Lenovo ThinkPad X100e review

Ever since we first met Lenovo’s ThinkPad X100e at CES we’ve had it on a virtual pedestal as the perfect solution between a netbook and a larger 13- or 14-inch ULV ultraportable. That’s because in addition to carrying the renowned ThinkPad brand, its AMD Neo processor / ATI graphics combo promise more power than the typical Intel Atom N450-powered netbook, and with an 11.6-inch screen the chassis can accommodate a wider keyboard and touchpad. Sounds like the perfect mobile computer, right? Unfortunately, there are two things that hold the $549 X100e from being all we wanted it be. Thought we were going to give it up that easily? Pssh. Hit that read more link for the full review.

Continue reading Lenovo ThinkPad X100e review

Lenovo ThinkPad X100e review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Mar 2010 15:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Dell Latitude E6410 and E6510 emerge overseas, Core i5 / i7 and all

We spotted this suit-and-tie wearing pair sneaking through the FCC’s lairs a few weeks ago, and now we know the whens and wheres of buying one… in the UK, anyway. The Dell Latitude E6410 is currently listed with a base price of £749 ($1,128) and features a 14.1-inch display (WXGA and WXGA+ options), a Core i5 or Core i7 processor, Windows Vista or 7, a pair of DDR3 RAM slots, NVIDIA’s NVS 3100M (512MB) graphics, a variety of storage options, a Blu-ray or DVD drive, optional mobile broadband and all the expected ports around the edges. The E6510 steps up to a 15.6-inch panel (with a 1080p version selectable) and offers up a few extra CPU options, but otherwise it’s identical. There’s no word on when these kind fellows will make their way stateside, but if we were the betting type, we’d put our pounds and / or greenbacks on “real soon.”

Continue reading Dell Latitude E6410 and E6510 emerge overseas, Core i5 / i7 and all

Dell Latitude E6410 and E6510 emerge overseas, Core i5 / i7 and all originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Mar 2010 08:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Notebook Review, VR-Zone  |  sourceSpecifications [PDF], E6410, E6510  | Email this | Comments

Envy 14, Envy 17, and Pavilion dm4 cited in HP support docs

Hardcore HP-heads have been poring over support docs tirelessly looking for indications that a presumed lineup refresh this spring will include previously leaked Envy 14 and 17-inch models, and what do we have here? “HP Support Assistant CVA documentation, SP47326″ includes references to both, meaning that a release is either in the works or someone in support is jumping the gun a bit. If that ain’t enough for your casual Friday kicks, a perusal of a little something called “LightScribe System Software CVA documentation, SP47798” (that one’s our fave) even mentions the HP Pavilion dm4, which SlashGear describes as a possible “14-inch machine with integrated optical drive, switchable graphics and a choice of Intel or AMD processors.” Of course, there is no indication when, or if these models will ever see the light of day — but if you were in desperate need for a device to fill the gab between your 13-inch and 15-inch HP Envy laptops, there is at least hope.

Envy 14, Envy 17, and Pavilion dm4 cited in HP support docs originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 26 Mar 2010 15:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink SlashGear  |  sourceNotebook Review forum  | Email this | Comments

Gateway NV5933u review

A Core i3 processor, Blu-ray drive, and 320GB hard drive for $629.99 — does the Gateway NV5933u really need more of an introduction than that? We didn’t think so, since that’s all it took for us to track down the budget multimedia 15.6-inch laptop and get it into our eager hands. For a budget system it sure has the specs to carry it on home, but after the dog has barked at the mailman and you’ve gotten it out of the box, how is it in actual everyday use? You know where to find out. We’ll see you after the break in our full review.

Continue reading Gateway NV5933u review

Gateway NV5933u review originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 26 Mar 2010 14:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGateway NV5933u at Best Buy  | Email this | Comments

ASUS cramming USB 3.0 into Eee PC line, N Series laptops, loads more

USB 3.0 is slowly but surely popping up on more and more new machines, but finding a rig with SuperSpeed support is still a chore. ASUS is working hard to make sure that finding the good stuff is easy when looking at its wares, and judging by the support it has already shown for the protocol, we actually have reason to believe ’em. The company has just issued a rather gloat-filled press release extolling the virtues of supporting USB 3.0 in every facet of their product line, but it’s the breakdown that really has us interested. We already heard that the Eee Box 1510U and 1210U would support the format, along with the N Series of laptops and Eee PC 1018/1015/1016. There’s also a full slate of mainboards that have joined the party, and we get the impression that every Eee PC from here on out will do the same. Imagine that — the company credited with sparking the netbook revolution, now sparking the USB 3.0 netbook revolution. Fitting, no?

ASUS cramming USB 3.0 into Eee PC line, N Series laptops, loads more originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 26 Mar 2010 01:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceASUS  | Email this | Comments

Sony’s VAIO CW draining the battery while asleep?

Thinking of picking up a VAIO CW over the weekend? You might want to hold those horses just a bit, at least until Sony (or someone) figures out what exactly is causing the batteries on these to zap themselves while asleep. Based on a raft of complaints — nine pages strong and growing — over at Notebook Review, it sounds as if the batteries within the outfit’s new CW series (at least those with Core i3 CPUs and the 330M GPU) are fading inexplicably quick while resting, leaving many with next to no juice once they crack open the lid the next morning. All sorts of theories are flying, but one in particular seems to note that a bundled Sony battery management application could be causing cells to only charge to a certain percent even when the machine is “off.” For now, some folks are actually flipping the battery out for a fraction of a second and popping it back in after putting it to sleep for the night in order to prevent the drain, but we get the feeling that a less janky fix should be in order. Right, Sony?

