Toshiba Satellite U845W Review


Over the past couple of months, it’s become clear that the way computer makers–those companies that specify and brand the actual physical device–need to make less models. It’s because when you’re optimizing for portability and battery life, what you don’t include is almost as important what you do include. Newcomers to the laptop game Vizio and Razer have adopted this one-model few-options approach, and computers like Microsoft’s Surface show that it’s increasingly about the product, not the customization.

(more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Toshiba Satellite C660 unveiled in Europe, Toshiba has new Satellite and Portégé notebooks out,

The Best LED Flashlight

Using your phone as an impromptu flashlight may work in a pinch. But if you spend enough time diving under desks, rummaging through supply closets and searching dimly-lit basements, you’ll want to invest in a proper torch. More »

Lumia 920 Review: Just Too Damn Heavy

Windows Phone 8 is lovely, and the Lumia 920 is supposed to be the Ultimate Windows Phone. Sadly, the handset we’ve been excited about for so long is just too fat to love. More »

Top Four Cases to Jazz Up Your iPhone and Show Off Your Personality

iPhone CasesApple has sold over 108 million units since the first iPhone was released in 2007, and they’re still going strong. Naturally, that means there are millions of people all over the world who have the exact same phone as you do. But while the actual phone might be the same, they don’t have to look the same, given the wide selection of iPhone cases available.

Google Nexus 10 Review

Google Nexus 10 ReviewThe end of year is traditionally when Google launches its new “pure Android” smartphone, but this year, Google came up with more than that. The Nexus 10 represents not only the best there is in terms of Android software, but incidentally, Google has also pushed the envelope in terms of hardware design and specifications. The company has worked with Samsung to design, and build what is simply the most powerful Android tablet to date. The specifications are quite evident.

With an amazing 2560×1600 display, and Samsung’s fastest processor to date, the Google Nexus 10 screams “high-end”. Yet, Google will sell it at a mere $400, which is significantly lower than competing devices. It is a strategy that Google has rolled out with the Nexus 7, and so far, it seems to take hold, so Google is now extending it to three Nexus products: 4, 7 and 10.

In this review, we will go over the Nexus 10 hardware, and the Android 4.2 features. Hopefully, by the end of it, you should have a good idea of how it is to use one of those in the real world. Ready? (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Google Nexus 4 Review, Samsung outs Nexus 10 with 64GB of storage on website, typo or accidental leak?,

Google Nexus 4 Review

Google Nexus 4 Review
It’s that time of the year, and Google has just introduced the Google Nexus 4, a smartphone designed by Google to embody the Android experience, and built in collaboration with LG which used its latest technology and manufacturing know-how which was acquired during the design of the recently launched, and excellent, LG Optimus G.

The Google Nexus 4 is different from other smartphones out there: for one, it comes with Google’s latest and greatest mobile OS: Android 4.2 (4.1 and 4.2 are code named ”Jelly Bean”). Secondly, Google will retail this smartphone as “unlocked” (will work with any carrier with a compatible network) for $299, which is about half of the regular price for comparable unlocked phones. Finally, the Google Nexus 4 is a “world phone” that should run with most GSM/HSPA+ natworks on the planet, including T-Mobile USA, which makes it a de-facto top choice for an out-of-contract smartphone.

Now the question is: how good is it in the real world, and what exciting features does Android 4.2 bring? In this review, we will go over the critical Android 4.2 features, and we will tell you how it feels to use the Google Nexus 4 in the real world. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Android 4.2 Preview with the Google Nexus 4, Google ‘secret police’ visits bartender for Nexus 4 prototype possession,

Review: Google’s Android OS Might Be Better Suited For Tablets, And The Nexus 10 Is A Shining Example

nexus10-1

This week, Google announced a new lineup of devices that would be running its Android OS, Jelly Bean version 4.2. Those new devices are a phone, the Nexus 4, and a 10-inch tablet, called the Nexus 10. I’ve had a chance to play with both devices, specifically the Nexus 10, and I was actually surprised with how the device has fit into my daily routine.

First, a little background on what type of devices that I use on a daily basis. I’m an iPhone guy and use an iPhone 5 daily and religiously, but I also carry the latest Galaxy Nexus. I’ve found that iOS still is the better phone operating system for me. However, when the Nexus 7 came out, I found that I used it way more than I ever used my iPad. Perhaps this could be a fluke, or maybe it’s because of the 7-inch form factor.

