Lenovo ThinkPad T400s with Multitouch Review: Finger Flicking Fun

The Lenovo ThinkPad T400s looks like your boring tray-table business notebook. But what the flight attendant doesn’t know is that the Windows 7 14.1-inch capacitive touchscreen laptop is the first capable of four finger multitouch and it’s fingertastic!

Four Freakin Fingers

Up until now most notebooks with multitouch have pretty much blown (including the Dell XT2 and the HP Tx2). Most of that was because of the Windows Vista interface and sluggish screen technology. The Windows 7 ThinkPad T400s with its capacitive touch screen changes that and almost makes me forget about the all out brawls I once got into with older tablets. However, while the hardware is strong, the success of the T400s depends on it getting good software and applications to run on top of it.

The screen is pure beauty. Like a capacitive touchscreen phone, light taps on the display are responsive and you don’t have to think about positioning your finger in a certain way to open apps or rearrange windows.

Now, that doesn’t mean you can do everything in Windows 7 with your finger, which is why Lenovo put on its own widget style SimpleTap user interface. SimpleTap lets you control the volume or adjust the screen brightness with fat finger like controls. You get to the SimpleTap interface by either double tapping on the screen or selecting the red dot on the top right corner of the screen.

SimpleTap helps, but there is still a crapload that you can’t do with your fingers on the screen. So, the T400 keeps its notebook form factor with the wonderful ThinkPad keyboard, touchpad, and pointing stick in tact.

No one will ever complain that there aren’t enough ways to move the mouse around on the screen.

Unfortunately, these peripheral controls are so integral to the laptop that the T400’s screen doesn’t even rotate—it’s not a convertible as you may have thought. More than once, I just wanted to enjoy a clean tablet design while surfing the web or playing a game, though the screen does tilt all the way back. Which brings me to actually testing the screen with my fingers.

With two fingers you can do the typical mutlitouch stuff you are used to. Pinch to zoom in or out, drag two fingers down the screen to scroll and twist to rotate images. But you can also add another two fingers into the mix. And using Windows 7’s touchpack applications (which are preloaded), you can even have another person’s two fingers on the screen to help edit photos or play a game. This is the kind of thing that is better seen in video so check out the video of me playing a game with a friend and editing photos.

Yeah, it’s more than freaking cool, but what the hell are you really going to use that for? Beyond the picture and games I showed you, the answer is “not much right now.” Lenovo will remind you that there are more programs like Space Claim coming soon, which lets designers use multiple fingers to move around objects (you can see the app in action here). But those programs are going to be few and far between until multitouch starts to take off on PCs.

Performance

Like most ThinkPads, the T400s can handle some pounding. Multitasking (watching a 1080p video, with 7 tabs open in Firefox, while running three IM clients and editing photos in GIMP) was smooth and I wasn’t waiting around for things to load. Also boosting performance is the 128 GB SSD which boots Windows 7 in less than 40 seconds. It also launches Photoshop damn fast.

However, its battery life leaves more to be desired. This thing isn’t going to make it through my flight next week from New York to San Fransisco. On a Wi-Fi battery test (it is the LAPTOPMAG Battery Test) that cycles through the top fifty sites on Firefox the six-cell battery pushed out 4 hours. The battery life isn’t unbearable, though it will be interesting to see what other multitouch laptops provide in terms of juice.

Actually Good Speakers

The ThinkPad T400s nails both touch and performance, but it also makes a decent phone and music player. Apparently the model has been super popular for making VoIP calls so Lenovo upped the quality of the webcam and the speakers. The speakers are actually excellent for a business class notebook; Black Eyed Pea’s “Ive Got a Feeling” sounded seriously full on the speakers that straddle the keyboard.

Price

$2,479 (as configured with a multitouch display, 2.53 Intel GHz core 2 Duo P600 processor, 4GB RAM, 128 GB Toshiba SSD)

Verdict

The ThinkPad T400s has always been a solid notebook, and now it’s the world’s first to have a screen capable of recognizing four fingers at once. But in my mind, the T400s’ screen is a lot like the Etch A Sketch I got when I was six: it’s fun to play with, but you aren’t going to use it all that much (at least until we have more compelling applications). And keep in mind, $2,000+ is a lot to pay for a Etch A Sketch.

Seriously responsive capacitive display


Recognizes not two, or three, but four fingers on the display


Superfast solid state drive that opens programs quickly


Meh, battery life


Kind of wish the screen rotated

HP goes high-end with two new Envy laptops

HP's slick new Envy 13.

