Chrome OS Netbooks For Under $400, Says Google

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Netbooks that will run Google’s new Chromium operating system will be competitively priced in the range of $300-$400, says Google chief Eric Schmidt.

The Chrome OS netbooks are expected to hit retail shelves by the end of this year or early next year.

“Those prices are completely determined by the costs of the glass, the costs of the processor and things like that,” says Schmidt in this video dug up by Tech Radar, “but in our case Chrome OS and Android are free so there is no software tax associated with all of this.”

Google introduced Chrome OS two months ago as a lightweight, browser-based operating system that would boot up in seven seconds or less. Google hasn’t revealed who will be manufacturing the Chrome OS netbooks, but already Acer has said it expects to offer about a million of these devices this year.

Chrome OS netbooks could also be available on contract from phone service providers, says Schmidt.

But it’s not clear how well that strategy will work. Other netbook makers have already tried that in the U.S. with limited success. For instance, Nokia offers its Booklet 3G netbook for $300 with a two-year AT&T contract that requires a monthly data service fee. But the device is also available without the plan at Best Buy for $600.

The novelty factor of the Chrome OS operating system aside, the netbook market is extremely price sensitive. And if Google wants a share of that pie it will have to beat the price of the Windows-based devices.

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Photo: (BlubrNL/Flickr)


Apple Launching Tablet PC? We Think So!

This article was written on November 06, 2007 by CyberNet.

It seems as though there always has to be a rumor about Apple, doesn’t it? After a short breather period where there haven’t really been any rumors, the newest one emerges that Apple is planning on entering the tablet PC market. Some people are saying “finally” while others are saying “what’s the point?” Keep in mind that this is just a rumor, but what’s being said is that Asus is helping Apple build a tablet PC.

While the tablet PC market currently only makes up 2% of the portable PC market, there are some advantages like the fact that it’s a more natural form of input. It’s also great for note-taking, makes interacting at business meetings easier, and comes in handy for those in the digital art profession. The downsides include the input speed can be slower than typing, and tablet PCs are generally a little more expensive than regular notebook computers, although the price has gotten extremely competitive over the last several years.

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So what does Apple have to gain from this? At this point, I’m not sure it would be a whole lot.  As mentioned, the Tablet PC makes up 2% of the portable PC market.  If Apple were able to enter the market and match that 2%, given the amount of notebooks that they currently sell, they’d sell under 27,000 tablet PC’s per year.  At just 27,000 is it worth it for them? Their biggest advantage would be if they could get the artists to purchase one who want to draw and do artwork on it. 

On one hand it hardly seems worth it, but on the other hand, I could see it being a huge success. If there’s one company out there that could get consumers psyched up over a tablet PC, it would be Apple.  Some of the mock-ups look pretty slick, and Apple does have a good momentum going here with the launch of Leopard, the iPhone, and the new line-up of iPods. If they were able to price it competitively with some of their other notebooks, I’d say there’s a good chance that it would be a success and perhaps even amount to more than just 2% of Apple’s portable computer sales.

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At this point, everybody is saying it’s not a matter of “if” but “when” Apple will launch a tablet PC.  Given that Apple has the multi-touch feature mastered, I’d agree that it must be coming sooner rather than later.

Source: Gizmodo

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New MacBook Pro: 10-Hour Battery, Hi-Res Screen, i7 CPU

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Apple has, at last, updated its MacBook Pro Line with new CPUs and graphics. The 15-inch can now be had with Intel’s Core i5 and i7 chips and the 17-inch gets the i5 as standard and the i7 as an option. This speeds things up, although the clock speeds actually drop, maxing out now at 2.66 GHz instead of the previous 2.8 GHz Core 2 Duo (or 3.06 GHz special order). There is also a KITT-style “turbo boost” which will up the clock speeds of some chip cores when applications demand it.

The graphics chip has been bumped to NVIDIA GeForce GT 330M, with a choice of graphics memory options. This replaces the NVIDIA 9400M and 9600M GT cards of the previous generation. The biggest change here is that you can now switch between the low power and the high performance modes without rebooting or logging out: The MacBook switches for you.

