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Monday, 19 December 2011

Samsung Chromebook Series 5 Titan Silver 3G Model

Posted on 10:50 by Unknown
Nothing but the Web Chromebooks are built and optimized for the web, where you already spend most of your computing time. So you get a faster, simpler and more secure experience without all the headaches of ordinary computers.

Thin & Light design - just 3.3 lbs. 
Weighing in at 3.3 lbs and just .8 inches thick, the ultra compact design provides maximum portability without compromising on functionality and optimal performance.

Instant Web 
Chromebooks boot in less than 10 seconds and resume instantly. Your favorite websites load quickly and run smoothly, with full support for the latest web standards and Adobe Flash. In fact, Chromebooks are designed to get faster over time as updates are released.

SuperBright 12.1” LED display
The anti-reflective 12.1" LED display has a mirror effect and produces the sharpest images with 300nlt brightness, which is up to 40% brighter than normal laptops. Get outstanding picture quality and text readability, even when you’re outdoors. Enjoy the web longer without straining your eyes.

Easy to use full-size keyboard 
Make the most of the web by using a keyboard that’s designed for it. Your Chromebook comes equipped with a dedicated search key, a new row of web-enabled keys, and a comfortable, full-size layout that doesn’t cramp your fingers so you can get more done and make fewer errors.
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Saturday, 17 December 2011

Apple MacBook Air - Core i5 1.7 GHz - 4 GB Ram

Posted on 10:20 by Unknown
July 2011 - Apple - Notebook - 4 GB RAM - MacOS - Intel CPU - 256 GB disk - 1.7 GHz CPU - Without Optical Drive - Intel GPU - Solid State Drive - 1440 x 900 - Touchpad - Widescreen - With Built-in Camera - 3 pound - 7 hour battery.

The MacBook Air is proof. It's designed around all-flash storage for better responsiveness and reliability. It features a trackpad with full multi-touch support. And though it's incredibly thin and light, its large battery gives you portable power. Chief among it was the precision unibody enclosure. That same engineering process comes to the MacBook Air display. Just like the main enclosure, the display housing is crafted from a single piece of aluminum, with all the structural elements machined directly into it. Total unibody construction means a less complex design with fewer parts. That makes MacBook Air exceptionally thin and light, yet still durable enough to handle the rigors of everyday use.




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Thursday, 15 December 2011

HP 3115m Notebook PC

Posted on 06:14 by Unknown
HP 3115m: Stylish and Compact. With up to 11.5 hours of battery life and flexible wireless capabilities, professionals can take this HP notebook beyond the office without worrying about plugging in. Features such as an 11.6-inch diagonal LED-backlit HD display, Beats Audio and an HD Webcam offer an enriched multi-media experience to encourage collaboration with peers. The new AMD Dual-Core E-450 APU with AMD Radeon HD 6320M discrete-class graphics provides greater performance than a netbook without weighing professionals down.

Long Battery Life
Work all day, whether you’re in the office or on a customer visit. With up to 11.5 hours of battery life, professionals don’t always need to be near a power outlet.

Ultra-portable, Intelligent Design
Starting at just 3.52 lb, the HP 3115m is easier to carry than standard notebooks and provides greater performance than typical netbooks. This HP notebook boasts an ultrathin profile, measuring less than 1-inch thin in front.
The 97% full-size island-style keyboard offers full-sized notebook familiarity in contrast to smaller keyboards of competing netbooks.

Tools that Won’t Slow You Down
Surf the web and view multimedia files with amazing speed, thanks to the AMD Dual-Core E-450 APU with AMD Radeon HD 6320M discrete-class graphics.
For those that need even faster performance, Solid State Drives (SSD) are also available on the HP 3115m. SSDs offer faster data access (including boot up time), longer battery run time, quieter and cooler operation and more durability.

Hear Amazing Sound Right from Your Laptop
Unlock all the sounds that musicians and producers have perfected in the studio. Hear the highs, lows and subtle in-betweens like never before with Beats Audio.

Collaborate with Peers using the HD Webcam
The HD Webcam is ideal for web conferencing, web casting, video-enhanced instant messaging and VoIP with no additional hardware to buy or carry.
 

