Archos 7 Home Bluetooth, GPS, or 3G tablet disassembled

Posted by admin on May 21, 2010
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I get why people like to disassemble laptops to see what’s inside. Because once you know that, you know whether it will be easy to upgrade the memory, storage, or other components — or install additional modules like Bluetooth, GPS, or 3G. But when it comes to tiny tablet-style devices like the Archos 7 Home Tablet, let’s be honest. There’s no way you’re going to do any serious hacking. There’s just not enough room inside.

But that doesn’t mean we don’t want to at least see what’s on the inside. Fortunately we don’t have to actually dissect one to find out, because the folks at nDevil have already done it for us — and they’ve posted a video to prove it.

The one thing that I did learn from the video is that the Archos 7 has an 18.5Whr battery – which could be user replaceable if you’re willing to risk opening up your system. After dissecting their unit and putting it back together, the folks at nDevil found that the Archos 7 simply didn’t work anymore.

Archos 7 7 inch Tablet sale for $200 with Android 1.5 operating system

Posted by admin on May 19, 2010
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You know how the Archos 7 Home Tablet has been up for pre-order at Amazon for a few weeks, and we were told that it would ship in June? Scratch that. It looks like you can purchase one today from the Archos Store.

The tablet has a 7 inch, 800 x 480 pixel resistive touchscreen display and runs Google Android 1.5. It supports 802.11b/g/n WiFi and has the hardware and software to handle 720p HD video playback. The base model has 8GB of storage space and a micro SDHC card slot that supports up to 32GB of additional storage.

The biggest drawback is that the device doesn’t ship with access to the Android Market. While you can probably install the same hacked version on the Archos 7 that works on the Archos 5, some apps from the Android Market won’t work on a non-smartphone device, and many others won’t run on the outdated Android 1.5 operating system.

Acer: We don’t have a Chrome OS netbook yet

Posted by admin on May 17, 2010
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Acer took an unusual step today and put out a press release to let the world know what it’s not working on. And that’s a netbook running chrome OS. Acer says it has “no short-term plans for such a product.”

Last week there was a rumor going around that Acer would show off netbooks and/or tablets running Google’s upcoming Chrome operating system at the Computex Trade show in June. But as I pointed out at the time, Chrome OS isn’t ready for prime time yet — and while it’s possible Acer or other companies could have a tech demo or two on-hand at Computex, it’s way too early for anyone to talk about releasing products based on the unfinished operating system.

Does this mean that Acer won’t ever bring a Chrome OS netbook to market? Hardly. We could still see something later this year — when Google officially launches the operating system for PC makers to load on netbooks and other devices.

Until then, you can always download and install an unofficial, pre-release copy of Chrome OS.

The Acer Aspire One 521 has a 1.2GHz AMD V105 single core processor, ATI Radeon HD 4225 graphics, and a 10.1 inch, 1024 x 600 pixel display

Posted by admin on May 16, 2010
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There’s good news and bad news about that new Acer Aspire One 521 netbook that was introduced the other day. The good news is the folks at Notebook Journal.de have gotten their hands on a demo unit. The bad news is they’ve discovered it has issues playing HD video from YouTube.

Standard definition video looks good enough — and so does 720p HD video in windowed mode. But when you try to blow the video up to full screen mode, it looks pretty choppy. 1080p HD video looks like a slideshow.

The Acer Aspire One 521 has a 1.2GHz AMD V105 single core processor, ATI Radeon HD 4225 graphics, and a 10.1 inch, 1024 x 600 pixel display. The laptop should be able to handle HD playback for local video files stored on your hard drive, it looks like it might have problems with Flash video — at least until Adobe releases a version of Flash Player that supports the graphics card in this machine — although it’s also possible that the reviewer simply didn’t install the latest release candidate for Adobe Flash Player 10.1

You can check out a video showing HD video playback on the Acer Aspire One 521 after the break. If you happen to speak better German than I do and notice anything I missed, let us know in the comments.

HTC Hero clone gets a capacitive touchscreen and Android 1.5 OS

Posted by admin on May 14, 2010
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HTC-HERO-CLONE-ANDROID-OS

We’ve seen quite a few HTC Hero clones out of Shenzhen since the original one made first appearance, but it seems this is the first one that runs Android OS. The phone seems solid-built, and gets a capacitive touchscreen, which is rare to find on a Shanzhai phone. What’s more, it gets a HTC sense alike user interface. Its specs that we know include a 3.2 inches 320×480 HVGA capacitive touchscreen, a 400MHZ processor, 128MB RAM, 256MB ROM, Android 1.5 OS. Thought only with Android 1.5, it’s said it comes with multi-touch support too. The specs are very good, but it just sells around $150 dollars.

Archos 7 (Google Android 1.5, 7 inch display )Home Tablet reviewed

Posted by admin on May 13, 2010
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You might think the Archos 7 Home Tablet is nothing more than a slightly larger Archos 5 Internet Tablet… and yo’d almost be right. But Engadget’s Joanna Stern has a detailed review of the new 7 inch tablet running Google’s Android operating system, and she found plenty to like… and plenty to dislike about it.

She likes the tablet’s build quality, even though it’s made mostly of rather cheap plastic. She likes the 7 inch display and overall small size and weigh of the device. She’s not a fan of the resistive touchscren display with narrow viewing angles.

There’s also no accelerometer or software feature for rotating the screen — which is a major step back from the Archos 5 which could easily be used in landscape or portrait mode.

