Showing posts with label peripherals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peripherals. Show all posts

WIRELESS SOLAR KEYBOARD

The Logitech Wireless Solar Keyboard K750 measures just 0.33 inches thick, and is designed to re-charge when it is exposed to sun light. Once the keyboard is charged, it can operate for up to three months in total darkness, and it is designed to charge even in areas where there is little light, like the Arctic Circle.
It is available for $80 (Rs 3,600 approx) from logitech.com.

Features
Light-powered keyboard
It doesn’t get more hassle-free than this. This keyboard charges itself whenever there’s light—and stays charged for at least three months in total darkness—so you can say good-bye to battery hassles.

Only 1/3 -inch thick
With sleek lines and a thin profile, this stylish, streamlined keyboard adds style to your workspace—whether you’ve got a laptop or desktop.
 

Hand happiness
Treat your hands right with keys that feel good and make every keystroke comfortable, fluid and whisper-quiet.

Advanced 2.4 GHz wireless
So you can work or play in more places—like your comfy couch—the long-range wireless connection virtually eliminates delays, dropouts and interference.

Logitech Solar App
Want to know how much battery power you have? Or how much power you’re getting from your desk lamp? The Logitech Solar App can help.

Logitech Unifying receiver
The tiny receiver stays in your laptop. Plus, you can easily add a compatible wireless mouse or keyboard—without the hassle of multiple USB receivers.

Plug-and-play simplicity
Setup takes seconds—you simply plug the wireless receiver into a USB port on your computer and start using your keyboard right away without software.

Small steps, bright future
From the PVC-free construction to the fully recyclable box, this keyboard is designed to minimize its footprint.

USB Air Purifier

Someday there will be no gadgets left that cannot be powered by a USB port.  They’ll all be shrunk down and in many cases suddenly be made much more cheaply.  There are times when that’s not necessarily good, but on occasion it makes certain devices very handy.  Like this little air purifier that plugs into your USB port.  It’ll make sure that you get clean air while you’re glued to your computer. Best for all programmers and gamers who stick to their pc for longer time.



This air purifier works by emitting healthy negative ions into the air.  Then by attaching themselves to air molecules and any impure particles in the air it negatively charges them.  This will get rid of toxic substances in the air like odors, dust, mold and hopefully will help to rid you of that sweaty smell coming from the guy with serious pit stains.  Hopefully. 

If you like to buy it you will get

Best headphone brands to have on your system

We will be looking at all the headphone in all the categories as well as price range.


  1. Bose
  2. Logitech
  3. Shure
  4. V-Moda
  5. Sony
  6. Audio-Technica

Aviator Headphones

Skullcandy, known for their rocker and punk-type gadgets, partnered with Roc Nation to produce this Aviator headphones that will surely appeal to teenagers and even to young adults.



Although it feels bulkier then other headphone of its kind, you will see in person that they are actually more portable than they look. You can fold them up to make them appear a bit smaller and easier to carry around anywhere.



Features
  • 20-20kHz frequency response.
  • 650Ohms impedance.
  • 40mW of input power.
  • 100mW of output.
  • 3.5mm gold-plated plug :)



You can expect these headphones to be available in june but the prices are not disclosed as yet.