(Credit: HP)

Ditching the Voodoo branding of the first Envy laptop, HP is aiming at the very upper ends of the market with its new Envy 13 and Envy 15 laptops, both announced today.

HP calls the 15-inch version, “the company’s fastest …

Apple iTunes LP format gets dissected, explained

Did you hear the news? Apple “resurrected” the LP! It turns out that a complete reversal of millions of music lover’s listening habits has been accomplished by throwing some images, videos, interviews, and DRM-free 256Kbps AAC audiofiles into a WebKit package playable in iTunes. OK, so maybe we are a little jaded — our busy 21st century lives generally don’t afford us the time to stare glassy-eyed at our computer screen (any more than we have the time to stare glassy-eyed at 12-inch album covers while sitting on the floor of our incense-soaked Haight-Ashbury crash pads). But if you’re morbidly curious about the inner workings of the new iTunes LP format, an experience accomplished via HTML 4.01, CSS and JS, hit the read link for the down-and-dirty tear down from web developer Jay Robinson. And who knows? You just might learn something.

[Via Daring Fireball]

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Apple iTunes LP format gets dissected, explained originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 22:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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OTOY uses AMD GPUs, black magic to put Crysis on iPhone

No need to dust off your spectacles — Crysis on the iPhone has been achieved. Just last week we took a peek at the graphical enhancements on the iPhone 3GS, but this demonstration didn’t rely on the factory goods from Apple. Instead, a recent OTOY demonstration put to use some of AMD’s newest GPU technology in order to play back one of the leading-edge 3D titles on a smartphone. In short, OTOY renders the game on remote servers and then sends information to a recipient; needless to say, an HDTV displayed all sorts of artifacts, but on a screen that’s just a few inches large, those flaws become invisible. So, is this really the killer app to supplant Apple’s own App Store for gaming on the iPhone? We get the feeling OTOY needs at least few clean-cut commercials with little-known underground music before they can bank on that.

[Via SlashGear]

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OTOY uses AMD GPUs, black magic to put Crysis on iPhone originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 21:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Opera 9.10 Released With Fraud Protection

This article was written on December 16, 2006 by CyberNet.

Opera Fraud Protection

Opera has gotten most of the kinks worked out in Opera 9.10 so they are preparing to officially release it. As of right now it is sitting on their FTP but the download homepage has not been changed to reflect the new version. Going off of information that the Desktop Team has previously provided this should be a rough estimation of the changelog:

  • New Fraud protection (disabled by default)
  • Improved stability
  • Fixed problem where pages showed the incorrect favicon
  • Fixed problem where multimedia keyboard shortcuts would not work when Opera was focused
  • Fixed bug where one could not log in to Gmail with “Accept only cookies for the site I visit” enabled
  • Changed Mozilla ID string spoof to mimic Firefox
  • Fixed issue where stored passwords were lost after enabling/disabling the master password
  • Made IE ID string spoof as Windows on Linux/UNIX and Mac
  • “Save target as” and “Save to disk” now play well together
  • “Save directly to” now works
  • Fixed accidental deletion of a feed when unsubscribing
  • Fixed smooth scrolling on UNIX
  • Flash now works on FreeBSD
  • Improved error message when a dictionary isn’t installed for the spelling checker

 It is important to note that the Fraud Protection feature is disabled by default. To enable it you need to go to Tools -> Preferences -> Advanced -> Security  and check the box that says Enable Fraud Protection. I really wish that this feature was enabled by default but I understand why they disabled it with their explanation: “It’s a new feature and we think users may need some time to get used to this idea, so we’ve made it an opt-in feature for now. Opera is about giving users the choice, after all.” Hopefully in the future they’ll realize how important this is to the browser and enable it by default, while offering the option to disable it.

Other than that there aren’t any large features that are new but there are several minor fixes. Opera is a truly amazing browser (those people who already use it know that) and the main feature I would like to see implemented into it next would be a remote storage solution for bookmarks. Other browsers have plenty of add-ons and toolbars available that let people manage bookmarks from a remote location but Opera is still lacking a good solution for it. I’m not sure if that would be considered a minor update or if it is something that will be pushed to version 10 but it is something I would love to see.

