Lenovo Debuts Low-Cost Tablet and Skinny Laptops

The 7-inch A1 tablet will run Android 2.3 and sell for $199. Photo courtesy of Lenovo.

Lenovo announced their newest tablet, the IdeaPad A1, which will undercut the competition with a starting price of $200.

The A1 tablet will run Android version 2.3 (Gingerbread), feature both front and back-facing cameras, Wi-Fi connectivity and all of the typical tablet accoutrements. Unique to Lenovo, the tablet will feature offline GPS, which connects directly to a satellite feed rather than through the wireless network. Like Lenovo’s other tablets, the A1 supports apps from both the Lenovo app market, and the Android store.

The A1 follows alongside three other tablets just released by Lenovo, which we reviewed last month.

For those who miss the comfort of a keyboard and a Microsoft OS, Lenovo is also releasing its U Series of laptops, including the U300s which comes in an ultra-slim, MacBook Air-like profile. The IdeaPad  U300s has a solid-state hard drive, and weighs in at .01 kg. less than the 13″ Air. A keyboard-centered fan ensures cooling despite the frame’s vent-less base.

Of course, if you favor computing brawn over slimness and portability, Lenovo’s U300 and 400 models are also available.


Toshiba Reveals Svelte Notebook, Skinny Tablet

Toshiba’s AT200 tablet is only 7.7 mm thick. Image: Toshiba

Today Toshiba revealed two new products that verge on the anorexic: A superskinny Android Honeycomb tablet, and a svelte notebook companion.

In case you don’t believe me, Toshiba’s tablet, the AT200, measures in at only 7.7 mm thick. For comparison, the iPad 2 is 8.8 mm thick. The AT200 features a 10.1-inch display with 1280 x 800 resolution. Inside, it’s got a dual-core TI OMAP 4430 processor that clocks in at 1.2 GHz, with 1 GB of RAM.

Over a dozen new tablets have been unveiled so far this year, from the Motorola Xoom to the funky Fusion Garage Grid 10. Many have taken Apple’s lead by slimming down their mobile products. Toshiba unveiled its 10-inch Thrive tablet earlier this summer, but some devices experienced some bugs after the initial release.

The brushed aluminum AT200 tablet will be available in 16-, 32- and 64-GB models, and will also includes a 5-megapixel rear-facing camera with an LED flash. It’s got mini-HDMI out, a micro USB port, and a micro SD card slot. It’s supposed to get 8 to 10 hours of battery life.

Toshiba’s Portege Z830 notebook takes aim at the MacBook Air market. At its thickest point, the Z830 is 0.63 inches, and it weighs only 2.45 pounds. It’s encased in a magnesium and aluminum alloy shell, and is just big enough to house all of the ports you need: two USB 2.0, one USB 3.0, VGA out, SD card reader, ethernet, and HDMI.

Toshiba’s Portege Z830 isn’t as powerful as other comparable notebooks on the market, as it features a somewhat less-powerful Core i3 processor. But what it lacks in power, it makes up in battery life and price; the juice is supposed to last for eight hours, and the entry-level Z830 costs under a grand. Higher-end configurations can include a Core i5 or i7 processor.

The Portege Z830 will be available in the U.S. in November, but no date has been pegged for the AT200’s release.

The Toshiba Portege Z830 has a super slim silhouette. Image: Toshiba


HTC Reveals New AT&T-Exclusive Tablet

The HTC Jetstream will cost $699, plus a contract data plan through AT&T. Image courtesy of AT&T.

HTC debuted its new tablet product on Wednesday, the Jetstream 4G. It will be available September 4 for $700, exclusive to AT&T’s wireless network. The rest will have to pony up $850 for the device, sans contract.

The Jetstream will run Android 3.1 Honeycomb through the HTC Sense interface. The screen is a 10.1″ WXGA HD display with a 1.3 MP front-facing camera. The tablet comes with 32 GB of storange, and  is expandable to 64 GB through MicroSD. For a limited time offer, customers who sign up now will recieve an HTC Scribe digital pen for free.

The unit weighs in at 1.56 pounds and measures just over a half-inch thick, making the iPad 2 look svelte by comparison.