Dell Comes Up With Phenom II X6 Studio XPS, AMD Notebooks



The Dell Studio XPS with AMD's Phenom II X6
Whew! And we thought it wouldn't land here. AMD's Vision that hit the Americas a few weeks back is hitting us here as well. Those caught between an Intel Core i5 and an AMD Phenom X4, an addiction to more multicore processors, will now have an easier time discerning which will satisfy their desires with the announcement of Dell's Studio XPS 7100. These workstations come with either AMD's Phenom II X6 six-core CPU, or quad core Athlon IIs. Walt Mayo, Vice President and General Manager for Dell Consumer Asia says, “The Studio XPS 7100 desktop, in particular, delivers a seamless experience for multitasking entertainment activities and multimedia creation.”
Here are some of the specs you can expect this to come with:
  • Oversized 460-watt power supply to support future expansion and hardware upgrades including AMD 125W class CPUs and 225W class graphics.
  • Up to 16GB of fast DDR3 dual-channel memory.
  • Up to 4TB (terabytes)of hard drive storage.
  • Premium integrated ports include, eSATA, Optical SPDIF and HDMI for more digital connections.
  • Integrated 19-in-one media card reader and SATA 6GB for higher speed disk transfer of HD media.
Dell Studio XPS 7100 Specs
Processor and Chipset AMD Six-Core and Quad-Core processors up to 125W TDP
AMD RS785/SB710
Operating System Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-Bit
Genuine Windows 7 Professional 64-Bit
Genuine Windows 7 Ultimate 64-Bit
Memory 2GB up to 16GB memory configurations with DDR3 1333 MHz Dual Channel SDRAM (Support for 1GB, 2GB, 4GB DIMMs)
Graphics Integrated ATI Radeon HD4200 Graphics
ATI Radeon HD 5450 1GB
ATI Radeon HD 5770 1GB DDR5 or ATI Radeon HD 5870 1GB DDR5
Audio and Speakers Integrated 7.1 with THX TruStudio up to Creative PCI Express
Sound Blaster X-Fi Xtreme Audio
Hard Drives SATA HDD options from 320GB up to optional 1.5TB (2TB post RTS) single, 7,200 RPM (2) 3.5" HDD Bays
Optical Drives 16x DVD+/-RW, Blu-ray Disc Combo Drive, Blu-ray Disc Burner
Dual Configurations: Blu-ray DiscTM burner + 16x DVD+/-RW, Blu-ray Disc Combo Drive + 16x DVD+/-RW
Communications Integrated 10/100/1000
Optional 802.11n WiFi
Optional Bluetooth
Port Top Ports
USB 2.0 (2)
Headphone port
Microphone / Line-in port
Front Ports
USB 2.0 (2)
19-in-1 Media Card Reader
Rear Ports
USB 2.0 (4)
eSATA (1)
HDMI (1)
Gigabit Ethernet Connection
SPIDIF
Standard 7.1 Audio Jacks
DVI
Expansion Slots PCIe x16 (1)
PCIe x1 (2)
PCI (1)
SATA (4)
Chassis and Case Micro-ATX (Mini-Tower)
Dimensions & Weight
Height: 16.02" (407.75 mm)
Width: 7.31" (185.81 mm)
Depth:17.9" (454.67mm)
Weight: 22.4 lbs (10.18 kg)
Power 460 Watts
Security Cable lock chassis security slot
Drive Bays Two 5.25"
One 3.5" FlexBay
Two 3.5" hard drive bays (Internally accessible)
Pricing of the Phenom X6 II model at the Dell Studio XPS website starts at US $1,428.99, which is about PhP 65,000 at 45:1 exchange rate.

The Dell Inspiron M301z
They've also got the ultra-light 13.3-inch Inspiron M301z and comes with an AMD Turion II Neo K625 II low-voltage processor, an ATi Mobility Radeon HD 4200 GPU, up to 640GB hard drive space, and a maximum of 8GB of memory capacity. Those looking for a quad core on a notebook will find it in the Dell Inspiron M501R, a 15.6-inch model featuring an AMD Phenom II Quad-Core CPU, a choice of ATI Mobility Radeon integrated or discreet GPU, and up to 640GB of hard disk space and 8GB of memory.

The Dell Inspiron M501z

The Arrival of the Warmouse




A mouse is a fairly simple technological animal. It's got a left and right button, allows you to point at specific parts of your screen and click to achieve certain desired effects. But with the advent of the Warmouse, you're going to have more than just two buttons - in fact, try about eighteen.

The Warmouse was designed by an avid game designer fed up with the limited options of the two button mouse, which is best served with first person shooting (FPS) games rather than massively multiplayer online role playing (MMORPG) games or real time strategy games (RTS). Possibly named in part for the popular World of Warcraft series, the Warmouse seeks to address not only gamers' need, but also many other non-gaming applications that would benefit from it.

With the Warmouse, you can assign any application function to any of the mouse buttons and execute them in either clicks or double-clicks, using the Meta Modware. The joystick function allows you to transform 20 commands of a keyboard to one swipe of the mouse, offering better functionality without the need to even take your hand off the mouse.

Here's a list of games and applications now compatible with the Warmouse.




Features of warmouse
  • 18 programmable mouse buttons with double-click functionality.
  • High-resolution laser sensoraround 100 to 5,600 DPI/CPI. 
  • 6 assignable button modes
  • Analog X-box 360-style joystick.
  • Click able and command-assignable scroll wheel.
  • 512k of flash memory holding up to 3,072 application commands in 64 modes.
  • Three on-the-fly CPI settings per mode. Maximum 192 different on-the-fly CPI settings.
  • 1.85 meter USB cable and coated rubber top.
  • Meta Modeware for the creation, management, and customization of game and application modes.
  • Import and export of custom modes.
  • PDF export of application modes.
  • Graphical pop-up map of current button assignments.
  • Statistical tracking of all mouse button clicks and application command clicks by application.
  • 64 default modes for popular games and applications, including Mozilla Firefox and Thunderbird, Microsoft Outlook, Word, and Excel, OpenOffice.org Writer, Calc etc.

Logitech's Newest Gimmick: 360 Degree Sounds



These are available in the country by the way. Two new speakers have been revealed to us by Logitech: the Logitech Z523 and the Z323 multimedia speakers priced at PhP 4,750 and PhP 2,650 respectively. Both are 2.1 systems and feature downward firing woofers and are made to be used for any system, PC or home theatre, or even with digital audio and video players. Logitech promises to give you a 360 degree experience.





