 GB and $249 for 16 GB.

Pros: When compare to Kindle Fire the price for this tab also same but right to use lots of free games, utilities and other software from android market. Quadcore processor and Android first appearance Jelly bean Operating system creates biggest positive.

Cons: By default Nexus 7 integrates with two storage model and data storage cannot be expanded via MicroSD memory card slot. No option for 3G dongle and 4G LTE dongle support cellular wireless broadband.

Real Full specs,availabilityand price ofGoogle Nexus 7

Samsungs Galaxy Tab 2 10.1

Screen: 10.1 inches with 1280 by 800 pixels

Operating system: Googles Android

Cameras: 3-MP Rear camera and low-resolution front camera.

Battery life: 11 hrs.

Price: $400 for 16 gigabytes of storage and 7-inch screen size for $250

Pros: Lighter, thinner and cheaper, longer, narrower screen better suited to movies. Storage is expandable with microSD memory cards. Also act as a universal remote control for an entertainment center.

Cons: No option yet for wireless broadband, but likely to come.

Amazons Kindle Fire:

Screen size: 7 inch with 1024 by 600 pixels

Operating system: Modified version of Googles Android

Battery life: 8 hours.

Price: $199 for 6 GB of storage

Pros: Cheap and portable. Easy to access Amazon store product and Kindle fire stands.

Cons: Not an economy tablet with lacks of camera and microphone. the third-party applications available from Amazon are extremely low compare to android market. No option to expand data storage via memory cards and for cellular wireless broadband using 3G dongle device.

The abovecomparison for Google Nexus 7 Vs Samsung Galaxy Tab Vs Amazon Kindle Fire tablets explains pros and cons,best buy for price of less than US $400.

Rome’s Blog: Pros and cons Googles Nexus 7 Vs Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 Vs Amazons Kindle Fire

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Jun 27

Samsung Galaxy Tab Family getting Android 4.0 ICS ...

It’s about time Samsung starts updating all their Galaxy Tabs to Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich. They’ve released one at about every size you can think of, some more than once, and the latest Galaxy Tab 2 already has ICS out of the box. It’s only fair they get these updated and we are now hearing they’ll be doing exactly that starting next month.

According to insider reports to SamMobile the updates will start sometime next month and continue into August. Samsung plans to update almost all of their tablets although obviously the original 7-inch Galaxy Tab won’t see the upgrade. Here’s the list they apparently have confirmed:

GT-P6210 Galaxy Tab plus 7.0 WIFIGT-P6200 Galaxy Tab plus 7.0 WIFI + 3GGT-P6810 Galaxy Tab 7.7 WIFIGT-P6800 Galaxy Tab 7.7 WIFI + 3GGT-P7310 Galaxy Tab 8.9 WIFIGT-P7300 Galaxy Tab 8.9 WIFI + 3GGT-P7510 Galaxy Tab 10.1 WIFIGT-P7500 Galaxy Tab 10.1 WIFI + 3G

Pretty good news right there. it looks like they’ll be updating all of their tablets they’ve released as of late. most likely the Tab 7.7 LTE from Verizon will be last, but I’m hoping that isn’t the case as I own and love that tablet. Verizon tablets like the Xoom took forever to see the update over the WiFi model, but hopefully that won’t be the case here.

Along with all the new features, improved UI, face unlock (maybe) and more that ICS brings we can also expect better performance and battery life for these slates. Stay tuned for additional dates once Samsung makes this all official. Check out the reviews on all those tablets listed from our timeline below.

Story Timeline

Samsung Galaxy Tab Family getting Android 4.0 ICS next month

May 26

LTE BlackBerry PlayBook Coming This Year, Says ...

RIM is keeping the PlayBook party going. while speaking at a BlackBerry World breakfast with RIM CEO Thorsten Heins stated the company plans to launch an LTE-enabled PlayBook by the end of the year. however, the CEO didn’t detail the projected release date, price or available wireless carrier.