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Thursday, 20 October 2011

Toshiba Satellite M645: The Steady March of Progress

Posted on 23:36 by Unknown
Oftentimes they can feel stylistically behind the curve, but every so often they produce a big winner as they did with their Portege R700 series.
Now, a trickle-down of style couples with modern hardware in a respectable new entrant in their venerable Satellite line: the M645. Our review unit features a shiny new Sandy Bridge mobile dual-core processor along with a healthy amount of memory, an Optimus-enabled NVIDIA GeForce 500M series GPU, and a Blu-ray combo drive, all in a reasonable 14-inch chassis. But it threatens to set you back a grand: is it worth it?
Introducing the Toshiba Satellite M645
Toshiba has spent the last half a decade carving out an interesting niche as a notebook manufacturer, with many consumer-grade notebooks that are ostensibly budget offerings but often feature a markedly different look and feel from the kinds of laptops vendors like Dell, HP, and Acer produce to serve this market segment. Oftentimes they can feel stylistically behind the curve, but every so often they produce a big winner as they did with their Portege R700 series.Now, a trickle-down of style couples with modern hardware in a respectable new entrant in their venerable Satellite line: the M645. Our review unit features a shiny new Sandy Bridge mobile dual-core processor along with a healthy amount of memory, an Optimus-enabled NVIDIA GeForce 500M series GPU, and a Blu-ray combo drive, all in a reasonable 14-inch chassis. But it threatens to set you back a grand: is it worth it?The elegantly titled M645-S4118X we have on hand for review is the most expensive unit in Toshiba's M640 line, and as you'll see from the specifications, it largely earns that. This is as decked out as Toshiba's 14-inch consumer notebooks get, featuring a lot of power and flexibility. Here's what you get: 