The biggest problem Joanna had was that the Archos 7 runs Google Android 1.5 which means it doesn’t ship with newer Android apps — and it’s tough to download third party apps because the tablet doesn’t come with access to the Android Market. Instead you get access to the AppsLib store which has only about a thousand third party apps — not the tens of thousands of apps available in the Android Market.

The Archos 7 actually has a slower processor than the Archos 5, but Joanna says it didn’t feel all that slow, and the tablet does an excellent job as an audio and video player. When I reviewed the Archos 5, I found that it locked up occasionally and required a reboot, but when I asked her about that, Joanna says she thought the Archos 7 felt pretty stable.

Overall it sounds like the tablet is a mixed bag… but it’s a $199 mixed bag. At that price, it almost doesn’t matter if it’s not the best tablet, media player, or Android device on the market. At least it’s on of the cheapest.

Asus Eee pc netbook Keyboard finally starts shipping

Posted by admin on May 12, 2010
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It’s been a good 17 months since Asus first introduced the world to its computer-in-a-keyboard concept. But the device is finally shipping today. Amazon has the Eee Keyboard in stock for $599 and says it can offer 1-day shipping, which means the first early adopters could have the Eee Keyboard as early as tomorrow.

At $599, I’m still not sure why anyone would buy a keyboard with a 4 hour battery and a computer stuffed inside when it would be cheaper to just pick up a cheap nettop, stick it next to your HDTV, and buy a separate wireless keyboard.

But if you’re still interested, here’s what you get with the Eee Keyboard: Windows XP, Wireless HDMI, a Broadcom Crystal HD video accelerator, a 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270 CPU, 1G of RAM, and a 5 inch, 800 x 480 pixel touchscreen for launching applications and viewing some content on the keyboard without bringing it up on your TV.

Verizon and Google working on a tablet

Posted by admin on May 11, 2010
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Not the Verizon/Google Tablet

The Apple iPad may be an AT&T exclusive in the US so far, but it looks like Verizon may have a plan to bring a tablet to market. The Wall Street Journal reports that the CEO of Verizon Wireless says the company is “working with Google” on a tablet.

But there are few details beyond that. It’s not at all clear whether Google would actually be involved in producing the tablet, or if Verizon is simply hoping to bring a tablet to market running Google’s Android or Chrome operating systems. My money’s kind of on the latter approach. The Wall Street Journal tired to get information on what company would actually manufacturer the tablet, but Verizon declined to comment.

Netbook operating system boots can be in 7 seconds

Posted by admin on May 10, 2010
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Ubuntu is a full-fledged Linux distribution that provides all the tools you’ve come to expect from a desktop operating system, including a web browser, office suite, communication and security features, and the ability to run thousands of third party apps. But like Windows, OS X, or any other desktop operating system, it can take a minute or longer to boot, depending on your hardware.

Ubuntu Light takes just 7 seconds — on a Dell Inspiron Mini 10v, which features the same 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270 processor found in most netbooks released in 2008 and 2009.

What separates Ubuntu Light from Ubuntu is that Canonical designed Ubuntu Light specifically to be a quick-booting operating system. It joints Splashtop, HyperSpace, and other light weight Linux distributions in this space. It isn’t meant to completely replace your primary operating system. Instead, you can load it up on a dual boot system, so you have the choice of loading Ubuntu Light and launching your web browser in just a few seconds, or loading up your full desktop operating system for more resource-intensive tasks.

Here’s one of the most important things you need to know about Ubuntu Light right now: It doesn’t support adding and removing programs. That’s a large part of the reason why the OS can boot so quickly. there’s also no support for file management.

For Ubuntu Light, Canonical redesigned the user interface to focus primarily on the apps that you’ll run most often: A web browser, email client, and maybe a few other apps. The new interface is called Unity, and it basically has an app dock on the side of the screen and a panel at the top. In a blog post, Canonical founder Mark Shuttleworth says that “rather than making it equally easy to access any installed application, we assume that almost everybody will run one of a few apps, and they need to switch between those apps and any others which might be running.”

If the dock looks rather Windows 7-like, that’s because both Microsoft and Canonical were focused on improving the touch experience. You want nice big icons if you expect some users to be poking their fingers a touchscreens to tap them. The app dock and panel together take up much less space than the full-screen program launcher used for Ubuntu Netbook Edition, and Shuttleworth says the goal is to use the new user interface in future versions of Ubuntu Netbook Remix starting in Ubuntu 10.1 which should be released in October.

While Ubuntu Netbook Edition will use the Unity user interface, it will be a full fledged operating system, which means you’ll still be able to install and remove apps.

Ubuntu Light will be available in desktop and netbook editions. The idea is to offer a light-weight, quick-booting version of Ubuntu to PC makers so that they can easily load the operating system side by side with Windows or another operating system — which could substantially boost Ubuntu’s user base.

Canonical says Ubuntu Light is available to OEM’s starting today. It’s not clear at the moment whether a user-installable version will be available in the immediate future.

3G Technology Week – the first mobile phone industry to upgrade cum online business summit of this report

Posted by admin on May 07, 2010
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April 18, from Shenzhen, Ben Wang, China Network and other media-sponsored “3G Technology Week – First Mobile Phone Industry Chain of the opportunities to upgrade cum Internet Summit” in digital culture, Nanshan District, Shenzhen City Industrial Park success, the participants have to from the government related to leadership, the industry’s elite, but also small manufacturers and media companies a total of 200 people, which will explore the mobile industry chain, how to seize the opportunity to 3G the first year of the arrival of a good grasp of the Internet this boom business theme, the participants transition from the mobile phone respectively, cottage this prospect, the cottage of the program development, marketing strategies, etc. were all on the cottage side of the discussions on the development of the industry boost.

 

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