The 15-inch MacBook also gains the option of a higher resolution screen: 1680 x 1050 pixels against the standard 1440 x 900. This combines with the new NVIDIA chips to give proper HD video.

The other big change is battery life. All models get a boost of a couple hours, pushing the 13-inch MacBook Pro up to 10 hours (although this is no iPad, so expect that to be lower in real life). The 15- and 17-inchers manage a respectable eight to nine hours.

Nothing much else has changed. The 13-inch gets a speed bump for the Core 2 Duo CPU and a new NVIDIA GeForce 320M graphics replaces the old GeForce 9400M. You can also spec a 512-GB solid state drive in any model (for an extra $1,300).

A pretty solid update with one surprise: The 13-inch MacBook Pro doesn’t look so pro anymore, which is a pain to those that need the power but don’t want the big screen. Who says that size doesn’t matter?

MacBook Pro [Apple]


Hands-On: Can Kin Phones Make Microsoft Cool Again?

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Microsoft’s new Kin phone sits between two worlds. It isn’t really a smartphone — there’s no access to apps, games, document editing or viewing — but it’s more than a feature phone. It integrates social networking updates, news feeds and contacts, in a way that aims to be hip and cool.

And Kin just about manages to pull it off, but only if you buy into the idea that there are hordes of consumers hungry to have every bit of Facebook or MySpace broadcast to (and from) their phones in near real-time.

The Kin phones — the squat, compact Kin One and the bigger Kin Two — will launch exclusively on Verizon Wireless next month in the United States and on Vodafone in Europe later this year. There’s no word on pricing yet for these phones.

I spent a few minutes with both models during Microsoft’s launch event today, and my first impression is that it’s well-aimed at its target market. Assuming you are one of those people who lives and breathes Facebook or MySpace, the Kin might not be a bad phone to have. Its industrial design is interesting (especially the smaller Kin One model), has respectable hardware under the cover and sports a pretty user interface.

Hardware for the masses

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Kin is the culmination of Microsoft’s two-year project codenamed “Pink.” The Kin phones have been manufactured by Sharp, which also produced the original set of Sidekick phones. That’s no coincidence, since the Sidekick was developed by Danger, a handset maker that Microsoft acquired in 2008.

The Sidekick, originally launched in 2002, became a popular hit among text-happy teenagers, although it was never taken seriously as a smartphone. A data-center glitch that wiped out many T-Mobile Sidekick users’ data in 2009 may have been the final nail in the Sidekick’s coffin. Now it looks like Microsoft wants to update the Sidekick’s M.O. for a new decade.

The smaller Kin One has a 2.6-inch display and a 5-megapixel camera, while Kin Two has a 3.6- inch screen and a 8-megapixel camera. Both phones have a slide-out QWERTY keyboard.

The Kin One is almost the size of a lady’s compact. It’s an interesting form factor that does get your attention and fits well in the hand. The Kin Two is a standard candy-bar shape. The devices are lightweight, but they have a cheap “plasticky” feel to them. Buttons on the QWERTY keyboard, though raised, are difficult to use. Overall, there’s no feeling of luxury here.

That said, the Kin is not entirely lacking in tech firepower. The phones run Nvidia’s Tegra processor and feel pretty zippy. The touchscreens are responsive and the displays are bright. The cameras are easy to use and the built-in flashes meant the photos shot in low light (at the bar where Microsoft launched the device) were just a tad better than what I could get with my iPhone 3G.

User interface built around social networking

The Kin phones have three home screens. The first screen offers access to e-mail, messages, phone, news feeds, photos, music and the browser.

Swipe to the left and the next screen throws up a stream of status messages updated from contacts and your news feeds. This screen, called the Loop, is the home screen for the device, says Microsoft. The Loop screen connects to four social networks: Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and Windows Live. And, you can go to your contacts list — which is drawn from all the social networking sites that you have added on the device — and mark some people as favorites. Their status updates will get prioritized on the Loop screen.

The Loop feels a lot like MotoBlur, Motorola’s custom skin for Android, or HTC’s Sense UI, but it is easier to navigate. That doesn’t mean it’s not a visual overload. Loud colors like lime green and bright pink make you feel like you have had a few magic mushrooms, while photos, status updates and news headlines all jostle for attention. You’ll feel like you need a can of Red Bull just to keep up.