Toshiba M645-S4118X Specifications
Processor Intel Core i5-2410M
(2x2.3GHz + HTT, 2.9GHz Turbo, 32nm, 3MB L3, 35W)
Chipset Intel HM65
Memory 4GB DDR3-1333 and 2GB DDR3-1333 (6GB Total, Max 2x4GB)
Graphics NVIDIA GeForce GT 525M 1GB DDR3 (Optimus)
(96 CUDA cores, 475MHz/950MHz/1.8GHz core/shaders/memory)
Intel HD 3000 (12 EUs, 650-1200MHz core)
Display 14-inch LED Glossy 16:9 1366x768
(Chi Mei N140B6-L02 Panel)
Hard Drive(s) Toshiba 640GB 5400RPM SATA 3Gbps Hard Disk
Optical Drive BD-ROM/DVD+-RW Combo Drive w/ Labelflash
Networking Realtek PCIe FE 10/100 Ethernet
Atheros AR9002WB-1NG 802.11n Wireless
Bluetooth 3.0+EDR
Audio Realtek ALC269 HD audio
Stereo speakers
Headphone and microphone jacks
Battery 6-Cell, 10.8V, 48Wh battery
Front Side Indicator lights
SD/MS/MMC reader
Left Side Kensington lock
2x USB 2.0
Ethernet jack
Optical drive
Right Side Headphone jack
Microphone jack
HDMI
USB 3.0
VGA
Exhaust vent
AC adaptor jack
Operating System Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
Dimensions 13.3" x 9.0" x 1.12"-1.39" (WxDxH)
Weight 5.4 lbs
Extras Webcam
Flash reader (MMC, SD/Mini SD, MS/Duo/Pro/Pro Duo)
Blu-ray drive
Backlit keyboard
USB 3.0
Bluetooth
Starting from the top we have one of Intel's midrange Sandy Bridge mobile processors, the Core i5-2410M. Like its kin it features 3MB of L3 cache along with Hyper-Threading, and depending on thermals and workload it can turbo up to 2.6GHz on two cores or 2.9GHz on one core. Its only real weak point is that its HD 3000 GPU tops out at 1200MHz instead of the 1300/1350MHz you get on some of the faster models, but given our next major component that shouldn't be a huge issue.The M645 benefits greatly from the inclusion of the NVIDIA GeForce GT 525M with 1GB of DDR3 running at 900MHz (1.8GHz effective) and Optimus technology to maximize battery life while allowing the end user to enjoy both a decent mobile gaming GPU as well as Intel's Quick Sync hardware video encoder. Unfortunately, this is a point where the unit also falters: Toshiba runs the GT 525M at clocks well below spec. NVIDIA specifies the 525M to run the core at 600MHz (and thus the 96 CUDA cores at 1.2GHz), but Toshiba has substantially reduced its core clock to just 475MHz (reducing the CUDA cores to a paltry 950MHz). The cut is a brutal one that you'll see reduces performance below even a GeForce GT 420M.Fortunately, all is not lost. Toshiba includes a generous 6GB of DDR3-1333, and while the 5400RPM spindle speed on the hard drive is slow, at least the 640GB of storage is copious. Better still, Toshiba also includes both a Blu-ray drive and a USB 3.0 port. The backlit keyboard is also a welcome touch, but the inexplicable lack of gigabit ethernet connectivity is troubling, and the mediocre 48Wh 6-cell battery is unfortunate.In terms of the internal hardware, we really wind up with mixed feelings all around as Toshiba has been generous in some places while frustratingly stingy in others. At the price Toshiba is asking, some of these trade-offs just shouldn't have been made. 
Finally, a Little Less Gloss
There have been a couple of manufacturers that historically have hit my pet peeves when it comes to notebook design. Clevo and Acer both have dire keyboards that they frustratingly cling to even in the face of the kind of progress Dell and HP tend to get swept up in, and Toshiba seemed to have invested whole hog in glossy plastic for the longest time. Mercifully, while Clevo and Acer still have those same awful keyboards, Toshiba got the hint from the success of the Portege R700, and has proven themselves a little more agile and willing to change.The end result is an aesthetic that feels a little clunky, but is at least a major step in the right direction. While smooth glossy plastic is still present (particularly in my most hated of places, the screen bezel), it's used largely more as an accent than a style on the M645. The lid, palmrests, and area around the keyboard are all black and feature a pleasant patterning that's comfortable to use. In the most technical sense this is still glossy plastic, but it's heavily textured in such a way that's much more pleasing—it's the same look as seen on the A660-series laptops we've reviewed in the past, only in a smaller chassis.In keeping with the times and proving that white is the new blue, Toshiba uses white LEDs for nearly all illumination on the M645, including indicators and the keyboard backlighting, with orange as a secondary color for the indicator LEDs on the front rim of the notebook. I can't complain; there are reasons why blue LEDs caught on the way they did, and the white ones are no different. They're just pleasing to look at.As for the keyboard itself, the chiclet-style seems to be in vogue right now, and that's fine. Toshiba has a solid layout that's easy to use, and the flex that's present is fairly minimal. I'm disappointed that glossy plastic is used for the keys as it produces an odd texture when you slide your fingers across them, but at this point I just appreciate the progress compared to the big, flat, borderline-slick keys that permeated last generation Toshiba notebooks. At the moment the only manufacturer that seems to consistently nail keyboard designs to near-flawlessness is Lenovo; HP's double-high left and right arrow keys on their modern keyboards are downright bizarre, and Dell seems to still be trying to figure out exactly what kind of key surfaces to use. It's strange the kind of alchemy that continues to occur when it comes to keyboard design; the one part of the notebook that should be seeing the least change over the decades continues to see reinvention. But I digress; Toshiba's keyboard on the M645 is a major improvement on its predecessors, and a change in materials would finish the job.Touchpads are also tricky things, but Toshiba wisely gets the texture right. These seem to be a matter of taste, but I've found two dedicated buttons along with a mildly textured surface is oftentimes the right call for me, and I had no trouble using the touchpad on the M645. The dedicated touchpad toggle is a constant and appreciated inclusion.Unfortunately there are still a couple of places where I feel like Toshiba could stand some improvement in their overall designs. The M645 feels curiously bulbous compared to notebooks from competitors, machines that have generally gotten progressively sleeker and eschewed these rounded corners. That's a minor complaint; my major gripe still lies with the use of glossy plastic. It just doesn't belong on the bezel, but at least it's gradually phasing out of the market. The capacitive control strip above the keyboard also feels passe, and most people I know would rather use actual physical buttons than touch-based controls.Finally, on the feature side, Toshiba made too many perplexing trades here. I appreciate the inclusion of a USB 3.0 port and a Blu-ray drive, and dedicated graphics in a 14-inch form factor are still all too rare in the mainstream notebook market, but why no gigabit ethernet? I'm also sad to see Samsung's hard drive division get sold off to Seagate while Toshiba's continues to plug away at producing mediocre notebook drives. Maybe it's a cost-saving measure, who can say? However, my experience with Toshiba drives is that they've always been the slowest of the slow (alongside Fujitsu). 640GB of space is generous, but most users would probably be willing to sacrifice some of that capacity for at least a higher spindle speed. Notebooks in the price bracket Toshiba targets with the M645 almost always include 7200RPM drives as a matter of course, making the dog slow 5400RPM drive in this notebook an outlier.
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Tuesday, 26 July 2011