Here are the current download links for version 9.10 via their FTP (it should be up on the site within a few days):

Windows: Classic Installer | MSI Installer | International Version
Mac: DMG Installer

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Rock Band Stage Kit won’t smoke and strobe with The Beatles

We get the feeling that few Rock Band Stage Kits were sold to begin with, but those who proudly plunked down a Benjamin on this when it originally shipped were probably stoked to use it with The Beatles: Rock Band. Unfortunately for “those people,” such a scenario won’t ever be possible… at least, not without some serious DIY tinkering on the user end. Harmonix has confirmed to our pals over at Joystiq that a compatibility patch won’t ever be produced for the newest RB title, and when pressed about compatibility with future titles, the rep simply stated that the company “hasn’t announced any future titles at this time.” Looks like this party’s over, folks.

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Rock Band Stage Kit won’t smoke and strobe with The Beatles originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 20:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPod Nano 5G review: Jack of all trades

Photo of iPod Nano next to Flip Ultra HD camcorder.

When it comes to camcorders, I won't be abandoning my Flip anytime soon. But that doesn't make the Nano any less attractive. The more camera-having gadgets, the merrier.

(Credit: Donald Bell/CNET)

The official CNET review of the fifth-generation iPod Nano is up, and I am officially exhausted. Someone please tell Apple to stop adding features to this thing. Remember when all an MP3 player to do was play music? CNET’s first iPod review was only 600 words long. These days, you practically have to write a textbook to cover all the features that get crammed into something like the Nano.

Photo of 4th-generation and 5th-generation iPod Nanos sitting next to each other.

An extra 0.2-inches really does make a noticeable difference when you're dealing with screens this small.

(Credit: Donald Bell/CNET)

Writer’s exhaustion aside, the fifth-gen Nano is a pretty fantastic little gadget that’s one of the most easy-to-recommend stocking stuffers out there. The thing comes in tons of colors, works with iTunes, helps you lose weight (pedometer), and might even get you to record the world’s next completely unnecessary viral YouTube sensation. Sure, the earbuds are still garbage, but Sony seems to be the only manufacturer fighting that battle.

Now, to prevent from boring people to tears, one area of the iPod Nano’s performance I didn’t go into exhaustive detail over is the video camera’s image quality. If you’re curious, I ran a few of my own tests over the weekend, shooting indoors and outdoors, and A/B testing the Nano against the Flip UltraHD. Aside from the obvious image quality differences, I also ran up against problems with the Nano’s tilt-sensor getting tripped-up …

EVGA’s dual-LCD InterView display starts shipping

EVGA’s unusual dual-LCD InterView display certainly isn’t for everybody, but if you’ve got a desk-mate that you’re constantly sharing a monitor with you’ll no doubt be pleased to know that it’s now finally available to order. Now selling for as low as $624.99 (or $640 list price), the monitor packs dual 17-inch LCDs that can either be used in a screen-spanning mode for an extra-wide 34-inch display, or be rotated and automatically reoriented for folks sitting across form each other. Unfortunately, each display packs a somewhat lackluster 1,440 x 990 resolution, and you’ll of course have to make sure you have dual VGA or DVI inputs if you want to run it from a single computer. That’ll no doubt be a small trade-off to some folks, however, especially considering there aren’t exactly a ton of competitors to the InterView at the moment.

[Via ComputerMonger]

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EVGA’s dual-LCD InterView display starts shipping originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 19:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Photos: Archos 9 PC Tablet

Archos 9 tablet(Credit: Donald Bell/CNET)

Archos is out with its very first tablet PC, the Archos 9. We got a quick hands-on with the 9-inch touch-screen tablet and managed to snap a few pics.

While it won’t be ready for stores until October 22, when Windows 7 also officially rolls …

Apple pushes to change subscription accounting rules

Apple’s pretty famous for using subscription accounting for the iPhone and Apple TV as a way to bend the rules and offer free software updates after purchase — basically, instead of putting all the money from the sale on the books at once, the company’s accountants spread the revenue out over two years, extending the “transaction” to cover upgrades. That’s great for iPhone owners, but it’s not so great for Apple or its investors, since the company’s stock price doesn’t always reflect the true amount of iPhone money coming in — in fact, Apple earnings reports now include a second, unofficial balance sheet that does away with subscription accounting to show off the real numbers. Yeah, it’s confusing, but it might finally be about to change, since the Financial Accounting Standards Board just tentatively approved new rules that could allow Apple to do away with subscription accounting and still deliver free updates. That means Apple’s quarterly earnings will now feature much larger official revenue and profit figures — last quarter’s official revenue was $8.34 billion, while the unofficial number was $9.74 billion — the lawyers and accountants will be happy, and we’ll still get free iPhone updates. Good deal all around — except for iPod touch owners, who will still have to pay $9.95 and not get a camera.

[Via Yahoo]

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Apple pushes to change subscription accounting rules originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 18:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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