That’s until I picked up the Nexus 10 and realized that Android OS is, for me, the better “bigger screen” tablet experience. I have a first-generation iPad and never pick it up. In fact, I never use it for more than two hours a week. I’m usually on my computer or on my phone, and never had the need for a “middle” experience from a device. I was pretty sure that I’d never be a tablet person because of this, but alas, Jelly Bean 4.2 on a 10-inch tablet is just that good.

Don’t get me wrong, the tablet isn’t perfect, and definitely has some oddities, but overall, I think that the Android OS has made me a tablet person. If you’re really technical, and would like all of the details on the hardware guts in the device, head on over here to check that out.

I’m a Google user, meaning, I use Search, Gmail, Google Drive and Google+ for the most part. Clearly, those things aren’t as great on an Apple device with iOS…for reasons. I’m not the only one that uses Google products, so this won’t be a foreign concept.

I’m not really a games person. I’ve found when I use a tablet, it’s because I want to watch some YouTube videos, check my email, tweet a bit or go on Facebook. It’s all a lean-back experience, as you’d expect. However, I really don’t use a lot of apps and games, even when I did use my iPad. Perhaps this is weird, but it’s my personal flow.

I have a MacBook Pro and really enjoy using Mountain Lion. In fact, I think it’s the best desktop operating system ever built. However, I do use Chrome quite a bit, and since it syncs with all of my Android devices, it’s a rather enjoyable experience to open up a new piece of hardware and get started right away.

The Nexus 10 is a pretty standard-looking device at first glance. The first thing you’ll notice is the rounded edges and the fact that it has two speakers. That’s pretty sweet. The back of the device, which I’ll get to a bit later, is wonky. It looks odd, and certainly feels odd. However, the device is thinner than I expected it would be, and that’s really impressive.

The pixel density is impressive on the screen; again, not what I expected at all. This baby is big and clear.

Once you get it in your hands though, the rounded edges and feel are quite pleasant. However, all of that is quickly put to bed when you touch the back of the device. It has two different surfaces, a rubberized feel for the most part and then a plastic panel towards the top that protects some of its guts. I have no idea what Samsung and Google were thinking when designing the back of this device, but it’s a bit of a letdown. Not a dealbreaker by any stretch, though. I just find it to be odd.

The “smart case” that you can pick up has to snap into this weird little panel area, which again…it seems like an odd hardware choice.

Other than that, the thing is killer thin and is extremely light. I’ve found that using it for an hour or two is a pretty nice experience and it feels durable. So durable, that I don’t mind tossing it on the couch or coffee table without fear of it breaking into a million pieces. I can be pretty rough on devices and I’ve already nicked up my iPhone 5. Rugged is good in my opinion.


Like I suggested in the headline, I’m starting to think that Google’s Android operating system might be better suited for a tablet device. When it comes to using Android on an actual phone, for whatever reason, it just doesn’t grip for me. When I’m using my laptop, I tend to do everything that I need to do on it. My iPhone serves as a backup when I’m on the go, and the apps that I do use are really great on Apple’s OS. I haven’t had that experience on an Android phone yet.

Jelly Bean 4.2 is pretty impressive, more impressive than I’ve seen on any Android phone, but it really sings on a tablet devices, specifically the Nexus 10.

When I sit on my couch and use the Nexus 10, I tend to check email, flip through tweets, view Instagram photos, use Google+, troll Facebook and surf the web. All of these things are superior on this latest version of Android’s OS and on this device compared with my experience on the iPad. The front- and rear-facing cameras are unremarkable from the sense that I would never really use a tablet as a “camera.” However, the quality on the front-facing camera is pretty good for Hangouts.

Google Now

What I didn’t think much of when it comes to tablet usage is editing documents, getting fully immersed in YouTube and doing heavy Google searching, but alas with Jelly Bean 4.2 and the Nexus 10, I have absolutely started doing all of these things on a tablet. Because of the Google Now product, I am now using it like I would suspect I’d have used Siri, if it ever gripped for me. I perform searches, ask for weather, check sports scores and do research on pieces or places to go on the weekend. Google Now is such an amazing integrated Google experience that I would not be surprised if it ends up being one of the most successful products that the company has ever shipped.

That’s saying a lot.

Docs And TV

Also, I’ve started using Google Drive a lot more — not to create documents mind you, but to review and tweak them after a long day of work. In addition, I find myself surfing through my YouTube subscriptions as if I’m surfing the TV channels, even though I can’t stand cable TV.

