Showing posts with label keyboard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label keyboard. Show all posts

Meet the Genius LuxePad

9/2/11

If you’re getting weary of typing on your iPad’s touchscreen, then perhaps you need this.
Meet the Genius LuxePad, a physical keyboard that is the perfect accessory for your iPad. It is stylishly leather bound and communicates via Bluetooth, with an astounding range of 30 feet.
The keys itself are quiet and ergonomic, due to its ultra thin scissor key structure. It also showcases custom made function keys to access specific features on your iPad, has its own power switch and can be recharged via USB.
The LuxePad has a suggested retail price of only Php 2,995.

For Metro Manila residents interested in Genius’ new products, you may visit the Genius Concept Store located at SM Megamall’s Cyberzone (Building B, 4th Floor)
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Review: ASUS N53SV

9/1/11

Desktop replacements have always been my laptop of choice. You can have all the skinny ultraportables and all the netbooks you want, I’m sticking with the notebook heavy-hitters. Sure, they’re significantly heavier than your typical notebook and you’re probably be working more muscle groups when you start lugging them around, but their higher number-crunching abilities and graphic processing prowess more than make up for their weight. The Asus N53SV is such a notebook.
The N53V is an example of Asus’ typical approach to making notebooks. The overall color scheme is a tasteful dark grey, with a bit of surface gradations that look similar to brushed aluminum across the lid. Unfortunately, the lid isn’t made of metal, but it’s a nice effect nonetheless.
There’s a large speaker grille near the top of the keyboard where the hinge is. Right below the speaker grille are shortcut buttons for a number of different things, including the power management key (which is also boots the Express Gate Cloud OS) and volume controls.
The keyboard is nice and big, and comes with a keypad on the right. The keys have enough travel and are extremely easy to use. The wrist rest has this nice, faux wood grain effect going on. The touchpad is the right size, though the mouse buttons use the single bar config without separators, which annoyed me to no end.
The left side of the notebook housed the HDMI and Ethernet port, along with 2 USB ports and an SD card slot.
The right side housed the optical drive, headphone and mic jacks and 2 more USB ports.
Hardware-wise, the N53SV is powered by an Intel Core i7-2630QM running at 2GHz, 4GB worth of DDR3 memory and the most important bit – an NVIDIA GeForce GT 540M graphics card. The N53SV is also armed with a built-in GPU courtesy of the Intel HD 3000 graphics that the machine switches to when you’re in power saver.
With such massive hardware, it wasn’t a big surprise that the N53SV managed to run my games without any problems, specifically my newest MMOG addiction World of Tanks. The combination of the Core i7 processor with the burly GT 540M GPU meant that the notebook is able to handle most mainstream and a few hardcore games at decent resolutions.
Another feature that Asus is touting with the N53SV is the Bang and Olufsen audio that’s integrated into the device, and with good reason – as the sound was definitely better than some of the other notebooks I’ve heard, and the N53SV is pretty damn loud, if anything.
Of course all that processing power comes at a price, namely decreased battery life. It’s pretty much the same for the N53SV, with the notebook on high performance the battery only lasted for about an hour and a half off the plug. It was only slightly better with powersaving on, at about 2 ½ hours.
But mobility isn’t the point of the N53SV. Processing power is, and that’s where the notebook excels. The Asus N53SV is a great buy for anyone looking for a notebook with a little bit of extra oomph in it. Unfortunately, the N53SV won’t be officially carried by Asus locally, so finding it is going to be a bit of a challenge. Thankfully there’s an alternative – a more compact and affordable version, the N43SL that will retail for 39,995.
What’s Hot:
Excellent audio
Powerful processor
Can handle mainstream and a bit of hardcore games

What’s Not:
Battery life is woefully low

Bottomline:
The N53SV is a great buy for people looking for a powerful notebook, that is if you can find it.
Buy meter: 8.5
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Asus Eee Pad Slider pics, set to launch “soon”

8/30/11

With the bevy of announcements from Asus in their pre-COMPUTEX presscon, like the 3D tablet and the PadFone, you could forgive us of we didn’t get around to our hands on of the Eee Pad Slider sooner. Nevertheless, its here now and we liked what we saw: 10.1-inch LED IPS screen, retractable keyboard (unlike the detachable design in the Transformer) and Android 3.0 on board.
Asus has teased that the tablet is coming soon from its own Facebook account, though a firm date was never mentioned. There’s also a bit of debate of whether the Transformer would use NVIDIA’s Tegra 2 processor or Intel’s Atom Z670 as reported by Engadget.
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Meet Luce, the first solar powered laptop


Meet Luce, the double solar panel powered PC, a concept laptop designed by Andrea Ponti. It’s rumored to be able to power continuously under the sun by utilizing two solar panels located on the back of the display and beneath the touch keyboard.
It’s still unconfirmed whether this model has actually been tested, but Ponti’s concept was shortlisted in Fujitsu’s design competition earlier this year. Whether or not the company will push thru with manufacturing this solar powered laptop is still in the wind.
As for now, we can only imagine what it would be like to actually own the first fully functional solar powered laptop, which could hopefully lead us to greener pastures in the wasteland of technology. In Ponti’s words,
Luce is a concept designed to turn maker’s attention to real sustainable production. Wireless devices, powered by nature, completely free of cables, represent the future for a sustainable development focused on user’s real needs.