This is a smart move for RIM. rather than spending the time and resources producing another tablet, RIM is instead concentrating efforts on making sure upcoming software works on existing hardware. during a recent trip Rim’s Waterloo campus, the company made it clear to TechCrunch that it is very much committed to bringing BlackBerry 10 to the PlayBook.

The PlayBook has actually aged quite well. the computing hardware and screen is still competitive to current tablets on the market. BlackBerry 10 would likely make existing PlayBook owners very happy although by the time the OS hits later this year, companies and consumers might shy away from the older tablet. But as long as the 4G PlayBook isn’t tied to a two-year contract like other carrier-sold tablets, RIM might be able to sell several to those still addicted to their crackberrys.

LTE BlackBerry PlayBook Coming This Year, Says RIM CEO

Apr 06

battery mall » Blog Archive » NEC ...

April 6 news, Sony has released a waterproof 1seg TV long time ago which the machine can be used in the bathroom. recently, NEC formal launched a waterproof 7-inch Tablet in Japan. this Dual-Core Tablet PC model is Medias Tab N-06D, if you like, you can take it in to the bathroom to watch video. Of course, such preferences are relatively rare in China, but in Japan, there may have greater demand.

It is understood that the NEC Medias Tab N-06D Tablet carry with 7-inch touch screen, resolution up to 1280 * 800 pixels and will be equipped with a 1.2GHz dual-core processor and Android 2.3 system. the machine built-in TV function, it has front and rear dual cameras, WiFi, Bluetooth 4.0, infrared, GPS, the NFC and LTE multiple functions. the NEC Medias Tab N-06D also has a strong water resistance. even with so many features and a strong configuration, the NEC Medias Tab N-06D is still doing very thin thickness of only 9.9mm and weighs just 320g.

Perhaps you are interested in the NEC Medias Tab N-06D, but unfortunately, this product is currently only marketed in Japan. as for specific price and wheather will be listed in other areas is unclear.

battery mall » Blog Archive » NEC released waterproof Medias Tab N-06D Tablet PC

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Mar 27

New iPad Slow to Recharge, Barely Charges During ...

More controversy for the new iPad: PCWorld Labs testing and follow-up hands-on tests that I performed indicate that the latest version of Apple’s tablet charges only minimally when it is in use. This performance flaw is particularly problematic because the new iPad battery is slow to recharge. of 43 tablets that PCWorld has tested, the third-gen iPad takes the longest to recharge its battery fully–almost six hours.

In my experience, other mobile devices (including the previous iteration of the iPad) do not have this problem. I frequently use my tablet or phone while it’s plugged in and charging, so that I don’t have any interruption in usage. to conduct these tests with the new iPad, I waited until the tablet had dropped to 3 percent battery life before plugging it in to begin charging. I then used it, plugged in, for at least five consecutive hours, with Wi-Fi on but the Verizon LTE disabled.

Surprisingly, the new iPad’s battery percentage indicator showed no increase in charge during those hours of use. Some of the reports I’ve seen online indicate that the battery fails to charge only when performing processor-intensive tasks such as displaying videos and running games, but I found that the problem persisted across a wide range of activities. Over the course of my test, I downloaded and tried out apps, viewed photos, sent email messages, surfed the Web, and listened to lots of music; I also played short sections of standard- and high-definition video, and–oh yes–played games. In that time, the battery gauge simply didn’t budge. for the entire testing period, I left the display on maximum brightness, with no auto-brightness, and set the screen time-out to ‘never’.

The charging problems do not appear to be isolated events. my colleague Leah Yamshon, a staff editor at Macworld, reports that her new iPad’s battery gauge dropped by a percentage point while it was plugged in and she was downloading new apps from the App Store. and Macworld staff editor Alexandra Chang simply noted that charging was “slow”–an observation we’ve confirmed in our PCWorld Lab tests.

To verify that I had identified a problem peculiar to the third-generation iPad, I tried charging both the new iPad and the iPad 2, with the display brightness maxed, auto-brightness off, and the same song playing at the same volume on both units. Playing music is one of the least CPU-intensive tasks you can throw at a tablet, but it has the benefit of demonstrating, quite audibly, that the unit is in continuous use.