The speakers are set up in such a way that they deliver omnidirectional acoustics to create a substantially wider sweet spot, which they say is helpful if you constantly move computer around but your audio system just sticks to one place. Technically speaking, you should be able to get the same sound quality even if you face these speakers away from you since Logitech says that there's an additional speaker driver facing backwards for each of the sattelites.



The Logitech Z323 Speaker System
The Z323 offers 30 watts of RMS power while the Z523 offers a little more oomph at 50 watts. No remotes here by the way, the speaker volume control's located at one of the speaker itself. There's RCA and a stereo 3.5mm jack input to choose from. Great if you're running on two sources, but don't turn both of them on unless you're just out to make some noise.

Genius' LuxeMate T810 Keyboard Lets You Channel Surf



Impressive looking keyboard we've got here. The LuxeMate T810 from Genius is a 3-in-1 device, hosting the mouse and a media center remote control in one wireless gizmo. The mouse is in the form of Genius'

OptoTouch, which is essentially a digital trackpad - this also supports four way scrolling, too. It works well with the Media Center Edition of Windows XP along with Vista (...and Windows 7?). Wireless is trasmitted in the 2.4GHz range and can go up to 10 meters without any interferences. It's also got shortcuts to frequently accessed media activities like live TV, tv recording, photos, videos, and music enjoyment.




The left media controls.
To be honest, we like the idea, and the transparent body and the rubberized coating is pretty cool. We think you can fly an X-Wing or Tie Fighter with this one. It's priced at PhP 3,370 by the way, up there with Microsoft's own keyboards.


MSI-ECS: Trade In Your Mouse For A 30% Discount On The Arc Mouse


Microsoft Arc Mouse promo by MSI-ECS

How Mac fans wish this was the Apple Magic Mouse instead... we can't win them all. The Arc laser mouse is a pretty good deal in itself being a novel wireless mouse with its own key selling points, namely, the lighter weight and foldable design and a longer battery life. In fact, it's made more appealing now that you can trade in any working or non-working mouse for one with a 30% discount on the SRP price which is around PhP 3,000, so that runs to about PhP 2,100 that you'll shell out for this mouse. Full details after the break!

Now that MSI-ECS's promo got your attention, they're only available to one per customer, and it's exclusive to Silicon Valley branches in Megamall and SM North Edsa only. The promotion runs from June 23, 2010 up until July 31, 2010. You've got a little over a month to make room in your budget.


Press Release

MSI-ECS, the exclusive distributor of Microsoft Hardware in the Philippines, is rolling out a promo on one of Microsoft's most revolutionary products---the Arc Mouse.

Tired of your old mouse? Trade it in, and get a new Microsoft Arc Mouse at 30% OFF! All we need is your old mouse of any brand (including Microsoft) in exchange of a whopping 30% discount. All old mice will be accepted for trade-in, working or non-working.

Trade-in will be on a one-to-one basis. This promo is exclusive to Silicon Valley store branches in SM Megamall and SM North Edsa only. This promo will run from June 23 to July 31, 2010.

Why should you trade in your old mouse for a new Arc Mouse?

Because the Arc Mouse is unlike anything you've ever seen before. Aptly called "Arc", the device has the sleek and sexy contours of an arc. The Arc Mouse is a full sized mouse but with a folding feature. Folding it reduces its size by more than a third, making this mouse portable and very travel-friendly.

Microsoft Arc mouse features 2.4 GHz with 30 feet wireless range capability. The wireless USB micro-transceiver connects wirelessly right out of the box with virtually no interference.

Microsoft Arc Mouse features 4 customizable buttons which allow quick access to the media, programs, and files you use most often, as well as a Windows Flip function which enables you to easily switch between open windows with the click of a button.

In addition, the Arc Mouse also has longer battery life compared to others, lasting up to 6 months. A battery status LED Indicator glows red when the battery is running low.

Microsoft hardware is exclusively distributed in the Philippines by MSI-ECS. For more product information and other inquiries, email marketing@msi-ecs.com.ph, visit www.msi-ecs.com.ph, or call 688-3180/688-3181.

Zotac's GTX 480 AMP! Edition Comes With Death Adders


Zotac GTX 480 AMP! Limited Edition with Razer DeathAdder Mouse

The Zotac GTX 480 AMP! Limited Edition with The Bundled Razer DeathAdder Mouse

Sounds like some cheesy boss name the Japs thought of - the SEGA and PC classic Golden Axe came into mind actually - but we're talking of a mice from its name alone, suggests in helping its wielder claim more heads, frags and gibs to add to his leaderboard score. We're talking of the just arrived 5-button, 3500 DPI, left-hander friendly, 3.5G Razer Precision infrared sensor-equipped Razer DeathAdder mouse. Makes perfect sense to bundle with Zotac's GTX 480 AMP! - overclocked - Limited Edition graphics card.