For customers who forego AT&T contract ($35 per month for 3 GB of data), there are two options: $14.99 for 250 MB, or $25 for 2 GB.


Hands-On With Sony’s New Wedge-Shaped Tablet S

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Still got tablet fever? Somebody must, because they just keep coming.

Sony unveiled the final versions of its two new Android tablets Wednesday. These are the same two devices we saw last month — the curvy, wedge-shaped full-sized tablet is now called the Sony Tablet S, and the dual-screen tablet that folds up into a pocket-sized burrito is now called the Sony Tablet P.

The Tablet S will land in stores this September, priced at $500 for a 16GB version and $600 for the 32GB version. The Tablet P will arrive closer to the end of the year, and pricing on that one is still up in the air. The full-sized Tablet S is Wi-Fi only, but the Tablet P will be outfitted with AT&T wireless connectivity options.

From the front, the S looks like every other tablet: boring, shiny and flat. But from the side or the back, you can see it resembles a magazine with the front cover and the first dozen pages folded around back.

The hardware was officially announced at the IFA trade show in Berlin. However, we were given a demo version of the Tablet S to play around with over the weekend. The software (it comes with Android Honeycomb) isn’t fully baked just yet, so we’ll hold off going deep on that until we get a final version. Look for a full review later in September in the Product Reviews section of Wired.

From the front, the S looks like every other tablet: boring, shiny and flat. But from the side or the back, you can see it resembles a magazine with the front cover and the first dozen pages folded around back. The black plastic shell wraps around the fat “spine” and continues across the back of the tablet, tapering off and ending before it goes all the way to the other end — just like a folded magazine cover doesn’t wrap all the way around, leaving an inch or two of the back cover’s outer edge exposed.

This goes against the unspoken Code of Tablet Design, which mandates thinness above all else, and from which we’ve seen very little deviation. But while Sony’s S is bulky (at least along the “spine” edge) you don’t notice it.

It’s supremely comfortable to hold with one hand — more comfortable than the thinner and lighter tablets, even though it weighs about 1.3 pounds, the same as an iPad 2. The whole shell is crafted from smooth plastic, but the fat spine is subtly textured with raised bumps to it give some grip. The bumps continue around the back so your fingertips don’t have to dig in as hard.

The screen is lovely. It’s bright with excellent color depth, and black tones are represented especially well. I’d expect a good display from Sony, and this one excels. Of course, the 9.4-inch screen rotates to accommodate both left-handed and right-handed users.

There’s another advantage of the wedge shape, which is that when you set it down to type on the screen in landscape mode, the top of the tablet is propped up towards you a little. It’s not ideal — I found myself wanting to slide something under the spine to angle the screen toward me more — but it’s better than typing on a touchscreen that’s laying totally flat.

Holding the tablet by the spine (in portrait mode), the top and bottom edges of the tablet are like little teardrop-shaped valleys. This is where Sony has stashed all the ports and physical buttons. If you’re right-handed, it’s most comfortable to hold the tablet in your left hand so you can touch the screen with your right. This puts the power button and volume rocker on the top. Next to those is a tiny, recessed Reset button. The ports — USB and an full-sized SD card slot — are on the bottom of the device, behind a little removable door. Also on the bottom is the headphone jack. There are two cameras — front-facing and rear-facing — built into the middle of the spine.

Two unfortunate things to note. First, as is often the case with Sony, the charging cable is proprietary, so you have to carry a power supply instead of just using a standard USB charger. Also, the speakers are weak. They are on the back of the device, so they face away from you whenever you’re looking at the screen — a common annoyance in tabletville. It ships with earbuds. Crappy ones, but earbuds nonetheless.

As I mentioned, the software on our tablet was not finalized, but I can tell you that it already appears as snappy, responsive and powerful as you’d expect on a top-tier tablet. The S has a dual-core 1GHz Tegra 2 processor and 1GB of RAM, so no worries there.