This second test confirmed my initial findings: the new iPad barely registered an increase in charge, despite the light use. When I started, the new iPad registered a 43 percent charge, and 22 minutes later it advanced to 44 percent. the gauge did not budge again for 28 more minutes, at which point it crept up to 45 percent.

The iPad 2, by contrast, started at a charge of 94 percent and took just 2 minutes to move up to 95 percent. a mere 7 minutes later, it registered 96 percent; and 28 minutes after that, the iPad 2′s charge stood at 99 percent.

As part of our routine evaluations of tablets, PCWorld Labs tests both battery life and how long the battery takes to recharge. On the latter measure, the new iPad took noticeably longer than its predecessor.

Granted, the new iPad has a larger battery–41 percent bigger than the one in the iPad 2, with the largest mAh (milliampere-hour) rating of any tablet we’ve tested (the higher the mAh, the longer a battery should last).

The chart above outlines how the new iPad and other slates fared in our recharge time test. the Android-based Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime posted the most impressive result on this measure, when you take battery size into account: Despite having a reasonably large (6930mAh) battery, it took just 2 hours, 41 minutes to reach a full charge. the iPad 2, with the same-size battery, took 4 hours, 10 minutes minutes to reach a full charge. the third-generation iPad, with its big 11666mAh battery took a whopping 5 hours, 56 minutes to recharge. That’s not much longer than two versions of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 took despite their having significantly smaller (7000mAh) batteries–the LTE version took 5 hours, 46 minutes and the Wi-Fi version took 5 hours, 34 minutes–but it’s still a long time.

These results should be of concern to anyone considering the new iPad. its lengthy recharge time and its extreme slowness to charge while in use give highly mobile users reason to question its travelworthiness.

For other recent reviews and critiques of the new iPad, see these stories:

• “Apple iPad Review: the Retina display Redefines the Tablet”

• “ITunes Appears to Change Colors of Images Sent to the New iPad”

• “New iPad Runs 10 Degrees Hotter than iPad 2″

• “Top 3 Controversies Hounding Apple’s Newest iPad”

New iPad Slow to Recharge, Barely Charges During Use

Mar 27

New Apple iPad Launching in 25 More Countries ...

Apple’s new iPad is arriving in 25 additional countries on Friday.

The full list of places where the third-gen tablet is launching today includes Austria, Belgium Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Macau, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, and Sweden.

This is the second wave of countries Apple has rolled the new iPad out to. it first hit stores on March 16 in the U.S., the U.K, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, Switzerland, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Not surprisingly, the new iPad was an instant hit, selling 3 million units in its first weekend, Apple confirmed last week. Demand for the tablet has remained strong, with wait times on Apple.com at about 2-3 weeks.

The updated tablet includes a Retina display, 4G LTE connectivity, an improved camera, and the new A5X processor with a quad-core GPU, among other things. However, the new iPad hasn’t debuted without complaints; According to a thread on Apple Forums, several users are reporting connection issues with the new gadget. Some users have said that their new iPad’s Wi-Fi connection is slow at best.

That’s not the only criticism of Apple’s latest launch. Earlier this week, there were reports that the updated tablet runs about 10 degrees hotter than the iPad 2. Apple denied that it was an issue and said the new iPad runs “well within our thermal specifications.”

However, complaints haven’t stopped sales of the new iPad. for more, check out PCMag’s full review of the new iPad and the slideshow below.

For more from Leslie, follow her on Twitter @LesHorn.

 

For the top stories in tech, follow us on Twitter at @PCMag.

New Apple iPad Launching in 25 More Countries Today

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Mar 17

Motorola Xoom with Android 3.2.2 and 4G LTE ...

Just like we mentioned earlier last week a select group of Verizon business accounts and government users were able to send in and update their Motorola Xoom to 4G LTE thanks to Motorola. The link above details the upgrade in detail, now after a 5 day turn around users are receiving their upgraded Motorola Xoom’s in the mail from FedEx with Android 3.2.2 Honeycomb.