I think we're already quite familiar with the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 480, so let's take it from what Zotac's version brings to the table: 756MHz vs. 700MHz core clock speeds, 1512MHz vs. 1401MHz processor clock speeds, 3800MHz vs. 3696MHz memory clock speeds, 480 CUDA cores, 1536MB GDDR5 memory, dual 92mm silent high performance fans with one intimidating heatsink. Interfaces are standard coming with dual dual-link DVIs and one mini HDMI 1.3a-capable port.

We suppose we missed out a little more on the subtle yet important details of the DeathAdder mouse that could mean the difference between your headshot or someone else's. The mouse has a 1000Hz ultrapolling with a 1ms response time, so that makes mouse-lag, a not valid excuse for missing your target. There's on-the-fly sensitivity adjustment, negating mouse speed issues. There are 5 independently programmable Hyper Response buttons along with the non-slip texture on the mouse, zero-accoustic Ultrastick Teflon feet pads, gold plated USB connectors, 16-bit ultra-wide data path, 60-120 inches per second and 15g of acceleration, and 7-foot lightweight, braided fiber cable. Everything works for you if you're one kick arse player, or against you if you're a sore loser, so make sure you don't belong to the latter.

With a little luck you may not really need such a mouse, but heck, whoever said these things were a need? They're definitely a want, and perfect if you're looking at getting both the DeathAdder and an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 480 GPU.

A-DATA's Ultra Slim USB Drive Looks Chewy


A-DATA C003 Flash Disk Drive

7.5mm. That's how thin the C003 flash drive from A-DATA is. This stick's available from 2GB to 32GB in capacity and is available in strawberry red and lavender blue. The USB interface port is a slide-on mechanism and what makes this product catchy is really its cute, edgeless design. Simply put, it doesn't look crappy. The large cellphone strap holder's also cool and I wouldn't mind having one of these on my phone, unless it's a 32GB stick, then that might be one reason kleptos might want to get their hands on your USB drive.

Press Release

ADATA Launched Ultra-Slim USB Flash Drive C003

Shaping your taste in simplicity

Taipei, Taiwan June 14th --, 2010 - ADATA Technology, the world leader in DRAM modules and flash memory products, today unveiled its latest skinny frame C003 USB flash drive with merely 7.5 mm in thickness. With the advanced technology facilitates C003 in a super miniaturized size and only 10 grams in weight.

Storing in extremely slim with portable design

With the ultra-compact size and light weight, users can easily enjoy transfer experience anytime, anywhere at their precious moment. Apart from its ultra-slim size, C003 generates all practical functions from classic USB flash drives as its three hallmarks: Compact size, easy operation and price- wise. Meanwhile, the C003 is conveniently designed with a strap hole so that users could make it as a decoration or accessory hooking on to a keychain or a mobile phone. Featuring cute strawberry red and sparkling lavender blue in C003 conveys an animate impression and lasting brand value to customers through these two highly saturated colors. Hot plug-and-play ready and available in 2GB~32 GB, the C003 serves more than just a storage device but also a unique taste for fashion. C003 is born to blend a functional device into a trendy accessory with its simplicity.

About ADATA

ADATA Technology, the world’s 2nd largest vendor of DRAM Modules (iSuppli, May 2009), 4th largest of USB Flash Drives (Gartner, May 2009), and the Top 20 global brand in Taiwan, provides complete memory solutions, including DRAM Modules, USB Flash Drives, Memory Cards, Solid State Drives and Portable Hard Drives. Committed to constant innovation, A-DATA delivers first-rate quality and industry-leading product performance to worldwide customers. Widely known for its distinctive design, A-DATA products are internationally recognized by Germany’s iF Design Award, Reddot Award, CES Best of Innovations Award, Japan’s Good Design Award, Best Choice of Computex Award, and Taiwan Excellence Gold Award. For more information, please visit our website at www.adata-group.com.

ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT Tablet Netbook


The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook

Last week, we covered the ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT in one of our unboxing jobs and found it to be an intriguing contender to Lenovo's IdeaPad S10 3T and to a certain extent, the emerging Pad computers that are set to appear in the following months. It may sound like an apples vs. oranges comparison, but if it's going against the iPad, it's going by a long shot in some aspects. But that comparison's not our primary concern here. We'll examine the EeePC Touch to see how it fares as a tablet computer – if its tablet functionality is merely just another frill, or if it offers enhanced usability as a whole.

ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT

The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook


The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook

Design: Classy Masculine Appeal


The design of the ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT actually reminds us of previous subnotebook molds that appeared at least a decade ago. These were squarish, rectangular computers that in themselves, were appealing, considering their small form factor. This EeePC Touch is made classy by the touch of brushed chrome-like accent on the hinge edge while the softened corners and matte black finish rounds up the final effect of the EeePC. That's what the T101MT is all about – playing with an all black design with varying finishes and chrome-like accents.

Opening the netbook, we're greeted by a chiclet keyboard similarly found in other recent EeePC models, a 10.1-inch touchscreen LCD, chrome accents on various parts of the EeePC like the stylus, the power pull switch, the Touch Gate hotkey, the webcam outline, and the trackpad keys. If you look closely, there's almost if not any hard corners to be found on any of the notebook's main parts. We like the added effect of the status lights on the chrome material on the top cover of the EeePC, which makes us say these are faux yet convincing classy finishing touches.

Like other EeePC models, there's no clip for the lid, and the top lid's only held in place by the snapping hinge neck and the two rubber nubs on the keyboard side that fit with their female partners on the lid side. The lid's only designed to twist clockwise and counterclockwise to transform to tablet mode and back. And since it uses a single hinge, the screen can actually lean back just a bit more than 180 degrees.

We like how the interface ports are laid out on the T101MT, having most of them at the rear and leaving only the most useful ones, namely the audio jacks, the card reader, and a single USB port on the left and right sides.

The battery's also located at the front side by the palm rest underneath, which is a tad unconventional to the typical rear slot-in design.


The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook

Highlights: A Netbook With A Twist


The EeePC Touch T101MT isn't too different compared to other netbooks around. In fact, if we take out the touch screen, it's but a typical netbook of the 2010 era, using defacto standard netbook components like the Intel Atom N450 1.66GHz processor and the integrated Intel HD Graphics on-chip graphics processor, the NM10 chipset. It comes with only 1GB of memory (which is still expandable as we'll see later), 160GB of hard disk space, Atheros AR9285 Wi-Fi b/g/n wireless networking, 10/100 Ethernet LAN, and no built-in Bluetooth module. A built-in 1.3 megapixel webcam and microphone's also installed.

As we've mentioned earlier, the set up of the ports is different, in that only the most useful ones are kept on the left and right profiles while the rest of the ports are on the rear. There's a total of 3 USB ports, a VGA output port, an Ethernet port, a power port, a kensington lock port, two standard I/O audio ports, and a multi card reader on the unit. The card reader can read SDXC capable by the way, supporting up to 2TB cards. Stereo speakers are situated on the front profile, and only the audio ports and a card reader are set on the left profile, while a single USB port is present on the right.

The T101MT is multi touch ready, coming with a multitouch trackpad and a multitouch ready touchscreen. We say multitouch ready for the latter because this can only be used with Windows 7 Home Premium and above. Only Windows 7 Starter Edition comes pre-installed.


The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook

Usability: Touch Panel Ease


The T101MT is still technically a netbook no matter how we look at it, so you can expect it to perform and work like one. Likewise, the chiclet keyboard and touchpad feels like those of seashell EeePC designs. The keyboard's comfortable enough to work with despite the cramped dimensions of the form factor. The touchpad's generously sized, enough to be comfortable enough to use. The choice of setting up the interfaces also enhance the user friendliness of the netbook, especially in tablet mode. The multi touch features of the screen and the trackpad are among the key selling points of this unit, and while the multitouch trackpad works as expected, the touchscreen, as earlier mentioned, is handicapped by Windows 7 Starter Edition. Again, an upgrade is necessary for the multitouch features to be enabled. Even with a single touch functionality, it's still responsive to use. To fully appreciate the touch functionality offered, you may want to resort to using applications or add ons that supports hand grabbing, like the hand tool for Internet Explorer 8 and Adobe Acrobat Reader 8.

We like how easy it is to just twist and snap the screen from netbook to tablet mode and vice versa, and we like how the metallicstylus is designed to be easily accessible. The Touch Gate shortcut's a good way to access some of the most useful features of the computer in tablet mode, but it's limited in that you can't put your own shortcuts into the application. The time to hold the button to toggle screen rotation's also a tad too long for us as we see it as a useful function that will be frequently used. We also like the added function shortcuts added to access the Task Manager and cycle through the Eee Super Hybrid Engine modes.

If 1GB isn't enough, there's an empty SODIMM slot for easily upgrading this netbook's memory to 3GB using a 2GB stick.

It's also slightly heavier by a few hundred grams compared to a seashell EeePC by the way, weighing at about 1.3 kilos. It does feel heftier, and in a good way, you feel assured that it's not a cheap lightweight plastic product. On the other hand, it's added weight may affect the way you use it as a tablet.