We did see some demos of the apps that will be shipping with the Tablet S. There’s a universal touchscreen remote that’s quite handy — you can control almost any home A/V component (Sony or otherwise) through the tablet’s IR eye. You can load PlayStation games onto it through an emulator — this is a “PlayStation-Certified” device, and it will come pre-loaded with Crash Bandicoot. Finally, the tablet is a DLNA-compliant device, so you can throw videos, photos and music to any DLNA component on your network.

Minus the universal remote, these features are all on the Sony Tablet P as well. The P is a dual-screen clamshell, so it folds up into a flattened cylinder that you can slip into a jacket pocket or a purse (or a man-purse). The dual-screen configuration makes it especially nice for playing those PlayStation games, with the top screen showing the action and the bottom screen reserved for the touch controls. Also, held with the spine vertical, you have a pleasantly book-like form factor for reading e-books. Both tablets come loaded with e-book software that lets you browse and buy from Sony’s store.

The P has a few more kinks to work out — not surprising, given the unconventional tooling — so we didn’t get as much hands-on time. But we’ll hopefully see more of it before the holidays.

As an Android experience, Sony’s Tablet S is fully capable and largely unexciting — aside from the universal remote and the PlayStation emulation software, it performs very much like every other Android tablet in its class. But the hardware design is the real winning element here. Sony has taken a chance by eschewing the simple slate and going with a more humanizing shape. It’s new and unusual, but yet familiar to anyone who’s read a magazine at the beach. An admirable choice.

Photos by Jon Snyder/Wired


Ultimate SleeveCase Fits Any Tablet, Even Ones You Haven’t Heard Of

This is the rare, little-seen Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet next to a case that fits it perfectly. Photo SF Bags

As a Gadget Lab reader, its likely that you are a nerd. In which case, you may be one of the three or four people who bought a Motorola Xoom, BlackBerry Playbook, or a Galaxy Tab. Or perhaps you are unlucky enough to have ask your significant other to buy you an iPad as a gift, only to receive a fire-sale HP TouchPad instead (hint: divorce the cheapskate right now).

If so, then this post is for you. Waterfield Designs will sell you the Ultimate SleeveCase, a padded envelope-style case available in myriad sizes to fit pretty much any tablet or “slate.”

The case is made from ballistic nylon (the tough one that goes fluffy if you rub it a lot, not the thin one that tears) and has a soft, screen-cleaning Ultrasuede lining. A flap shuts the tablet in, and a stiffened insert protects the screen.

You can also opt for leather trim, or a strap, or just eyelets for a strap.

But more interesting is the range of tablets that are listed on the sizing chart, some of which you may never have heard of. Fujitsu Q550? Check. Acer Iconia Tab A500? It’s there. Samsung Sliding PC 7? What?

The bags run from $52 to $57, depending on size, plus $5 for leather trim and from $5 to $22 for strap options. If you have the TouchPad, that might just come out at more than you paid for the tablet.

Tablet Ultimate SleeveCase [SF Bags. Thanks, Heidi!]

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HP Resurrects TouchPad Tablet to Pacify Rabid Customers

And on the 61st day, the TouchPad rose again.

HP has plans to produce another round of its TouchPad tablets before the year is out, despite its earlier decision to discontinue its mobile hardware products.

“Despite announcing an end to manufacturing webOS hardware, we have decided to produce one last run of TouchPads to meet unfulfilled demand,” HP spokesman Mark Budgell wrote in a company blog post. “As we know more about how, when and where TouchPads will be available, we will communicate that here and through e-mail to those who requested notification.”

Budgell says it will be a few weeks before devices from the additional run will be available for purchase.

The blog post signals further confusion from a company in upheaval. Two weeks ago, HP announced suddenly it would end production on all of its mobile hardware, including the soon-to-be-released Pre 3 and Veer smartphones. The decision also included the company’s iPad competitor, the TouchPad, killed off a mere 49 days after its debut in July. Circulating rumors suggested third-party retailers were sitting on hundreds of thousands of unsold units.

HP followed its announcement by slashing prices on remaining TouchPad inventory, reducing the price of the 16-gigabyte TouchPad to $100, and the 32-gig version to $150.

Since the blowout sale prices, however, the company hasn’t been able to keep any TouchPads in stock. Retailers have been bombarded by customer requests for the cheapened devices, and dozens of retailers have reported completely selling out.

