Tag Archive for 'laptop'

13
Apr

Tiny Portege R500-12Q packs big 128GB SSD

From Toshiba, “The world’s lightest notebook: weight starting at just 979 g - The world’s first notebook with the slimmest optical drive: just 7 mm- The world’s first notebook with the transflective LED: 12.1″ widescreen display- One of the world’s thinnest notebook: at just 19.5/25.5 mm in height- competitive battery life”

For those of you who got gaga over the original Toshiba Portege R500 but couldn’t stand the thought of a laptop without a solid state drive, this is your lucky day. The R500-12Q is the answer to your very specific prayers.

Eat your heart out, Macbook Air.

Toshiba Portege R500-12Q

Toshiba Portégé R500-12Q

26
Mar

HP UMPC 2133 Specs, Pictures, Price and Release Date released

The skinny is this - the HP 2133 Mini-Note PC comes in four flavors, running between $549 and $849.

Sporting an 8.9″ WXGA LCD, the UMPC 2133 is based on a Via Chrome 9 platform with VIA C7-M processors. Except for the $749 version, all the processors run at 1.2ghz. The full spec sheet is attached below.

The UMPC 2133 is set to land in stores around April 7th, so if these have caught your eye and the heavy weight is not enough to turn you off, it won’t belong before you can pick one of these little laptops up.

Editor’s Note - the weight and dimensions listed appear to be shipping weights and box sizes, not for the physical unit.

HP Umpc 2133 Mini-Note

HP Umpc 2133 Mini-Note Laptop

Engadget has the whole scoop right here

09
Mar

MSI Wind PC competes with 9″ EEEpc

It seems that the Asus EEE Pc has created a whole slew of tiny laptops that are looking to capitalize off its popularity.

The latest comes from MSI, dubbed the Wind. Available in 8 and 10 inch flavors, and powered by Intel Atom processors running at 1ghz and 1.6ghz, the MSI Wind costs between 299 and 599 euros. While the high end model puts it in the price range of more full-sized notebooks, 299 euros is very much a cheap computer and a direct price competitoragainst the EEE pc.

The initial specs are as follows;

1024 x 768 display
Intel Atom CPU at 1.0 or 1.6GHZ
2.5″ HDD or SSD
1GB RAM

MSI Wind

Read the full story at Notebook Italia

26
Feb

Matrox DualHead2Go Digital Edition Review

Matrox DualHead2Go Digital Edition Review

A question I’ve often been asked – how do I run two monitors using the single video port on my laptop? In 2005, Matrox answered that question with their DualHead2Go Analog solution. The small box allows a computer with a single VGA port (and enough graphics horsepower) to drive two external VGA monitors up to 1280×1024 pixels, the common resolution for 17 and 19 inch LCD monitors. In early 2007, Matrox released the second iteration of its product, the DualHead2Go Digital Edition. This new model allows for two monitors to be connected via DVI and provides support for higher resolutions as well.

Matrox DualHead2Go Digital Edition Box

Matrox, a Canadian graphics company known better in the professional imaging and architecture fields for their graphics products, created the DualHead2Go Digital Edition with the goal of high quality dual head capabilities for computers with only one (or two, in the case of a 4 or 6 monitor setup) video output.

See more. Do more. Be more productive.

This external multi-display upgrade is a compact box which sits outside your system and connects to the VGA output of compatible notebook or desktop computers. The multi-display configuration delivered by DualHead2Go Digital Edition permits working with multiple full-screen documents or applications simultaneously—eliminating the need to constantly open, close, or minimize applications. It is the ideal solution for professional and business users looking for a simple and cost-effective solution to quickly increase their productivity.
Through patent-pending technology, the operating system detects the DualHead2Go Digital Edition as an ultra-widescreen monitor which is then split into two or more standard resolutions compatible with the attached displays. DualHead2Go Digital Edition also enables support for high resolution panels, offering a stretched desktop of up to 3840×1200 (or dual 1920×1200)1 across two displays.

A big thanks to Matrox for providing us with a sample for this review!

Matrox DualHead2Go Digital Edition DVI Ports

We looked at the dual port solution, but there is a tri-port product called the TripleHead2Go available as well.

Initial Reactions:

It works! Anything else here should be preceded with the fact that the DualHead2Go very much works as advertised, and with little hassle. I will say that the software aspect of things does work more naturally in Windows, with the maximize function understanding the separation of monitors where the Operating System couldn’t. Mac worked well for the most part, but it lacked the sophistication of the Windows software.

