HP, Acer, ASUS and Toshiba all announce new Haswell Chromebooks; HP model arriving in the holiday season for $300

HP, Acer, ASUS and Toshiba all announce new Haswell Chromebooks; HP model arriving in the holiday season for $300

Intel has just announced a new line of Chromebooks that run on Haswell. Chromebooks have previously run lower-powered processors like ARM and Atom, though the Pixel did break the mold by running on a dual-core 1.8GHz Intel Core i5. Upcoming Haswell Chromebooks include new iterations from Acer and HP, along with Chrome OS newbies ASUS and Toshiba. Sundar Pichai, senior vice president of Chrome and Android, came on stage to say that Haswell will offer superb battery life without compromising performance. At first glance, the Acer Chromebook on stage is a slim and light affair, while the HP model sports a larger display. Intel even showed off a special ASUS Chromebox that serves to be an extremely lightweight PC. As you might expect, there’s no announcement of pricing or availability just yet, though we did hear we’ll see them “over the coming months.”

Update: The New Acer Chromebook and the HP Chromebook 14 pages are now live. So far, we have the most details about the Chromebook 14, which will arrive sometime this holiday shopping season for $300. It will have a 14-inch, 1,366 x 768 display and 16GB of built-in storage with HDMI, USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 ports. Unusually, too, it will be available in an array of punch colors, including “Snow White,” “Ocean Turquoise” and “Coral Peach.” Find the full press release embedded below.

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Source: Chrome Blog

Dell Venue tablet 2013: Bay Trail keeps OEM in consumer tech

Though the company made clear that they’re out on smartphones for the time being (back in 2012), Dell has been revealed to be a headliner here in 2013 for a Windows tablet running Intel’s new Bay Trail processor. Not one whole heck of a lot is known about this device at the moment, as Dell […]

Intel Bay Trail aims for Android and Windows 8 hybrids

Today Intel has revealed their plans for the Bay Trail collection of Atom Z3000 Series Processors, making clear that they’re aiming for devices that are small but powerful. This line of SoC is headed for tablets, phones, and everything in-between packing Intel’s newest Silvermont architecture for next-generation processing finesse. This is not Intel’s first move […]

Intel Bay Trail: Laptop-Tablet Hybrids Might Actually Keep Up Now

Intel Bay Trail: Laptop-Tablet Hybrids Might Actually Keep Up Now

Just a couple of months ago, Intel’s new 4th generation processors helped laptops get a whole lot better. Now Intel’s trying to work the same magic on mobile. Meet Bay Trail, a new flavor of chips designed specifically to make Windows 8 and Android tablets more awesome.

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Intel details Z3000 Bay Trail chips for tablets and hybrids, claims up to 2x CPU and 3x GPU performance

Intel announces three new Bay Trail SoCs for tablets, laptop hybrids and more

Intel barely existed on the mobile scene two years ago, and yet the company’s Clover Trail chips for low-power tablets and hybrids have already had a huge impact on the Windows PC market — not least by rendering Windows for ARM (aka Windows RT) largely redundant. But Clover Trail’s performance in devices like the Acer Iconia W3 or Lenovo IdeaTab Lynx is far from perfect, especially with Windows 8 desktop applications and anything that involves 3D graphics, and that’s why we’re more than ready for its successor: Bay Trail, which is based on the next-generation 22nm Silvermont architecture. Intel has today detailed three families of Bay Trail chips, the most interesting of which is undoubtedly the Z3000-series for tablet form factors, and you can catch up on these new SoCs right after the break.

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Intel CEO Claims Sub-$100 Tablets Headed Your Way These Holidays

Intel CEO Claims Sub $100 Tablets Headed Your Way These HolidaysEach holiday season, it would be safe to assume that folks do look forward to see what else is new out there which can keep them occupied through the winter until spring arrives, and this applies more often than not to kids rather than adults, although the latter are not exempt, either. Well, how about lining up your pockets for a spanking new tablet for the masses? It might sound like you have to fork out a few hundred dollars for a new high end tablet, but Intel CEO Bryan Kraznich has a different idea on where the industry might be headed this holiday season. He claims that we should be able to find sub-$100 tablets in the corresponding time period, citing the fact that a price war has been fought in the 7″ tablet market, so us consumers can expect prices to hit a new low.

Of course, in the world of technology (and every other industry to say the least), the general rule of thumb is this – you get what you pay for. Obviously we have seen sub-$100 tablets in the past, but most of them do have a ‘price’ that consumers pay – they lack the quality that one would expect. Hopefully the sub-$100 tablets that Kraznich envisioned would not be the epitome of sloppy manufacturing practices, but rather, allow customers to walk away with a smile on their faces after making a purchase.

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  • Intel CEO Claims Sub-$100 Tablets Headed Your Way These Holidays original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Intel Quark Processors Target Action In Mobile Devices

    Intel Quark Processors Target Action In Mobile Devices When it comes to the mobile arms race, it does seem as though ARM is the alpha male here, but this does not mean that Intel themselves are just leaning back and not doing anything. In fact, Intel has been slowly trying to make inroads into the mobile device market, and they do not seem interested to just sit idly and let the whole world pass them by with what seems to be a surge of wearable technology headed our way. Having said that, Intel has just unveiled their latest range of Quark processors that will most probably see action in future smartwatches and other kinds of wearable technology.

    Needless to say, the Quark processors certainly live up to their name, being really tiny in stature and of course, power efficient. Intel claims that the Quark processor will be 20% the size of the smallest Atom processor, where it will be able to function on just 10% of the equivalent power, now how about that? There will be samples of the new Quark processor design that will be ready sometime in Q4 later this year, but it should not be in wide use until next year, so keep your fingers crossed. [WSJ (subscription required)]

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  • Intel Quark Processors Target Action In Mobile Devices original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Intel Quark chips in the works for wearable and ingestible technologies

    There’s no doubt that wearable technologies are picking up speed, and aiming to be in the forefront of the emerging industry is Intel, which is now working on a line of microchips called Intel Quark. These small chips are designed for wearable devices like smartwatches and bracelets, with another variety being designed for ingestible applications, […]

    HP ZBook 15 and 17 hands-on: Thunderbolt arrives with Haswell

    Along with the ZBook 14 – the world’s first workstation Ultrabook – the ZBook family has arrived with the ZBook 15 and the ZBook 17. The larger two devices work with much of the same technology as the smaller, but each brings on its own unique blend of high-powered features that makes the price jump […]

    HP ZBook 14 hands-on: the world’s first workstation Ultrabook

    With the generation of workstation computers introduced this week by HP, this brand is taking the market from a real mobile angle with the HP ZBook 14 as its hero. This device works with a 14-inch LED-backlit SVA eDP anti-glare display up front coming with two configurations: one touch, the other standard. Under the hood […]