The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook

Performance: A Typical 2010 Netbook


As expected, performance of this notebook closely follows other Atom N450-based netbook designs. PCMark Vantage gave it an overall rating of 1165 marks, while it obtained 290 3DMarks for 2005, and 153 3DMarks for 2006. Nothing too surprising these figures. Practically speaking, we didn't sense anything sluggish about the T101MT with regular use. When playing videos, expect it to be able to play 720p HD content without problems unless your bitrate's set to very high. As for 1080p full HD videos, it was able to play them, but we noticed the video playback stuttered for a couple of seconds, skipping every 15 to 25 second of smooth playback.

The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook Windows Experience Index

Windows Experience Index

The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook PCMark Vantage score

PCMark Vantage scores

The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook 3DMark05 score

3DMark 2005 scores

The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook 3DMark06 score

3DMark 2006 scores

Battery life performance was pretty good, though not the longest lasting of the EeePC family. On idle and power saving mode with the display set with the lowest brightness and to not to turn off automatically, it lasted us 6 hours and 25 minutes before the critical battery alarm set off. If you're reading eBooks with such settings, you can reasonably expect it to last this long. When we set the notebook to high performance and playback 720p HD videos off the hard drive, it lasted us 3 hours and 14 minutes, again, before the alarm set off and the netbook had to hibernate. This should be enough for sitting through the God Father or two relatively short movies while on a plane ride.


The ASUS EeePC Touch T101MT tablet netbook

Costs: Competitive Offering


This netbook's priced at about PhP 26,900, which is a few thousand bucks cheaper than the Lenovo S10 3T tablet netbook. It's a netbook at the mid range level, slightly leaning towards the higher end of the scale. Looking down at the price chain, we've got PhP 20,000 to PhP 25,000 netbooks with very similar specs and performance from the likes of Acer, HP, and Samsung, with perhaps the only serious competitor in terms speed is MSI's Wind12 U230. Looking up the price ladder, there's the likes of the Lenovo, Sony, and maybe even a grey market iPad. How does it fare? It's priced just about right, and we don't expect touchscreen netbooks to come cheaper in products of known brands like ASUS anyway.

.

Specifications

ASUS Eee PC Touch T101MT tablet netbook
CPU Intel Atom N450 1.66GHz
Graphics Intel GMA 3150
Display 10.1″ LED Backlight WSVGA (1024×600) LCD
Memory 1GB (2GB with Home Premium version) DDR2 SO-DIMM
Storage 2.5″ 160GB SATA2 HDD 5400rpm (320GB with Home Premium version) + 500GB ASUS WebStorage
Wireless Connectivity WLAN 802.11b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR (Optional)
Battery Slim and eco-friendly Li-polymer battery, up to 6 hours
Webcam Yes, 0.3 megapixels
Audio Codec Hi-Definition Audio CODEC
Audio Output Headphone-out, Stereo Speakers
Microphone Mic-in, Built-in Digital Array Mic
Interface 1 x VGA Connector, 3 x USB 2.0, 1 x LAN RJ-45, 2 x Audio Jack (Headphone / Mic-in), MMC/SD/SDHC/SDXC Card Reader
Operating System Microsoft Windows 7 Starter Edition (Home Premium comes as another version)
Dimensions / Weight 264 x 181 x 31mm / 1.3kg
Colors Black and White

KINGMAX KE-91 2.5-inch Portable Hard Disk Drive


The Kingmax KE-91 Portable External HDD

In our recent unboxing of the KE-91 external pocketable hard drive, we've again learned how fast things move in the industry of electronics and computers. Survival, growth and success means innovating, moving, or changing one's product lines here, and in pursuit of that, we have the first external hard drive product from Kingmax. Will this mean a new era of success for the brand? Their product will tell us how serious they are about these new directions they are undertaking.

Kingmax KE-91 External HDD Kingmax KE-91 External HDD Kingmax KE-91 External HDD Kingmax KE-91 External HDD

The Kingmax KE-91 Portable External HDD


Kingmax KE-91 2.5-inch Portable External HDD

Design & Highlights: An Exec's Taste


We're not too crazy about boxy designs when it comes to our USB hard drives, but if done right, the effect would still be appealing to the eye. The Kingmax KE-91 is just that. It looks simply like any other portable USB hard drive, but makes use of design and good materials to attract one's attention. It uses minimal softened curves for its corners and edges, save for the edges where the metallic body encases the KE-91. The metallic jacket, so to speak, is one of the things we find to be quite attractive with this product. The texture and appearance seems to be that of quality Teflon kitchenware material. It's lustrous yet not glossy, and smudges don't stick to it. The sides are of black glossy plastic, and in our experience, while getting fingerprints on this part may not be entirely avoidable, the material is at least easy to clean, and hint scratches are only made. The USB 2.0 interface is located on the edge of one side of the KE-91, which is another interesting design choice, and we'll see why later.