Matrox Dual Head 2 Go Digital Edition

Installation:
Installation is not hard, but it has occasional moments of frustration. In Windows, it was very easy. Using the supplied driver disk, the installation went smoothly and we were up running dual (and triple) monitors in no time. When testing with a Mac, it often required a restart before anything would take hold (even though the software had given confirmation that the resolution was applied) and the software often was just unresponsive, which was frustrating. We later used version 1.1 of the Mac software, which was recently released and comes as a great improvement to the original shipping drivers and control panel. It also adds official support for 20” widescreen panels.

We tested using a pair of 15″, 20″ and 24″ monitors powered by an Apple Macbook Pro. Initial testing was carried out on a Sony Vaio laptop but the video card was found to be inadequate for full range comparison testing. The Macbook Pro was using OSX 10.5 Leopard, Windows Vista Ultimate and Windows XP through Bootcamp. It has the nVidia 8600m-gt video card and a native resolution of 1440×900. The 15″ monitors required VGA adapters to connect, but the others had DVI native connections that matched the DualHead2Go.

Matrox Dualhead2Go Digital Edition Installation

Image Quality:
With a product like this, aimed at professionals, image quality is often going to be an important point. With that said, image quality is good. Using properly calibrated monitors and the “adjust image quality” button in the Matrox panels, the image quality is good. Its not great – I could notice a difference between a direct DVI connection from my laptop to a single monitor, versus the VGA to Matrox to DVI configuration that the DualHead2Go employs. I’m a little curious as to why there isn’t an all-digital, non-converted product of this nature available but for what it is, the image quality is between good and great. (Editor’s note: this is actually due to the fact that non-dual link DVI connections do not support the required resolutions to power two monitors combined; as well as the widespread presence of VGA connections on laptops). Definitely usable for almost any application, and I found photo editing to be up to par as well. The sharpness and clarity were also good, but not spectacular. I would say that this is a very reasonable compromise for the actual functioning operation of the product, but it should be noted.

Matrox Dualhead2go

Usability:

We tested the DualHead2Go Digital Edition with a number of applications and tested a variety of scenarios. Included were web browsing, photo editing, word processing, file management and gaming.

Across the board, things went well. It was excellent having so much real estate when it came to web browsing, and the ability to open 5 or more pages in a Word document is very useful.

Matrox DualHead2Go Digital Edition Windows Vista

Software:
The software is very capable, but it’s not perfect. In Windows XP and Vista, things feel very polished and features like snap to each monitor work wonderfully well. In Mac OSX, this is obviously a newer development and it caters to a smaller market, so the product is less polished but it is still very functional. Since OSX’s window maximize feature is barely functional to begin with, it’s not surprising that the snap to feature is not entirely functional.

Quirks:
For whatever reason, if you’re running a Mac, don’t expect to run two 15”, 20” or 24” monitors alongside your open screen. In our testing, we discovered that the only way we could get the build in display of our 15” Macbook Pro to work alongside the dual monitors properly was when running two 19” widescreen LCD monitors that had the same vertical resolution as our 1440×900 resolution laptop screen. Otherwise, the image would be skewed and distorted. This contributes to the lack of sophistication on the Mac side, as we were required to run our computer in closed-lid mode for it to operate normally. However, under Windows we did not have this problem and were able to successfully run a triple-monitor setup with the laptop display and our other pairs of LCD monitors.

Matrox Dual Head 2 Go

Closing Observations:
If you need more screen resolution then your laptop and just an external monitor can offer, you really don’t have much of a choice in the way of solutions. Docking stations provide a much less elegant option and USB video cards are often crippled and slow, and this is where the DualHead2Go shines. If you’re buying it for a Mac, make sure to install the latest drivers from Matrox’s website before anything else.

Through the testing, I found that a 20″ widescreen LCD monitor is the sweet spot, where performance is still good but image quality is also up to snuff. I would recommend a Dell 2007WFP LCD monitor for use with the DH2G.

For these reasons alone, the Matrox Dualhead2go is definitely worth a look. However, its also worthwhile on its own merit. The product works very well and even if you did have an alternate capacity, I would still recommend it providing that you are willing to deal with a few small quirks in an otherwise excellent product.

30
Jan

Macbook Air Landing Today

Word is that the first round of shipments for the Macbook Air are touching down today (and some even yesterday). If you were one of the few who got an order off minutes after the announcement, expect your super-thin, super-breakable laptop to arrive sometime soon.

Macbook Air Recieved