I'd like a sleeve in neopren like the one I had for my MBA : http://www.rueducommerce.fr/Accesso...-neoprene-noir-pour-MacBook-air-11-pouces.htm
Any viable alternatives to Surface Pro yet? Or do I still have to wait
Look above.
The one you posted? What's the full name of the device?
Well for one thing, Surface didn't end up using a 16:9 panel because it's more common. It's the only 10.6" device on the market.
Any viable alternatives to Surface Pro yet? Or do I still have to wait
Definitely the Yoga. Twist's resolution is subpar, and so is the tablet functionality.
You also get 8 gigs of RAM for the Yoga if you get it from Lenovo's website
Anandtech has benchmarks of the Qualcomm powered Windows RT Ativ Tab tablet. It definitely wins on performance and battery life, but the charger...
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Ew.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/6528/samsung-ativ-tab-review-qualcomms-first-windows-rt-tablet/3
looks like people are starting to get their thinkpad tablets in:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=duwm107ax1U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCEDNryF-EE
http://forum.tabletpcreview.com/lenovo-ibm/54564-thinkpad-tablet-2-initial-impressions.html
http://forums.lenovo.com/t5/ThinkPad-slate-tablets/Thinkpad-Tablet-2-First-impressions/td-p/973015
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pxr1_oG8zps&feature=youtube_gdata
What's your point? They picked 10.6" because of the size of the keyboard. It's still 16:9. They could've went with a similar keyboard size, still be sub 11" and have a better aspect ratio.
Those with the Yoga 13 do you plan to play games on it ?
What would be the most beautiful/impressive game this ultrabook would run at enjoyable enough fps ?
(Ivy i5, HD4000 and 8 GB of Ram)
What's your point? They picked 10.6" because of the size of the keyboard. It's still 16:9. They could've went with a similar keyboard size, still be sub 11" and have a better aspect ratio.
Those with the Yoga 13 do you plan to play games on it ?
What would be the most beautiful/impressive game this ultrabook would run at enjoyable enough fps ?
(Ivy i5, HD4000 and 8 GB of Ram)
After breaking into the PC market last year, it was only a matter of time before Vizio released its first Windows 8 tablet. The company just announced the Vizio Tablet PC, an 11.6-inch slate running full Windows (i.e., none of this RT business). What's interesting is the combination of specs here: on the one hand, it packs a dual-core, 1GHz AMD Z60 chip, making it among the first Windows 8 tablets with an AMD processor inside. At the same time, it rocks a 1080p display -- not the sort of resolution you'd expect to find on a low-power tablet with a Z-series or Intel Atom CPU. Also, like the rest of Vizio's PCs, this has a Microsoft Signature software install, with zero bloatware. Otherwise, the specs are pretty standard: 2GB of RAM, 64GB of solid-state storage, a 2-megapixel front camera and micro-HDMI / micro-USB ports. Vizio hasn't announced pricing or exact availability just yet, but we hope to get hands-on with this thing very, very soon.
this surely must be pretty cheap, cheaper than atoms at least.
Battery life on this could be utter crap, AMD Z–60 isn't even a SoC, it's pretty much a laptop designed chip. And it uses 4.5W vs. 1.7w on Clovertrail.
I edited the post. That is not my picture, but what I always wanted back then (hence "dream setup"). Those screens are 5 years old and have a higher resolution that the 20" and 30" screens you can buy today. It's bonkers. I'm using a 16:10 22" and two 5:4 17".
Dell still makes those, just fyi. Bought recently 4 more for work, best damn montors ever.
probably start seeing devices with it toward the end of the year.Any idea when the Haswell upgrades will come?
Really? Shit, I thought they would be a lot sooner.probably start seeing devices with it toward the end of the year.
If only someone made one of this massive tablets with wacom suport I would buy it in an instant
Lenovo's backflipping IdeaPad Yoga 13 garnered a good bit of praise, but when the company launched a smaller, cheaper version of the touchscreen Wintel laptop, it chose to use the hamstrung Windows RT operating system and an ARM-based Nvidia Tegra 3 chip instead. You won't have to choose between size and capabilities forever, though, because Lenovo's introducing the IdeaPad Yoga 11S today. The Yoga 11S maintains the attractive $799 starting and design of the original 11-incher — adding only a smidgen of thickness and weight — but brings back the Intel Core processor and full Windows 8 operating system necessary to run desktop applications. For $799, it will come with a Core i3 processor, 4GB of memory, 128GB of solid state storage.
It might not get the battery life possible with an ARM chip, with Lenovo estimating a take-it-with-a-grain-of-salt six hour runtime for the 11S, but it does support up to 8GB of memory and 256GB of solid state storage underneath its 11.6-inch, 300-nit, 1366 x 768 resolution touchscreen. Lenovo says the IdeaPad Yoga 11S should arrive in June.
They're still making the 2007 and 3007 series? Did they ever update the panels or are they still 16 ms?