Saturday, September 10, 2011

Samsung targets rural folks with solar charged laptop

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South Korean electronics maker Samsung has launched a solar powered laptop in the Kenyan market with the capacity to run for 15 hours, nearly double the seven to eight hours lasting power of rivals . 
By Okuttah Mark  (email the author)

Posted  Monday, August 29  2011 at  20:12
IN SUMMARY
South Korean electronics maker Samsung has launched a solar powered laptop in the Kenyan market with the capacity to run for 15 hours, nearly double the seven to eight hours lasting power of rivals .
Kenya was among the key markets that Samsung picked for the global launch that also targets consumers in the Middle East, Europe and Asia
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Korean electronics giant Samsung has launched a solar powered laptop in the Kenyan market targeting thousands of potential consumers currently locked out of the computer revolution by lack of electricity.
Kenya, with a large rural population that is not connected to the national power grid, is among the few countries Samsung picked for the global launch that began last week.
The Samsung Netbook NC215S lap top is priced at Sh35,000 and is also targeting consumers who are connected to the national electricity grid but suffer erratic power supply.
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The solar-charged laptop is loaded with a front cover panel that captures energy from the sun and automatically recharges the battery. When fully charged, the lap top can run for up 15 hours – nearly double the capacity of its closest competitors that have seven or eight hours stand-by capability.
“With Netbook NC 215S Samsung is demonstrating its capacity to bring to the consumers technology that satisfies their needs and takes care of the environment,” said Samsung Electronics East Africa Business Leader Robert Ngeru.
The Korean firm is building consumer electronics and mobile technology for sub-Sahara Africa where it set a $10 billion revenue target by 2015. Samsung’s sub-Saharan Africa market is currently worth $1.23 billion.
Launch of the Netbook NC 215S comes as Kenya’s four mobile telecoms firms, Safaricom, Airtel, Telkom’s Kenya Orange and Essar’s Yu have intensified their activities in the data market and are looking for affordable internet enabled devices such as laptops and mobile phone handsets to expand the number of data users.
Growth of the data market is particularly critical to the long term survival of the telecom operators who have had to contend with steep decline in voice revenue in the past couple of years.
Samsung is among the hardware vendors who have partnered with Safaricom in the laptops market.
Available only in black, the netbook’s solar panel can also be used to charge a smartphone, MP3 player and other devices via its USB port, even when the PC is switched off or in power-saving mode.
The Netbook NC 215S also features an ultra-portable and stylish design, weigh–ing just 1.3kg and featuring a slim display rim that is as thin as a finger.
The new solar powered Netbook will be launched in Russia, the U.S, Europe, and South Korea this month.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

ASUS MARS II gets reviewed, deemed the fastest single graphics card on the market

By   posted Aug 27th 2011 10:33AM
ASUS MARS II
Well, that insane ASUS MARS II card we got to feast our eyes on back in June has finally started rolling off the assembly line. That means it's time for the hardware fanatics and gaming freaks to start putting them through their paces. HotHardware said the dual GTX 580-packing card was "quite simply the fastest single graphics card we have ever tested, bar none." And everyone else seemed to agree. Now, obviously there are drawbacks -- the 3GB card is an absolute power hog (requiring 600-watts all by itself) and insanely pricey at $1,499. You could even buy three separate GTX 580 cards for slightly less, use the same number of slots and get better performance, but the MARS II has one other thing going for it -- status. Only 999 of these beasts will be made. After they're all snatched up you'll have to head to eBay, and pay a hefty premium over it's already absurd price. But, if you absolutely have to have the best performance you can out of a single card solution, this is the clear choice. If you need more detail about just how badly this spanks the competition check out the reviews below.