There is a blue status light indicator on the unit, and it's situated on the top profile close to the USB 2.0 port. We found the USB port to be a very tight fit as if locking the cable's end once connected, so one will have to be careful with disconnecting the two. There is a fairly large warranty sticker on side of the product. This may be a put off for some who like seeing and feeling more of their product than warranty stickers. At least it's been well and cleanly installed.


Kingmax KE-91 2.5-inch Portable External HDD

Usability: Extended Features via Software


The KE-91 follows the form factor of numerous 2.5-inch external hard drives out there – it's small enough to be carried around with ease and fashionable enough to be touted around. The bundled leatherette case is also a nice touch, and a tight fit for the KE-91. It's also designed to add a little flair to the product, and also allow the user to access the USB port of the drive without having to remove it from the case. The tight USB interface on the drive isn't exactly our preference, but it could work for some users. Pulling the connector head out may require some care.

Aside from the obvious noted above, there are a couple of tools pre-installed that makes this drive more useful: PC CloneEX Lite, SecureDriveEX2, and TurboHDD USB, all from Taiwanese software R&D developer Fnet. The KE-91 includes registered versions of the TurboHDD USB and SecureDriveEX2. PC CloneEX Lite is a software that takes care of backing up your personal data for you. It can backup selectively or the entire drive, including the Windows and Program Files directories. What's special about this program is that it allows you to restore your system by booting directly from the USB storage drive that PC CloneEX Lite works with and can immediately perform recovery – especially useful when your PC's Windows installation somehow screws up.

TurboHDD USB is yet another very useful application that quite literally boosts your file transfers between other devices and the Kingmax KE-91 USB hard drive. It looks like it's designed to only work with the KE-91 and the program needs to run in the background, set to Turbo mode before users can see immediate effect in transfer speeds. We'll touch on the performance of this drive with and without this in the next section.


Kingmax KE-91 2.5-inch Portable External HDD

Performance: Boosted by TurboHDD USB


In terms of speed, expect typical performance similar to other branded USB 2.0 devices. The KE-91 we have here uses a 2.5-inch hard drive by TOSHIBA with the model MK3265GSX, which according to Toshiba, is a 5400RPM drive with SATA 3.0Gbps interface and 8MB cache. Transferring extremely files nets us about an average of 28MB/s actual transfer rate according to Windows 7, excluding the USB overhead. However, we got huge gains when we used the specially bundled TurboHDD USB software. Transfer burst speed went up to 50MB/s and averaged out between 40 to 44MB/s, and that's excluding the minimized USB overhead. The added performance is impressive and quite useful while we wait out USB 3.0 to become the new de facto standard. We've subjected the KE-91 to several hard drive tests with and without the TurboHDD software to see how it fares:

HyperGear Bench
CPU Intel Core i5-750 2.66GHz
Cooler Standard
Motherboard Gigabyte GA-P55A-UD3P
Memory G.Skill Trident 2x 2GB 2000MHz @ 1333MHz
Graphics Zotac GeForce 8800GTS
Hard Drive Samsung Spinpoint 1TB (32MB Cache)
Optical Drive LG GH20LS10 Super Multi Drive
Power Supply Cougar CM Power 700W

ATTO Disk Benchmark 2.46

Kingmax KE-91 ATTO Disk Benchmark

ATTO gave us expected results, though a little slower than what Windows 7 has reported. Hard drive performance is obviously bottlenecked by the USB 2.0 interface. Without TurboHDD USB, the drive performs up to about 24MB/s read and write operations, and up to 35MB/s with it enabled.

CrystalDiskMark 2.2

Kingmax KE-91 CrystalDiskMark Benchmark

CrystalDiskMark shows us read and write results consistent with what ATTO benchmark tells us. The drive can do up to about 24 to 25MB/s in read and write performance without TurboHDD USB, and about 35MB/s with the utility enabled.

PCMark Vantage 1.0.2 x64

Kingmax KE-91 PCMark Vantage Benchmark

PCMark Vantage's HDD Suite gave the the KE-91 a score a little over 2000 points. If you notice the difference between the two tests – one with and without TurboHDD USB, you'd notice that the drive was able to perform better without the software acceleration utility, but only marginally so. The benefits of TurboHDD USB outweigh the very minimal performance hit that this suite shows, but if you're concerned about it, TurboHDD can be set to normal speed while you're not doing large file transfers with the KE-91.


Kingmax KE-91 2.5-inch Portable External HDD

Cost: Up to Par Pricing


With a price of about US $80 for a 320GB Kingmax KE-91 in the Internet and PhP 3,180 (or PhP 4,180 for the 500GB model) at CD-R King, this drive looks competitively priced against its competitors. In this already mature market, there's only so much manufacturers and marketers can do to make their product stand out. We can say however, that Kingmax's first attempt into external storage products is a step forward and in the right direction. We've pointed out the pros and cons about this product, and given that, we believe they've managed to get the KE-91 up to par with its competitors, including its price and value added softwares bundles.