The third screen shows the contacts you’ve marked as favorites. Instead of a stream of updates, it just shows the most recent status update from each one.

One well-designed feature is the sharing button on the phone. Called the Kin Spot, it lets you share almost anything — photos, texts, web pages — by just holding on it for a second or two and then dragging it to a small circle at the bottom of the display. When you’re ready to publish, you tap that circle icon to see all your shared items. From there you can sent them as e-mail, texts or picture messages.

Music, movies and extras

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Finally, the Kin phones integrate Zune, Microsoft’s elegant but struggling attempt to get into the digital-music service business. The music player on the Kin devices use the same impressive interface as the Zune HD. And those 5 percent of users who have a Zune pass can sync the music already on their Zune players with the Kin phones, either wirelessly or by hooking the phone up to a PC.

Microsoft is also counting on Kin Studio, a service that syncs the phone to a password-protected website where your photos, videos, messages and even call history get backed up.

It offers unlimited storage in the cloud for free. That means if you click more photos than what your phone can store on the device, it just gets moved to the cloud but not deleted. Deleting anything on the phone, though, means it will be gone from both the device and the online site.

Kin Studio includes a neat visual timeline feature, where you can use the slider to go back month by month and see what was on your phone at any given time.

The phone’s web browser doesn’t support Adobe Flash or Microsoft’s Silverlight.

Overall, the Kin phones aren’t particularly innovative or fresh, but they will help put Microsoft back in the mobile game. If Microsoft and Verizon can get the pricing right on these devices (under $100 with an attractively priced data plan) then they might just be able to sell a few million of these to teens and Facebook fiends.

Top two photos: Jim Merithew/Wired.com. Bottom photo: Microsoft


Patent Filing Shows MacBooks with Built-In Projectors

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We’re just as annoyed as you are when certain rumor sites claim that Apple is on the verge of selling a new gadget just because it has submitted a patent application. After all, a large company will patent every idea it has, just in case. It’s like that junk-drawer in the kitchen, full of things you may need one day.

This little filing, although far from being made (and surely far from being a patentable idea) is worth a look. It shows MacBooks with pico projectors, those tiny little projectors that sit inside cellphones, cameras and even matchbox-sized standalone packages.

The filing’s diagrams show the projectors in various places on the notebook’s body, although to us the most useful seems to be the one on the top of the lid, on the opposite side to the iSight webcam. This would allow you to beam an image of your boring business presentation whilst reading every word on the PowerPoint slide. It would also let you fold the lid almost shut and project the latest 30 Rock onto the ceiling as you lie in bed.

The filing adds some extras, such as sensors which would detect the position of the surfaces around the MacBook and process the image to fall square, even if coming from an angle. I’m all in on this one, although I doubt we’ll see it for some years, if ever. It’s not something you’d use every day, but if it is built-in, why not have it?

Apple Illustrates Pico Projector Coming to MacBooks [Patently Apple]

Portable Computing System With a Secondary Image Output [USPTO]


Concept NetBook with Full-Sized Fold-Out Keyboard

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Despite the weird name, we can’t help but like the ingenious iweb 2.0 notebook, designed by Yang Yongchang. The tiny package folds out to give a full-sized keyboard (and a still-tiny screen), a mouse-nubbin like you would find on a ThinkPad (the whole aesthetic is very ThinkPad-like, in fact), and an almost certainly useless “trackpad”, a long, thin strip which runs across the case just below the spacebar.

Does it look familiar? If you were thinking about old Palm keyboard docks or new iPad keyboard docks, you’d be thinking the same as me. This concept design even has a multi-touch screen. The iweb looks like a great portable writing machine, but there are some odd design decisions. That keyboard, for example. Squeezing in the number-pad forces the more important QWERTY section off-center, which no writer will be able to stand for. Also, two (2!) home keys and a bunch of other fluff sit between the letters and the caps-lock and shift keys on the left.

Still, this could all be fixed by flipping a few options in the CAD software used to make this. If I were in the market for a netbook, then I’d consider this. I’m not, though. There’s another product with a multi-touch screen and a full-sized (optional) keyboard coming soon. You may have heard of it?