Google+ name policy 'frustrating,' Google confesses

Posted on 12:36 by Unknown

Google has responded to the many people upset over its Google+ profile name restrictions by tweaking the controversial policy.
In a Google+ post published late yesterday, Bradley Horowitz, vice president of product for Google+, acknowledged that many of the violations from users of the Google+ name policy were "well-intentioned and inadvertent" and that for these people, the process can be "frustrating and disappointing."
At the same time that Google+ has captured 20 million members in just a few weeks, many have complained about the site's requirement that they must use their real names in their profiles, rather than nicknames or pseudonyms. Many have also seen their accounts automatically suspended over such policy violations.
Horowitz noted that Google has read the user feedback to another post about the naming policy that appeared yesterday. In a conversation with tech blogger Robert Scoble, Google's senior vice president of social, Vic Gundotra, admitted that Google had made some missteps with the policy but tried to explain the reasons behind the naming requirement.
Responding to the feedback and the policy itself, Horowitz said Google is making a number of "improvements" to the process:
First, people who violate the policy will no longer see their profiles automatically suspended and will instead receive a warning and be given a chance to adjust their name. Google has provided a Web page explaining how users can edit their profile names to follow the policy's requirements. The company also promises to set better expectations as far as the next steps and timeframes for users who need to adjust their profile names.
Second, Google is aiming to improve the overall Google+ signup process to help people create profiles that won't get them into trouble later on.
Third, Google is trying to placate people who'd like to display a nickname, maiden name, or other alternative name within their profiles. Though the actual profile name will still limit you to your real name, two workarounds will be offered:

• You can add nicknames and other personal descriptions to the "Other names" section that appears when you edit your Google+ profile. Fellow members with permission to view that field can search for you based on those other names.

• The Employment, Occupation, and Education fields in your profile can appear in your Google+ hovercard for those with permission to view that information. This can also help other people more easily find you.

Beyond these two features, more changes are coming, promised Horowitz. In yesterday's post by Scoble, Gundotra said that Google is working on a way to allow pseudonyms, though it will take a while before such a feature can be rolled out.
Horowitz also took the time to try to dispel what he calls "myths" about Google+.

• Myth 1: Google doesn't care about ____. (businesses, teenagers, organizations, pseudonymous usage, disadvantaged populations, etc.)

In response, Horowitz said that Google wants to support all these different types of users, but that desiging a product for everyone isn't as easy as it sounds. He urged users not to "misconstrue" Google+ as it exists today as the final version and promised that Google will continue to improve and innovate the product.

• Myth 2: Not abiding by the Google+ common name policy can lead to wholesale suspension of one's entire Google account.

Horowitz acknowledged that an account violation cuts off your access to Google+, but said it doesn't affect other Google services. So even people whose Google+ account has been suspended can still tap into Gmail, Google Docs, Calendar, and the rest.
"We'll keep working to get better, and we appreciate the feedback--and the passion--that Google+ has generated," he said.
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      • Samsung Chromebook Series 5 Titan Silver 3G Model
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