Showing posts with label Home Entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home Entertainment. Show all posts

Friday, 13 January 2012

Ultrabooks: Bringing Sexy Back to PCs



Once upon a time, the PC had no rivals. Back in the era before smart phones, tablets, Internet-savvy HDTVs and other gadgets-come-lately, it was the most important technology product in the world, and therefore inherently exciting.
But with tech gear, familiarity breeds tedium. At his keynote at this week’s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said there are now 1.3 billion Windows PCs on the planet. They’re as useful as ever, but most of them are also pretty mundane.
If you consider the PCs to be a boring, utilitarian appliance, you’re far less likely to splurge on a new one. That’s a dangerous scenario for computer manufacturers, who would prefer that consumers and businesses feel the need for new systems as frequently as possible. It’s just as alarming for chip giant Intel, the company whose processors are inside most systems.
In 2011, Intel took matters into its own hands by creating a concept it called the Ultrabook–thin, light notebooks with an emphasis on pizzazz over raw specs. It reportedly decided to invest hundreds of millions of dollars in convincing PC makers to build them. A few Ultrabooks debuted last year, but the floodgates opened at this year’s CES. Nearly every major manufacturer introduced one or more more models at the show.
When I first heard about Ultrabooks, I feared the worst. I figured most of them would be unimaginative knockoffs of the MacBook Air, the whisper-thin wedge of a laptop that’s been a hit since Apple introduced its second-generation version in 2010. I also worried that they’d be montonously similar to each other, in the way that netbooks all tend to blur together.
I needn’t have fretted. True, some Ultrabooks look a little–or, in some cases, a lot–like Apple’s machine. (Asus’s Zenbook is one of them.) Conceptually, however, the Ultrabook isn’t a shameless Air knockoff. In fact, it’s remarkably amorphous, giving hardware companies the latitude to build all sorts of Ultrabooks for all kinds of people.
Intel does say that a notebook isn’t an Ultrabook unless it uses a power-efficent Intel processor, delivers at least five hours of battery life on a charge, is no more than 21mm thick, wakes up almost instantly when you open it up and uses a couple of Intel security technologies. But an Ultrabook doesn’t have to hit a particular price point, come in under a specific weight, or include a certain list of features.
That’s why the models unveiled at CES are hardly peas in a pod. Consider these notable contenders, and how different they are from one another:
  • Dell’s $999 XPS 13 looks like an optical illusion: Dell fit a reasonably spacious 13.3″ screen into a dinky (but handsome) case similar in size to the ones used by 11.6″ laptops. Dell’s also offering a souped-up Intel Core i7 processor option for the XPS; most Ultrabooks use the less potent i5 chip.
  • Rather than matching or beating the $999 starting price for the MacBook Air, HP decided to price its Envy 14 Spectre at an imposing $1399 and lavish it with features and technologies. The Spectre has Beats audio, individually-illuminated keycaps that light up when a motion detector notices you’re there, a bevy of full-sized ports and a unique case protected with Corning’s super-sturdy Gorilla Glass. (Confusingly, it’s thicker and heavier than Samsung’s identically-priced new Series 9 laptop–a sleek machine that Samsung doesn’t call an Ultrabook.)
  • Acer says that its MacBook Air-esque Aspire S5 (price not set) is the planet’s thinnest Ultrabook. It achieves that distinction through a feature that’s both useful and zany: When you press a button, a secret compartment on the back of the case plops down to reveal a full complement of ports. Another still-unpriced Acer Ultrabook, the Aspire Timeline Ultra, is available in a version with a roomy 15″ display and a built-in optical drive; it may be reasonably light and thin for a big notebook, but it’s still a big notebook.
  • Samsung’s Series 5 Ultra, starting at $849, comes in 13″ and 14″ variants. Both use hard drives rather than solid-state disks, and the 14-incher manages to cram an optical drive into its still-relatively-thin case.
Not all of the CES crop look like sure winners–Dell’s diminutive model is my early favorite–but most of them are evidence that their manufacturers are stepping up their game. The best ones are strikingly nicer than most garden-variety Windows laptops, which tend to plasticky buckets of compromise.
For all the effort Intel put into drumming up enthusiasm for Ultrabooks at CES, it apparently regards the new systems as stopgaps. “Eventually,” an Intel blog post confidently says of future models,” you’ll think of an Ultrabook as a tablet when you want it, a PC when you need it.” The company’s line of thinking is in line with that of Microsoft, whose upcoming Windows 8 will attempt to take on the iPad while keeping users of conventional PCs happy.
Intel is already declaring that the Ultrabook tablet/PC hybrids it envisions will bring “historic” change to the computer market. I’m instinctively skeptical about that prediction: A device that tries to be both a tablet and a PC may end up serving two purposes poorly rather than one purpose well. (Bicycles are great, and so are cars–but I wouldn’t want to buy a bicycle/car combo.) If upcoming Ultrabooks are bad, consumers will notice and stay away in droves.
A computer doesn’t have to make history to be a step forward for the industry; it just needs to make everyday computing meaningfully better. Ultrabooks of the type that were everywhere at CES have a shot at doing just that–and if they end up the world’s default notebooks within a few years, as I think they will, Intel will have done both PC makers and PC buyers a major favor.
McCracken blogs about personal technology at Technologizer, which he founded in 2008 after nearly two decades as a tech journalist; on Twitter, he’s @harrymccracken. His column, also called Technologizer, appears every Thursday on TIME.com