This tablet retails for $399, which is cheaper than the standard iPad. However, I’m not pitting one against the other. What I can say is this: If you are a Google account holder and Google product user, then you really should think about picking this device up. Sure, it’s not perfect, and I’m not thrilled that Samsung made the device.

I thought that Asus did a way better job with the look and feel of the Nexus 7 than Samsung did with this device. However, it’s not horrible; in fact it’s quite solid. The idea that Android’s OS might be better on a tablet than iOS might be jarring for you, and trust me, I surprised myself with this line of thinking. What I’m saying is that for my daily usage and lifestyle, this really is the case.

Do you want to wait for another 10-inch tablet with Android? Maybe, but it’s not going to get better than this until Google wises up and starts making its own hardware. Yes, it’s time. It’s time for Google to step up to the plate and control the entire experience of Android and hardware. Does that mean that other hardware manufacturers should get the shaft? Maybe not, but I think Apple’s #1 genius move is that it controls the hardware and software.

Apple has an advantage, but Google is right there on the cusp of something amazing. Maybe you don’t agree with my statement that Android has a leg up for the tablet experience, but it’s worth thinking about. Perhaps Mr. Brin can stop playing with glasses for a few months and help design a killer tablet. I’ll buy it, as long as it’s running Jelly Bean 4.2 OS or beyond.

It really is that good, and I’ll probably switch between it and the Nexus 7 when I’m not “wired in.”


Samsung’s $249 Chromebook: If You Like The Web, And You Like Cheap, This Is The Computer For You

Samsung-Chromebook-5

Features:

  • Uses your Google account for easy setup of computer and Google services.
  • 10 second boot time, near-instant resume from sleep.
  • ARM processor keeps power requirements low, computer cool and quiet.
  • Comes with 100GB of free Google Drive storage.
  • Easily switch and add user and guest accounts.

Pros:

  • Price. This is the main selling point of this computer, and pretending otherwise benefits no one.
  • Chrome OS is essentially Chrome with a little Android thrown in. Anyone should be able to pick it up easily.
  • This is a very portable device, and it’s well-built enough to endure some rough handling.

Cons:

  • Chrome OS is very focused, but that also means it’s limited in what it can do compared to Windows, OS X or Linux.
  • Quality of display and other build material choices reflect the $249 asking price.
  • Limited support for some times of external memory cards.

Short Version

Samsung and Google recently introduced the simply named Chromebook, a $249 computer with an 11.6-inch screen and around 6.5 hours of battery life in a slim and svelte 2.5 lb, 0.8-inch-thick shell. It’s a bare-bones approach to the concept of a Chrome OS notebook, and it’s probably what Google should have done with this type of hardware from the very beginning. But does that mean it’s good?

Chrome OS is minimal; it’s a web browser, essentially, with features added that make it possible to access local files and work more easily offline. Hardware for an OS like that need not be overly complicated, or overly powerful. It really just needs focus, and that’s mostly what Samsung and Google have delivered with this new bargain-basement notebook.

Long Version

User Experience

The Chromebook is as easy-to-use as Chrome the browser itself – which is to say very easy. In fact, there are a good numbers of users who aren’t comfortable doing much outside of their web browsers, and that is the ideal target audience for this device. If what you want is the web, Chrome delivers that, with a very functional keyboard with web-focused functions like dedicated reload, back and forward buttons, and a trackpad that does its job better than those on most Windows computers, even if it does move the cursor when scrolling once in a while, which is surprisingly annoying over time.

Thanks to Chrome’s large app and extension store, there’s plenty of software here to meet basic computing needs, and even handle some more advanced tasks including photo editing. For daily casual computing, and even a good chunk of my work tasks, the Chromebook is a device that meets my needs. It doesn’t go very far beyond, and there are some tasks that are less frequently part of my gig that I’d have to go back to a more capable computer for (like video editing for instance, or anything other than light retouches for photo work). But for remote web workers on a shoestring budget, Chrome OS running on Samsung’s intelligently pared down hardware is a heck of a combo, providing a user experience that’s hardly frustrating, and definitely spends a good amount of time in the ‘enjoyable’ range, too.

Hardware

The Chromebook’s hardware is about as far away from high-end ultrabooks as you can get: it uses plastic, the screen feels taken directly from a netbook released around 2008, and it feels like it’s got quite a bit of flex in the body. But it’s also incredibly small, slim and light, and while ports (save the SD card slot) are around back, they’re there, and with USB 3.0 and HDMI out, they’re modern and capable. In other words, Samsung cut corners where it should have on this design and made sure not to when it was important to how the notebook handles.