Sony’s VAIO CW draining the battery while asleep? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Mar 2010 21:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceNotebook Review  | Email this | Comments

Acer launches Aspire Ethos line with swanky 5943G and 8943G models

Acer’s aspirational laptops have a new Ethos to them now, and it clearly has something to do with entertainment. The newly revealed 18.4-inch 8943G sports a 1920 x 1080 resolution and a true 5.1 surround sound setup, meaning that somewhere within its shell reside five miniature speakers and a sub. Processor options range all the way up to the quad-core Core i7-820QM, which offers 8MB of built-in cache and a 1.73GHz clock speed that cranks all the way to 3.06GHz when required. ATI Mobility Radeon HD 5850 graphics and up to 1.28TB of storage (2x 640GB) complete the overkill recipe. The 5943G is basically a scaled down version, offering as it does 1366 x 768 resolution across a 15.6-inch display, a 2.1 internal speaker arrangement, and a merely adequate 640GB storage maximum. The rest of the specs are shared, including a 4,800mAh battery, which should perish quicker than you can say “desktop replacement.” Pricing and availability have not yet been announced.

Acer launches Aspire Ethos line with swanky 5943G and 8943G models originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Mar 2010 05:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink SlashGear  |  sourceNotebook Italia  | Email this | Comments

Samsung’s R30 and R80 Touch of Color laptops now on sale


Plain they are not, and Samsung‘s Touch of Color laptops that were launched at the tail-end of CES this year have finally begun to ship. As of now, the Core 2 Duo-equipped R430, Core i3-packin’ R480, and Core i5-based R580 / R780 are all on sale at Best Buy, with prices ranging from $629.99 to $829.99. The whole lot seems to be available for shipping or direct pickup, so give that source link a look to figure out which configuration fits you best. Or don’t — no pressure.

Samsung’s R30 and R80 Touch of Color laptops now on sale originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Mar 2010 23:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Laptoping  |  sourceBest Buy  | Email this | Comments

Nyoombl Uses the TV for Video Conferencing

nyoombl

A tiny device promises to make video conferencing a better experience by using the TV that’s already in your living room.

Nyoombl, an interestingly named startup, makes a gadget called Greypfroot that will sit on top of your TV and allow you to make calls from one TV to another or to a phone mobile or a PC.

“Why can’t [people] with laptops today enjoy video calls with loved ones who are currently familiar with TV sets?” Oladayo Olagunju, CEO of Nyoombl said during his presentation at the DEMO Spring conference Tuesday. “Teleconferencing really doesn’t have to require any corporate dedicated setup that has to cost thousands of dollars.”

The caller and receiver don’t have to always have the Nyoombl device, except in case of TV-to-TV teleconferencing, says the company. The only requirement is that one of the users have an account with an online e-mail service that also offers video chat such as Google Talk or Yahoo.

“We are working on open clients similar to Google Talk, and hope that the proprietary ones will open up to interoperability as we continue to engage them in talks,” says Nyoombl in its website.

Increasingly, TV makers are looking to add video conferencing as one of the applications built into TV sets. Samsung and LG, for instance, offer Skype on newer TVs. Skype on TVs will be similar in its interface to the application that PC users are familiar with, but it is not available on all TVs.

Nyoombl says its advantage is that it works with existing TV sets. The Nyoombl Greypfroot is a “palm-sized device” that sits on top of the TV screen. The device includes a webcam and comes with its basic conferencing own software that can send and receive calls from TVs. Nyoombl’s Greypfroot “connects via the TV’s coaxial connection and adds an interface to accept or reject incoming video chat requests,”  says CNET.

To initiate a call from a TV, you can use the TV’s remote, while the other person is on a laptop, say Google Talk. When the call’s connected, the TV screen is split into two halves, even as the show the TV is running continues in the background.

Nyoombl hasn’t disclosed pricing for the device yet but Olagunju says it will be more affordable than a “current smartphone on the market.”

Check out the video to see Nyoombl’s demo.


Samsung’s N150 netbook picks up some Corby branding, Starburst color

Spotted first crawling its way through the FCC, then on the floors of CES and most recently at WMC with some LTE inside we’re going to go ahead and say the Samsung N150 has earned its new stripes, err rainbow colors. Trying to add some brightness to its well stocked Pine Trail netbook line up, Sammy has gone and painted the $379 10.1-inch N150 in Flamingo Pink, Bermuda Blue and Caribbean Yellow, though kept its internal 1.6GHz Intel Atom N450 processor, 250GB hard drive and 1GB RAM unprimed. Interestingly, in some countries the netbook has acquired Samsung’s affordable mobile phone Corby brand, though here in the U.S. that doesn’t seem to be the case. We’d probably just stick with the black hue, but that doesn’t mean we couldn’t go for some sort of tropical-flavor candy right about now.

Samsung’s N150 netbook picks up some Corby branding, Starburst color originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Mar 2010 11:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSamsung, Notebook Italia  | Email this | Comments