Enchanting Folding-out Laptop With Utopian Specs [Yanko]


Alienware M11x Review: Gaming’s New Featherweight Division [Review]

Dell’s promise: that the Alienware M11x is the “most powerful 11-inch gaming laptop” around. And they’re right! It’s hard to imagine packing much more oomph into such a portable frame. Then again, there’s a reason Muggsey Bogues never won MVP. More »

Concept Notebook Has Handle and Stand

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Remember the old toilet-seat iBook from Apple? What’s that, you’d done your best to forget it? Yeah, us too. Sorry to dig up those bad old memories. The point, though, is that the candy-colored computer had a handle, and despite its aesthetic flaws, a notebook with a handle is, well, handy. Zhang Shouze’s Playing By Heart* concept adds a handle and manages to keep it looking good.

The fold-out handle has a cleverly angled cross-member that lets it lay flat on the lid when you don’t need it, but also sits flat on the desk should you decide to invoke its other personality, that of a bracket. In this mode, it’ll raise the screen from the desk and set the keyboard at an angle, all while letting the cooling breeze waft underneath – just like a bulky third-party notebooks stand, only built-in.

Thankfully there is a central plastic section to the aluminum strip so the angled handle won’t cut into your fingers as you carry it, and the top edge of the screen-bezel has a lip which droops over the base when closed and should help protect against bumps. For a concept design, this is surprisingly practical.

Laptop Morphs Into A Briefcase [Yanko]

*Nope. No idea either.


Intel Previews New ‘Gulftown’ Six-Core Processor

intel_core_i7_backIntel’s first 32-nanometer, six-core processor is ready for prime time. It’s clunky moniker aside, the chip called the Core i7-980X Extreme edition will offer some serious artillery for gamers and heavy multimedia users looking for a faster processor.

The chip is based on Intel’s platform codenamed “Gulftown” and will include features that improve on computing speed and power efficiency.

Intel launched the first of the Core i7 chips in November 2008. The family of Core i7 chips will be almost four to six times faster than the earlier platform, says Intel.

The first of the Core i7 chips were based on the 45-nm circuitry, a step ahead from the previous 65-nm generation. The latest chip takes it to the next level with a 32-nm process so Intel can pack in more computing power and manufacture the CPUs more cheaply.

The new Core i7 chips are based on a newly designed Intel microarchitecture called Nehalem, which includes major design changes in areas such as power management and integrated memory control.

The chips use “hyperthreading” technology, which gives the chips the ability to execute 12 threads simultaneously on six processing cores, greatly increasing their speed.

The Core i7-980X chip has 1.17 billion transistors with 12 megabytes of Level 3 cache. The processor uses the Intel X58 Express chipset and has a clock speed of 3.33 GHz, reports Extreme Tech, which offers some benchmarks. Intel is yet to announce the entire technical specifications of the chip.

The Core i7-980X chip will be available at the same price as the i7-975 chip released last year. The i7-975 chip can simultaneously process eight threads on four cores.Intel hasn’t said exactly when we will see the latest chips in high-end gaming desktops though it is expected to be in the next few weeks.

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Photo: Core i7 chip/Intel


MSI Wind Lasts 15-Hours On One Charge

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MSI’s new Wind netbook uses the low-power Intel Atom N450 “Pine Trail” CPU and manages to get an almost ridiculous 15-hours of battery life. Even if we viciously slash that time in half, to simulate real-life use, seven hours is impressive on a mere six-cell battery, and we’d expect something close to ten.

The specs are otherwise similar to all other netbooks: 10-inch display, 160GB hard drive, a gig of RAM and Windows 7. But the case itself features some rather neat additions. First, it comes in gold (or black), has a glowing MSI logo on the back, and the power button sits in the hinge – hardly useful, but certainly cool-looking. Best is the big trackpad, which has no edges and just disappears into the main body of the computer. The keyboard is more stylish, too, featuring MacBook-alike chiclets. MSI has even made the comma and period keys the right size instead of the tiny vestigial buttons on the original Wind.

The U160 is $430. That’s not bad, but we have a feeling that a certain $500 “tablet” computer might cause the netbook market to be even less attractive than it is already.

Wind U160 [MSI. Thanks, Mark!]