Source: TheTechJournal
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Review: Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101


Try as others might, there really hasn’t been a true Android tablet that could go toe to toe with Apple’s iPad. Sure, there’s the Motorola Xoom, but the Xoom was a horrible release – bugs heaped upon bugs, plus an $800 price tag that didn’t even come close to being as competitive as the iPad’s $499 sticker price. Android tablets that run version 2.3 or earlier doesn’t count either, because those devices don’t even bring a fraction of the user experience that’s needed to compete realistically with the iPad.
That’s until the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 came along.
The Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 is the first Android tablet in the market that can realistically go up against Apple’s entrenched iPad. It has the right price, the right amount of features, is easy to use and has enough innovative features of its own to entice customers away from the clutches of the fruity one.
Let’s get all the technical data out of the way first. The Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 is a 10.1-inch Android Honeycomb tablet that’s powered by NVIDIA’s dual-core Tegra 2 processor.
Like the Motorola Xoom, the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 has few hardware buttons, and aside from the power/lock button and the volume rocker, the sides of the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 are devoid of buttons.
The right side houses the HDMI port, headphone jack and microSD card slot, while the bottom holds the power/data port.
The Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 is powered by Google’s Honeycomb tablet OS, which is definitely different than Android on your smartphones. The screen to screen transition is smooth and you get that nice border-line effect when you swipe from one screen to the next. Navigation is done via the back, home and multi-task buttons on the lower right side, while battery status, time, wireless connectivity and other information (such as mail notification) are located on the lower right.
You can access the main screen via the grid icon on the upper right marked apps, and you can quickly customize the number of apps on your different home screens (you get five) by pressing the plus button on the side of the app button.
Another nice feature of Honeycomb is its ability to multitask like crazy. You can press the multitask button and you can easily go to the previous programs you had open before.
The Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101’s large screen size make it a natural choice for reading books and comics, and its overall weight doesn’t make it hard for you to lift it up to your face while laying down. The on-screen keyboard is easy to use and worked well enough in practice.
Unlike most tablets, the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 can take a keyboard accessory which also pulls dual duty as an additional battery, extending the quoted 9.5 hour battery life to 16 hours.
With the keyboard attached, the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 resembles a netbook – complete with a touchpad for navigation. The dock also has an SD card reader and a USB port. The keyboard dock allowed me type long articles fairly easily as the keys have enough travel and the keyboard in general is extremely comfortable to use.
There were a couple of games installed on the device I reviewed which really showed off the power of the Tegra processor. Samurai Vengeance was a fairly demanding game graphics-wise, but the device handled it with ease, and I never really felt it was struggling with the graphics even with multiple enemies on the screen. Additionally, with the Honeycomb 3.1 update in the winds (I’m in Taiwan as I write this and I’ve received the update already) it’s now possible to connect a USB game controller to the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 and use that to play games.
Probably the only complaint I have with the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 is the scarcity of apps on the Android Market. Sure, there are apps in there that were ported from the Android marketplace, but I would have preferred a bit more apps created solely for Tablets. While there was a dedicated ereader for the device, there wasn’t a native comic book app – an odd complaint, but I know more than a few people who bought their iPads with the sole purpose of using them as comic book readers. There’s also no orientation lock, or none that I could see right away, and the constant auto-rotation of the device while lying down when I was browsing the internet got a bit annoying, to say the least.
Those are really small complaints, and in the end the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 is a solid tablet and the first real contender to Apple’s iPad. Its ability to take a keyboard and act more or less like a traditional netbook puts it in a class of its own when it comes to versatility. The Eee Pad Transformer will be available this month, and will retail for 22,995 (32GB) (16GB) for the keyboard-less version, and 29,995 (32GB) (16GB) with the keyboard.

What’s Hot:
Has a proper tablet OS
Has an option to take a keyboard that acts as a secondary battery
Powerful Tegra 2 processor allows graphically demanding games to be played

What’s Not:
Needs more apps developed specifically for tablets
Needs a native comic book reader
No obvious orientation lock

Bottomline:
There are not enough superlatives in the world to express my feelings with the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101. It’s the first, real contender to the iPad and it’s probably the Android tablet you’ve been waiting for.
Buymeter: 9
Edit: Apparently the prices and specs we were initially given were incorrect, the review has been updated to reflect this.
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