Thursday, January 26, 2012

Google mobile phone nexus

Google mobile phone nexus
Google mobile phone nexus
Google mobile phone nexus
Google mobile phone nexus
Google mobile phone nexus

Google mobile phone in india

Google mobile phone
Google mobile phone
Google mobile phone
Google mobile phone

Google mobile phone

Google mobile phone
Google mobile phone
Google mobile phone
Google mobile phone

Friday, November 18, 2011

Samsung Galaxy Note

Samsung Galaxy Note
Samsung Galaxy Note


Samsung Series 9 laptop


review The ultraportable laptop market seems to be going gangbusters at the moment. Between the lovely MacBook Air, luxury thin-and-lights like the Sony VAIO Z and Samsung Series 9, and the recently launched ultrabooks, most of the action in mobile computing – at least so far as notebooks go – seems to be seems to be happening in the 1-1.5kg weight class.

The Series 9 originally launched in April in a 13.3” Intel Core i5 version, and Samsung followed it up a couple of months ago with variants of the 13.3” model with Core i3 and Core i7 processors, as well as a smaller 11.6” version with a Core i3 processor, the latter of which we’ve gotten in for review.

Like every other ultraportable, the Series 9 has a strong competitor in the MacBook Air, and even more so in the 11.6” space, given Apple is one of the few manufacturers with a notebook in this screen size. Samsung has had a lot of luck challenging Apple in the smartphone and tablet spaces, but can it pull the same thing off for ultraportable laptops?

Samsung Series 7 (15-inch)

Samsung Series 7 image
Samsung Series 7 (15-inch)
Samsung Series 7

Monday, October 31, 2011

HP says it will soon offer Ultrabooks


HP (along with Dell) will be one of the last major PC makers to enter the market for these sub-0.8-inch, 3-pounds-and-under laptops that compete with Apple's MacBook Air.

"HP had yet to announce its intentions for the Ultrabook market and has been notably quiet as Lenovo, Asus, Acer, and Toshiba have all announced new ultra-thin models," Deron Kershaw, an analyst at GAP Intelligence, said in a research note today.

The world's largest PC maker needs to put all of its weight behind new product launches. The "hangover," as CEO Meg Whitman put it, of the August 18 announcement--when HP stated that it was exploring a spin-off of its PC business--has caused plenty of confusion among customers. "We're very conscious of the pressure that we face in the short term," said Bradley today.
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