How to Pick the Perfect Slate,Sony VGP-BPS9 Battery

Publié le par ehar

2010 was the year of the iPad. And this is the year the competition starts to get serious. Nearly every company that makes a PC or phone is releasing a tablet to take a bite out of Apple’s dominant market share. Their mission: to give consumers an alternative device for surfing the web, playing games Akku thinkpad T500 and videos, reading eBooks, enjoying apps, and—yes—getting real work done.

How big is this market? IDC forecasts nearly 45 million shipments of media tablets (as opposed to old-school tablet PCs) in 2011. That’s a pretty big jump from 17 million units shipped last year. Now you see why everyone wants a piece of the action.

The question facing tablet shoppers is whether to get Apple’s sleeker Akku thinkpad T400 and faster iPad 2 or something else. After months of Apple having the tablet
world all to itself, there are finally viable alternatives either hitting shelves now or on the way soon. We expect dozens of Android devices alone, which run a new version of Google’s software designed for tablets. Other high-profile competitors include the BlackBerry PlayBook
Akku thinkpad T410 and HP’s TouchPad.

As they say, choice is good, but picking an OS is only one part of the equation. Here are the factors you need to consider before you buy a tablet.

new laptop

Acer Iconia 6120

The Acer Iconia 6120 isn't the first dual-screen Windows 7
tablet on the block. The Toshiba Libretto W105 had two 7-inch displays Akku thinkpad T61 and was about the size and weight of a paperback, but its short battery life and lackluster software doomed that device to collectible status. The Iconia is different. It's more like a coffee table book, a book that features two large 14-inch displays and innovative touch-enabled software, plus a Core i5 processor. But does this $1,199 tablet-book represent the future of laptops, or is it just a pricey experiment destined to appeal only to early

Samsung Series 9

Ever since Steve Jobs pulled the original MacBook Air out of an envelope, Windows laptop makers have been trying to beat the thinnest, lightest notebook in town. We've seen some notable efforts, such as the sexy but underpowered Dell Adamo series Akku thinkpad R61 and the powerful but unsexy ThinkPad X301. Others have tried, too, but no one has been able to pair an ultra-slim and ergonomically sound design with an uncompromised computing experience. Now Samsung has taken up that challenge with the Series 9, a machine that rivals the latest 13-inch MacBook Air not only on in terms of design but performance. It also has a brighter display than the Air Akku thinkpad R60 and a backlit keyboard, which you only get on the MacBook Pro. The Series 9 definitely has the air of an Air killer, but is it worth $1,649?

Intel SSD 320

When Intel first launched its X25-M SSD in 2008, the chip-maker helped start a new era of high-performance solid state drives with reasonable prices. However, in the last three years, Intel has only updated its mainstream SSD once, while facing stiff competition from over a dozen other players. In fact, in our most recent SSD round-up, Intel's 120GB X25-M drive trailed drives from Samsung, OCZ, Akku thinkpad T60 and Crucial by a wide margin. Now here comes the new Intel SSD 320 ($529 for 300GB, starting at $89 for 40GB), which promises not only blazing performance but offers strong encryption. Can Intel reclaim its leadership position?

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