Read - HotHardware
Read - PC Perspective
Read - techPowerUp
Read - TweakTown

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

By Exiting, Slow-Moving HP Will Help Reshape the PC Market


August 23, 2011 10:59 AM
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When IBM announced its intention to abandon the PC market in 2004, it was big news on a number of levels, not the least of which was that IBM had created this very market. Not on purpose, of course. But by using off-the-shelf hardware for its PCs and licensing third-party software, IBM inadvertently opened the doors to clones—clones that appeared in a flood after the IBM PC BIOS was copied.
This past week, Hewlett-Packard dropped its own similar bombshell. It, too, will exit the PC market, by selling or spinning off its own PC business. But there's a big difference between the HP announcement and IBM's earlier decision. Unlike IBM, which had long before ceded PC leadership to smaller, faster-moving companies, HP is, as I write this, the most dominant PC maker on earth. So the market it’s leaving is one over which it reigns supreme.
Of course, that all depends on how you measure things.
According to data I've averaged from market researchers at IDC andGartner (because these firms measure market share slightly differently), HP sold over 15 million PCs in the second quarter of 2011, a 3-percent gain over the same quarter a year earlier, and strong enough for a first-place finish, with 17.75-percent market share. (PC makers, overall, sold 84.8 million units in the quarter.) This places HP in a considerable lead, from a unit sales perspective, over the second-biggest PC maker, Dell. This company sold 10.75 million PCs in the same time period, also a 3-percent gain year over year, and good for 12.7-percent worldwide market share.
(Third-place finisher Lenovo is nipping at Dell's heels with 10.25 million PCs sold in the quarter, a stunning 21+ percent gain year over year. Meanwhile, industry darling Apple sold 3.95 million Macs in the same time period, and it doesn't even crack the top five PC makers. The Mac's market share for Q2 2011 was just 4.65 percent.)
So why would HP abandon this market?
Unit sales don't always equate to success. According to HP, the margins on its PC business are tiny, and like IBM before it, the company wants to focus on higher-margin, services-oriented businesses for corporations moving forward. The PC business requires shipping huge volumes of machines, many to finicky consumers, for comparatively low margins.
As proof of this statement, HP offered up some figures. Its commercial businesses experienced 5-percent revenue growth year over year, but its consumer businesses nose-dived 15 percent. Overall, its PC business generated almost $10 billion in revenues last year and, ironically, was the company's biggest revenue contributor. (Its tech services division delivered $9.1 billion in revenues.) But profits in the division were much smaller, about $2 billion.
Although many smaller companies--Samsung, Acer, ASUS, but also possibly Lenovo--would probably happily accept $2 billion in additional profits per year on HP's PC business, for HP, it’s only part of the story. The company had already paid $1.2 billion last year for struggling mobile OS maker Palm, and the Palm-based products HP was already selling--smartphones and the recently released TouchPad tablet--were summarily executed this week as well; HP will take another $1 billion charge related to winding down that business, though it's possible the company will offset some costs by finding a buyer. The wider issue here is that being competitive in the ever-shifting consumer market would require even higher outlays of cash, and HP simply isn't interested in this market and the resources and effort it would require.
Left unsaid is that HP simply cannot compete with the Apples and Googles of the world. Not that it didn't try: In addition to its Palm efforts, HP built clones of Apple's MacBook Pro laptops, purchased the high-end boutique PC maker Voodoo, briefly licensed the iPod from Apple, and launched Microsoft-based products such as the Tablet PC and Media Center PC. None of these efforts ever amounted to anything positive.
More important than consumer lust for Apple and Google mobile products, perhaps, is the fact that these companies also generate dramatically better margins than does HP. (Google's margins could cool a bit, however, thanks to its mammoth $12.5 billion purchase of Motorola.) And while the death of the traditional PC is grossly exaggerated--PC makers should sell roughly 400 million PCs this year, and the market is still growing by 4 to 5 percent, rather than contracting as many imagine--it's absolutely true that consumers are turning in ever-greater numbers to more mobile devices. And this includes both tablets and smartphones, neither of which HP has ever made successfully.
But Apple has. Last quarter, the company sold an astonishing 20 million iPhone 4 handsets and a reasonable 9.25 million iPad tablets. And while Apple has fallen behind Google's more diverse Android OS in the smartphone market, it has the tablet market all to itself for the time being. Remember that Mac sales figure I mentioned earlier? If you were to add Apple's Mac and iPad unit sales together--they are both, after all, general-purpose computing devices at heart--Apple suddenly vaults into second place in the worldwide PC market, behind HP but ahead of Dell: Combined Mac/iPad sales in Q2 2011 were 13.2 million units, good for about 15-percent worldwide market share. Still behind HP, yes, but well ahead of HP when it comes to margins and profits.
That's not a bad little turnaround for a company that was within 3 months of bankruptcy in 1996. But it's bad for HP, which despite heady unit sales, simply can't leverage its PC business well enough to be successful in the growth consumer markets of the future.
So HP will almost certainly exit the PC market—there’s a small possibility it could continue selling PCs only to businesses--and I think the model it will follow is IBM's. Certainly, Lenovo has done a wonderful job of shepherding and improving IBM's ThinkPad brand, and its products today are still the wonder of the corporate world, with superior keyboards, pointing devices, and construction when compared with the competition. Yes, including Apple.
My guess is that HP's PC business, whatever it's called, will also be very successful moving forward, and that whatever smaller company does end up with it--either a standalone spinoff or a former competitor like Samsung--will be quite happy with the results. And while HP's decision was unexpected and initially shocking, let's face it: All that's really happening here is that a slow-moving behemoth is moving on, leaving the market to scrappier upstarts, any one of which is better equipped to compete with Apple or Google. Once the dust settles, this will likely be the better course for everyone involved: HP, its PC business, and its customers.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