Which is most likely the reason behind HP’s decision to once again beef up its inventory for a last TouchPad blast.

“Tablet computing is a segment of the market that’s relevant, absolutely,” HP personal systems group exec Todd Bradley told Reuters in an interview. The company continues to explore licensing options for, webOS — its proprietary operating system — according to Bradley.

There’s no guarantee, however, that HP will continue to sell the last round of tablets at a $100 rate. Hardware teardown website iSupply speculates that, in terms of components alone, a 16-GB TouchPad costs HP approximately $300 to build. That’s a $200 bath HP is taking on each individual unit sold, not including the cost of labor, shipping and associated expenses.

HP did not immediately respond to a phone request for comment.

While the resurgence in TouchPad interest may be a promising sign for HP, the company’s flip-flopping decision process isn’t serving its public image.

“The only thing I know for sure that’s going on at HP is that they have completely lost control of their message,” Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps said by e-mail to Wired.com. Epps continued, saying HP was “sabotaging their brand with the mixed messages.”

As of today, the TouchPad is now the No. 2 best-selling tablet after the iPad, according to FastCompany. Ironically, that’s the exact position HP was vying for.

Unfortunately for the company, it took bargain-bin pricing and the threat of extinction to get there.


UK Supermarket Sainsbury’s Offers iPad-Ready Shopping Carts

A shopping cart suffers its inevitable fate. Photo Joeri-C on Flicker

UK supermarket chain Sainsbury’s is trialling a new shopping cart with a built-in iPad dock and speakers. I’ll let you consider that for a moment. Imagine hordes of marauding shoppers barging through the aisles, staring at their tablets’ screens and pumping out a mixed cacophony of tinny tunes. If you are imagining hell right now, only with a frozen food section, you’re probably pretty close.

The trolleys are a promo scheme to pimp Sky TV’s Sky Go service, an app which lets you watch sports and news on your iPad. The iCarts have an adjustable dock, a pair of speaker and even a battery which is juiced by solar panels so you can charge the iPad as you shop. For complete proof that this is a gimmick, there’s also a sensor up front that will sound an alarm if you get too close to anyone else whilst staring at your screen.

The trial, taking place in the posh London neighborhood of Kensington, may yet be rolled out to other stores.

Is this the worst idea ever? I can see the appeal of having my shopping list (using the excellent Listary, pixel-doubled) in front of me at all times, but are speakers really necessary? And you can wave goodbye to leaving your cart at the end of a crowded aisle and just nipping in on foot to grab a packet of whatever — your iPad would surely be stolen.

I predict that these carts, like all carts before them, will be stolen by students too lazy to carry home their groceries. The only difference is that instead of ditching them in the canal afterwards, they’ll keep them and enjoy the world’s biggest iPad dock at home.

iPad shopping trolley launches [Telegraph. Thanks David!]

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Seniors, Women Embracing Tablets, E-Readers

Mobile devices aren’t just catering to the under-35 set now. Image: Nielsen

If you thought tablets were being used only by Angry Birds-flinging youngsters or guys between 25 and 34, think again. Turns out tablets are all the rage with women and seniors.

There hasn’t been much change in who’s using smartphones — they’re still most popular among the 20- and 30-something set — tablet and ereader ownership shows tablet ownership among those older than 55 climbed from 10 to 19 percent between last fall and this summer. As for e-readers, the number of women buying them climbed from 47 percent to 61 in the second quarter of this year.

“Early adopters tend to be younger and male. As consumer technology products gain wider acceptance, more women and more older consumers join the mix,” says Don Kellogg, director of telecom research & insights at Nielsen.

Although e-readers have been around for a while, tablets are a relatively new phenomenon marked by the arrival of the Apple iPad in 2010.

The tablet has followed a similar trajectory as the microwave oven, creating a new niche in the market based on its convenient, portable form factor — despite the fact it has less computing power than its PC counterparts. Depending upon which study you’re looking at, some reports show tablet ownership is eating into the e-reader market, while others disagree. Regardless, both devices appear to be permeating all age groups.

So what’s making tablets and e-readers so successful with the older crowd?