We don’t know a lot of details at this point and it’s possible this is just something unique to Motorola but we haven’t seen Android 3.2.1 yet so why the jump to 3.2.2 is beyond me. The Motorola Xoom devices are being returned completely wiped of all user date, upgraded to 3.2.2 and obviously Verizon Wireless 4G LTE speeds. a user over on XDA was kind enough to supply the photo and details.

The XDA user mentions the devices was unlocked and rooted when he sent it to Verizon and it has been returned locked, and obviously no root access since its been wiped and replaced with a new build of Honeycomb. we don’t have any further details but most likely it will be as easy to unlock as “oem unlock” as the Xoom never had a locked down and protected bootloader, why start now.

The screenshot above shows it all, most likely this is a Verizon Employee but this should start soon for everyone else.

[via XDA Forums]

Motorola Xoom with Android 3.2.2 and 4G LTE Spotted

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Mar 10

Apple’s new iPad: heavier and thicker, with ...

Apple’s latest version of the iPad, announced on Wednesday is an incremental upgrade to the fantastically popular mobile tablet computer that adds a higher resolution screen, 4G LTE mobile wireless connectivity, higher resolution cameras, and a handful of other new features.

But these combined upgrades have taken a slight toll on the chassis of the device, making it slightly thicker and heavier to accommodate the bigger battery, which has been increased in capacity to provide Apple’s now standard “10-hour/9-hour” battery life promises.

Here’s how the device specs of the three generations of the iPad stack up, to show where the new iPad fares.

Size:iPad: 9.56″ x 7.47″ x 0.5″ iPad 2: 9.50″ x 7.31″ x 0.34″New iPad: 9.50″ x 7.31″ x 0.37″

Weight:(Wi-fi/mobile)iPad: 1.5 pounds/1.6 poundsiPad 2: 1.33 pounds/1.34 poundsNew iPad: 1.44 pounds/1.46 pounds

Display:iPad: 9.7″ (1024 x 768) resolution at 132 pixels per inch iPad 2: 9.7″ (1024 x 768) resolution at 132 pixels per inch New iPad: 9.7″ (2048 x 1536) resolution 264 pixels per inch

Capacity:iPad: 16GB, 32GB, or 64GBiPad 2: 16GB, 32GB, or 64GB New iPad: 16GB, 32GB, or 64GB

Processor:iPad: 1GHz Apple A4 iPad 2: 1GHz dual-core Apple A5 New iPad: Dual-core Apple A5X with quad-core graphics

Battery and Power:iPad: 25-watt-hour rechargeable lithium-polymer battery”Up to 10 hours of surfing the web on Wi-Fi, watching video, or listening to musicUp to 9 hours of surfing the web using 3G data network.”iPad2: Built-in 25-watt-hour rechargeable lithium-polymer battery”Up to 10 hours of surfing the web on Wi-Fi, watching video, or listening to musicUp to 9 hours of surfing the web using 3G data network.”New iPad: 42.5-watt-hour rechargeable lithium-polymer battery”Up to 10 hours of surfing the web on Wi-Fi, watching video, or listening to musicUp to 9 hours of surfing the web using cellular data network.”

Wireless and cellular:iPad: 802.11a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR,UMTS/HSDPA (850, 1900, 2100 MHz)GSM/EDGE (850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz)iPad 2: 802.11a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR,UMTS/HSDPA/HSUPA (850, 900, 1900, 2100 MHz) GSM/EDGE (850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz)CDMA EV-DO Rev. a (800, 1900 MHz)New iPad: 802.11a/b/g/n, Bluetooth,LTE (700, 2100 MHz); UMTS/HSPA/HSPA+/DC-HSDPA (850, 900, 1900, 2100 MHz) GSM/EDGE (850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz)CDMA EV-DO Rev. a (800, 1900 MHz)

Cameras:iPad: NoneiPad2: Back: .9 megapixel (720p) up to 30 frames per second, Front: VGA, video at 30 frames per second.New iPad: Back: 5-megapixel, Front: VGA, video at 30 frames per second.

Apple’s new iPad: heavier and thicker, with bigger battery