ASUS' next gen Eee Pad Transformer to pack NVIDIA's quad-core Kal-El, launch this October?

By   posted Aug 2nd 2011 9:11PM

Fan of ASUS' affordable, yet competitively specced Eee Pad Transformer, but still haven't committed your credit to its 10.1-inches? Well, if this bout of rumor-mongering proves true, you might want to put the wallet down until early fall. Harbinger of supply chain gossip Digitimes is reporting that the electronics maker has just enlisted Wintek to provide touch panels for its next gen tablet, slated to launch this October. The parts supplier is said to be working in tandem with HannStar Display to ramp up production should this iteration be met with its predecessor's unforeseen popularity. Adding more ambiguity to the speculative fire, ASUS' Chairman Jonney Shih recently confirmed to Forbes that an updated Transformer is on its way, saying only that it'd be very "impressive," and would be available before CES. Jonney didn't comment on the upcoming slate's supposed use of NVIDIA's quad-core Kal-El, but with the chip's promised August launch date, we wouldn't rule it out. While talks of a Transformer 2 are still just gossamer promise, you can always snag that Eee Pad Slider while you sit and wait.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Galaxy Tab 10.1 for Verizon, hands-on with the new 4G speed king

By   posted Jul 28th 2011 6:15PM

Galaxy Tab 10.1 for Verizon
By now, you should be familiar with the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1. We've done countless hands-ons with the super-svelte Honeycomb slate, and even reviewed it... twice! Now it's back, again, and this time its packing an LTE radio tuned to the frequencies of a little company known as Verizon. Outside of a few tiny cosmetic changes -- the brushed, gray plastic back and the rumored Micro SIM slot up top, nothing else has changed. We won't waste too much time rehashing what you already know, but we figured it was worth firing up the latest version, which officially went on sale today, and putting that 4G antenna to the test. You know the routine, keep on keepin' on after the break.


Obviously, the first thing we did once we had the Galaxy Tab powered on was launch the browser and head straight for Speedtest.net. Now, we've done plenty of testing of Verizon's LTE network before, but this time something was different. The data rates we were seeing didn't just put most cable modems to shame, they were competitive with our FiOS connection. We ran the speed test 15 times just to make sure it wasn't some anomaly, and used a few different servers. We averaged 28.25Mbps down and 7.93Mbps up -- the Thunderbolt maxed out at 21.77Mbps. We saw speeds up to a positively face-melting 44.44Mbps down and 9.39Mbps up. Even our ping times were reliably low, never topping 75ms and averaging just shy of 67ms.

The connection feels just as fast as those numbers would indicate too. The browser loaded up full desktop sites, even those weighed down with Flash, in no time at all. Engadget popped up just as quickly as did on our Thinkpad and HD clips from the movies section of the Android market started playing almost instantaneously.

What isn't clear is why exactly we were seeing such dramatically faster speeds. It's possible that there is beefier hardware inside the Galaxy Tab than in the LTE phones we've seen so far. But, it could also simply be that there were no 4G Verizon customers in the area, allowing us to hog those 700Mhz frequencies. Regardless, we came away impressed. We expected the slate would keep pace with its network peers, but we never anticipated it would so decidedly blow them out of the water.