“Tablets and e-readers are relatively easy to use. Couple that with light weight and the ability to increase the text size (not to be underestimated with older owners), and you have a very appealing product for older demographics,” Kellogg said.

Not to mention, Apple products, like the iPad, are beginning to permeate the enterprise business environment, so many users who may not have seen value in the tablet before can use it for meetings and presentations.

As you might expect, e-readers continue to be popular with those who read a lot. Although tablet apps like Kindle and Instapaper make tablet reading easy as pie, e-readers’ black and white E-Ink or electronic paper displays make the activity easier on the eyes. And when you’re traveling, bringing a 1 to 2-pound e-reader is a whole lot easier than lugging around a couple of novels.

Nielsen is still studying if these trends apply outside the United States, and how mobile device usage differs among the different age groups they surveyed.

Have your parents or grandparents adopted mobile devices? Did they do it willingly, or was it originally a gift that you lovingly thrust upon them? Share your experiences in the comments.


Modders Slap Popular Android Hack on HP’s TouchPad

It was only a matter of time before the hacks for HP’s now defunct tablet started to roll in.

Android-modding group CyanogenMod released a video of its popular aftermarket software running on HP’s TouchPad tablet, a product which normally runs webOS — not Android — as its primary operating system.

“Our ultimate vision is to create a multiboot solution where the end user will be able to boot into WebOS, Cyanogenmod, and/or other OSes,” the CyanogenMod team said in a statement to Android-enthusiast blog RootzWiki. Essentially, the team wants the TouchPad to be a blank slate, so to speak, able to run multiple operating systems indiscriminately.

Since HTC first released its flagship Android phone, the Dream, the CyanogenMod team has been hard at work trying to get its software onto every Android device on the market. The software isn’t a radical departure from the Android operating system: It’s basically a mod that allows a user more control over his or her phone. From overclocking your processor to customizing your wallpaper, the mod enables subtle tweaks popular with the geeky, detail-oriented crowd.

While getting the Android software to run on the TouchPad has taken relatively little time (the device was released two months ago today), the team says its progress has been slowed due to a lack of development devices. At $100 a pop, TouchPads have been flying off the shelves since HP announced recently it would be discontinuing its mobile hardware and slashing prices on remaining inventory.

“We have talented and experienced developers who cannot contribute effectively due to a lack of hardware,” the team wrote in its statement, asking for spare TouchPad contributions from the community to help spur development.

As the group has gained in popularity, updates on the official CyanogenMod software have slowed. Original founder Steve Kondik was recruited to work for Samsung earlier this month, and team member Chris Soyars recently left for music-appmaker GrooveShark.

But a recent bounty on getting the TouchPad to run Android may have incited CyanogenMod team members to code faster (though the group denies it in its statement). Hardware-modification web site Hacknmod.com offered as much as $2,000 to those who first slapped a copy of Android onto HP’s tablet.

The version of CyanogenMod on the TouchPad (video below) is a highly unstable alpha, but the team says more features and better stability are on the way.


Leaked Sony E-Reader Sports Touchscreen, Stylus

The leaked Sony PRS-T1, now with added stylus

In the market for a €165 ($240) e-reader that isn’t a Kindle? Of course not. But if you were, you would soon be able to spend that money on the just-leaked Sony PRS-T1.

Gone is the sleek aluminum body of its predecessor, replaced by black, white or burgundy-red plastic. New is multitouch, with the Kobo-like touchscreen navigation joined by pinch-to-zoom (presumably for changing font sizes). Also new is a stylus, ready to be lost within minutes, as well as another Kobo-inspired feature: the T1 will display the current book’s cover on the sleep screen.

The rest of the features are just what you’d expect: Wi-Fi, 2-GB memory, augmentable by a microSD card, a six-inch e-ink screen, a one-month battery life and a featherlike weight of 168 grams (six ounces).

You can see the details at Dutch Web site BOL. Or rather, you can see the cache of the now taken-down page. Expect the reader to cost less than this when it launches in the U.S.

Touch Sony Reader PRS-T1 [Google Cache of BOL via The Digital Reader and Mike Cane and ]

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