Saturday, 7 January 2012

LG Teases Google TV-Powered Television as CES Looms



LG, meet Google TV, and the rest of us, meet LG’s Google Android-powered high-definition television a couple days before the company rolls it out in full regalia at CES 2012. That’s a shot of it up top, and yes, I think the interface looks a little unwieldy, too — almost a mishmash of what Microsoft’s doing with its tile-based Metro interface and a left-right master navigation bar to keep you from getting lost in sea of tiny bookmarks and icons. (I’m hearing the set will in fact support both the default Google TV overlay or an LG-tweaked version — I’m not sure which we’re looking at in the shot above.)
LG says it’s an all-in-one set, something it’s calling an “LG Smart TV with Google TV,” so it’ll have some LG logic either integrated with, grafted onto, or working sidewise with Google’s Android- and Chrome-powered interactive television standard. It’s said to run on LG’s own L9 chipset, about which I’m finding nothing else online save an ocean of press release repeats (Is it ARM-derivative? If not, does it afford LG an edge on pricing?). There’s been no word yet on screen size(s), but we’ll have that info in just a few more days.
The TV will support 3D, specifically LG’s “Cinema 3D” technology, meaning all you’ll need is a pair of battery-free “lightweight” stereoscopic glasses. LG’s also talking up its “magic remote QWERTY” interface, which I was prepared to write off as meaningless “magic” marketing-speak (onscreen keyboards tend to suck equally), but then noticed it refers to LG’s voice- and gesture-controlled remote with microphone and QWERTY keyboard (I’m assuming on the remote itself, but maybe I’m wrong about that). Move over, Kinect!
With this announcement, LG joins Samsung, Sony and Vizio in offering Google TV products, so things are looking up for the format from the electronics manufacturing side. The trick for Google and its partners remains getting content on these sets that consumers are into (some keep calling that “quality content,” which sounds wrongheaded to me — I’d rather call it “whatever the masses are jonesing for”).
In any event, it’s telling that LG’s still planning to release Smart TVs based on its own NetCast-based design in tandem with these Google TV-powered sets. Companies like LG are hopping on the Google TV express with a “money talks, bull-stuff walks” approach, no doubt waiting to see how buyers respond before committing with more authority to the platform.

Monday, 2 January 2012

SMARTPHONES Looking Forward to 2012: Apple TV, iPhone 5 and Goodnight PCs



Onward, tablets, smartphones and post-PC (yet still just as much “personal computing”) devices — call them whatever you like, 2012 will see a glut of me-too mobiles designed to untether us from stodgy office desktops and augment our everyday, ordinary activities by slipping into our everyday, ordinary surroundings. With that in mind, here’s my list of up-and-coming 2012 tech picks:
Apple TV, the Next Generation
The trouble my 37-inch, four-year-old LG 1080p LCD TV has squeezing inside my mammoth mission-style entertainment center aside, I’ve been eyeballing a new TV all year. I already have an Apple TV, but we’re talking the tiny black box, not a full-blown TV set. So when I say I’m eyeballing an Apple TV, let there be no confusion — I’m speaking of the rumored 32- and 37-inch Apple television sets due sometime this summer, not the device I only use to stream my music library to the living room.
Apple’s challenge, assuming these things are real, is twofold: Leapfrogging the current black box Apple TV’s features, and pricing its televisions competitively (assuming it wants to sell these things mainstream, anyway). Feature-wise, Apple needs to do more than offer access to a few third-party services and stream iTunes media from an Apple computer (it needs to be more than just an Apple TV inside an Apple-branded television, in other words) so here’s my wish list: An Apple TV that could sync wirelessly with iOS devices, allowing video, photos and even apps or games to appear (magically!) on the TV without cables, and a Siri-like voice command feature, making an appearance alongside a motion-control interface similar to (but ideally miles better than) Microsoft’s Kinect. Bring it on, Apple!
iPhone 5 or Android Whatever
The iPhone 4 I picked up last February — my first iPhone, if it matters — has been a mostly up experience. It’s quick, dependable, swarming with apps that cover all my bases and not a total disaster when texting so long as I use just one finger (in lieu of two thumbs). My only complaints: The screen is too small, the phone’s too breakable (all glass, front and back) and I’m still not sold on finger-gaming, especially first-person stuff where I’m fighting just to see around my thumbs (would someone please release a thumbstick snap-around like the 3DS’s add-on already?). I have mixed feelings about most Android phones, but after playing with a friend’s Galaxy Nexus, I’ve sort of done a one-eighty: Unless the iPhone 5 is thinner and has an edge-to-edge 4.65-inch or larger display, I may just pick up a Galaxy Nexus to go hand-in-glove with a new Windows-based, gaming-angled ultrabook.
Goodbye forever, desktop PCs — hello ultrabooks and tablets!
I ditched my tricked-out Windows desktop PC a few weeks ago — good night, good luck (and, with all due respect, good riddance). I barely touched the thing in 2011, and I’ve jettisoned any nostalgic sentiments I once had for screwing around with soldering circuits or tweaking liquid cooling kits. My work machine’s now an 11-inch MacBook Air, though it might as well be a Windows-based ultrabook. I love OS X, but I’m almost as fond of Windows 7, and since I’ve kept my personal and work data agnostic, organized and easy to migrate, I’ll be happy to switch if the right hardware comes along (hello Razer Blade!). The desktop PC is a dinosaur, and Moore’s Law ceased to matter years ago (just because computing power doubles in a given period doesn’t mean app requirements or consumer needs do), so bring on the souped-up ultraportables and 2012′s enhanced tablets (be they Android or iOS based), and may the space beneath (or beside) our desks, chairs and tables remain case- and cable-free forever.