If I had to sum up the Chromebook’s hardware in one word, it would be “smart.” The screen (which appears low-contrast and somewhat washed out compared to more expensive contemporary devices) is its greatest weakness, but it’s far from unusable. And there are other areas where the Chromebook actually pleasantly surprises, like with the built-in speakers, which are actually pretty good so long as you don’t crank the volume up too high. The camera for video chat also does the job, and an included USB to Ethernet dongle makes it possible to connect to a wired router. Even the keyboard is a good one, with dedicated buttons for browser-specific features, and comfortable, well-spaced and placed keys, though keyboard backlighting is understandably missing.

The Chromebook’s battery is maybe its key hardware feature. Google says it gets around 6.5 hours from a full charge, and in my usage that turned out to be right. Plus, when sleeping, it sipped energy slowly enough that I could close the lid, pick it up a couple of days later and still jump back in. For a computer like this, that’s meant to offer instant-on convenience, a good battery is a crucial measure of success, and one that’s impressive on its own at this price point.

Software

If you’re a Chrome user, which I am, then Chrome OS is like an old familiar friend. All that this has over a traditional Chrome experience is the addition of a simple file browser and user account switching. If, like me, you spend 95 percent of your day in Chrome, then that means what the Chromebook can accomplish is significant, but not all-encompassing. For instance, plugging in SD cards from my DSLRs had mixed results; an older 8GB standard version was recognized immediately, and I could open JPGs (not RAW) for viewing and editing, but a 128GB SDXC wasn’t picked up by Chrome OS.

Still, with instant on, and customizable settings for the trackpad (I’ve gotten used to Apple’s so-called ‘natural’ scrolling), the Chromebook’s software offered everything I needed for light use at the airport or on the couch, and I can easily see it meeting the entertainment and casual needs of a huge swath of everyday users. Chrome’s app store has grown considerably since its introduction, helping out with a variety of social, productivity, gaming and entertainment apps to satisfy most needs for those who aren’t hardcore gamers or working on the next Dreamworks masterpiece.

Chrome’s Remote Desktop feature is also very useful if you’re adding the Chromebook to a network of existing computers and want to access them for any reason, but I found it had trouble with more complicated multi-screen setups like the one I run in my home office. Still, for basic remote access, it’s a good tool to have around.

Summary

At $400 or $500, the Chromebook always struck me as an unusual device aimed at an enthusiast market; after all, who would want to pay as much as you might for an entry-level Windows machine for something with a far narrower, less capable software ecosystem? But now at $249, the Samsung Chromebook makes perfect sense: it’s a cheap, effective portable web browser with a full keyboard and nearly all-day battery life. If you’ve got four or five times the asking price, buy a Mac or a PC. But if those machines are overkill for your needs, you won’t regret picking up a new Chromebook, either now for $249 or when the $329 version brings cellular connectivity to the mix.












Microsoft Surface RT Review

Microsoft Surface RT ReviewWith the Surface for Windows 8 RT tablet, Microsoft introduces a Windows computer that runs with the same chip which powers Android competitors. To consumers, it means that they can now have a Windows computer that looks like a tablet, weighs like tablet, behaves like a tablet, while being able to run a “real” version of Microsoft Office, along with a Windows desktop environment for file management and settings. The “PC” feel also includes a full-size USB port and Microsoft has managed to do that with a design as thick as the iPad 3 – this is a feat of industrial design.

In this review, we will tell you what the Microsoft Surface is made of, but more importantly, this complete review will cover what you can (and cannot) do with it, and we will provide some concrete examples that show what you can expect from the Surface RT in the real world. Let’s dive…



Microsoft Surface RT Review


Microsoft surface


microsoft-surface-design-04


microsoft-surface-design-05


microsoft-surface-design-06


microsoft-surface-rt-review--22


(more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Microsoft Surface pre-orders canceled?, Microsoft Surface Unboxing, Review Coming Up…,

From "First Time Girls" To "First Wives Club," Protests Go Viral Prior To Election [Videos]

Women’s issues move center-stage once again in the final stretch of this
year’s contentious Presidential campaigns — mainly, due to Richard Mourdock’s and
Todd Akin’s extreme views on women’s rights.  On the left, the creative
genius of HBO’s hit comedy "Girls," Lena Dunham and 1960’s pop icon
Lesley Gore have released political ads that connect women of the 1960s
to first-time female voters of 2012, which provided a needed counterpoint.