Kingmax KE-91 Specifications
Capacity 320GB / 500GB
Interface SATA (HDD) / USB 2.0 via mini USB
Compatibility Microsoft Windows 2000 / XP / Vista / Mac OS 9.x and 10.x or higher(FAT32 format only) / Linux 2.4 or higher (FAT32 format only)
Bundled Software SecureDrive EX2 / PCClone Ex lite / TurboHDD USB
Colors Red / Gray / Black
Dimensions / Weight 114 x 75 x 12 mm / 170g

HyperGear Award

Overall: 9.0

For a first hard drive product, the KE-91 shows us that Kingmax is serious in making its mark and succeeding in this industry. It's priced, designed, and bundled well enough to become an attractive option for buyers looking for a portable external hard drive. It's competitive against the competition if we compare it by the spec sheet and what we get out of it, but it may take some time for the brand to become mature and accepted in this market in the face of already established brands. It's a product deserving of attention and worthwhile to check out.

Design: 8.5

It's a very clean drive and we love the metallic texture Kingmax has chosen for the KE-91.

Highlights: 9.0

The bundled software and the leatherette casing does give the product a slight edge over the competition.

Usability: 8.5

Again, the bundled software is definitely a plus. The design of the product and the complementing leatherette casing makes this drive quite attractive to carry around and use without having to take off the casing.

Performance: 9.0

Performance is up to par with other drives with the USB 2.0 understandably being the only bottleneck here. The bundled TurboHDD USB software does make an interesting case for this product, being able to boost the performance as advertised.

Cost: 8.5

Competitive pricing that brings good value to the table.

NVIDIA At Computex 2010: Tablets, DX11 and 3D PCs


NVIDIA Computex 2010

Jumping ahead of the official opening of Computex 2010, NVIDIA's impressed us with their own experience tent, in which they took everything they've got and showcased the way their goods are meant to be played with. The audience - members of the technology press were treated to a larger-than-life 3D cinema experience. NVIDIA head honcho co-founder, President, and CEO Jen-Hsun Huang talked about the focus of NVIDIA on this year's Computex: Tablet computers, Direct X 11, and the 3D experience for your PC. He also believed that the enhanced 3D experience is the future and NVIDIA is there to bring that experience to its users. We didn't see tablet PCs in the NVIDIA Experience Center. But that's not all there is to this launch. More details after the break!

NVIDIA Computex 2010

NVIDIA head honcho co-founder, President, and CEO Jen-Hsun Huang gave his keynote address to the global tech press.

Computex 2010 also marks the official release of the GeForce GTX 465, the "entry-level" card offered by NVIDIA that yet delivers the full Direct X 11 experience. In fact, the NDA of this card was shifted from June 1 to May 31st. This card has a target suggested retail price of US $279 and is now available with NVIDIA's add-in partners, system builders and OEM makers, so expect this to hit the shelves and your favorite pre-built PCs soon if not now. Instead of 16, this GPU has 11 tessellation units. It has 352 CUDA cores, shader and core clocks running at 1,215MHz and 607MHz respectively, and has a 1GB DDR5 memory with a 256-bit bandwidth and a clock speed of 3,206MHz. It's main competitor is ATI's Radeon HD5850 GPU.

NVIDIA Computex 2010

NVIDIA on Computex 2010 is summarized here.

NVIDIA Computex 2010

A little break for you guys.

Another news that marked affirmation of Microsoft's rather young Silverlight technology is its new streaming 3D video capabilities. This was the larger than life 3D experience NVIDIA demonstrated recently, which they streamed the music video "We Are The World" in 3D. Microsoft's IIS Smooth Streaming technology was used for this demo. Basically, to experience 3D Vision-based content, consumers will only need an NVIDIA 3D Vision desktop or notebook with the latest 3D Vision drivers and Silverlight plug-in.

NVIDIA Computex 2010 - the ASUS G51Jx-EE

The first notebook with the 3D glasses transmitter built in.

Do expect NVIDIA's 3D PC slogan to hit your computer shops soon, since this is the new "in" thing they are promoting. 3D PC is dubbed as a new PC category debuted by NVIDIA at Computex with the help of its partners like Alienware, ASUS, Dell, Microsoft, Toshiba, and others. So what makes a 3D PC? Here are the minimum requirements:

  • Includes a pair of 3D active-shutter glasses (like the 3D Vision Kit from NVIDIA), the only solution to provide full resolution 3D to each eye.
  • A 120Hz 3D-capable display in the form of a desktop LCD monitor, a 3D projector, a 3D TV, or a notebook PC with an integrated 3D-capable LCD.
  • A discrete graphics processor (like a GeForce GPU from NVIDIA) that is capable of delivering high definition imagery to the 3D display.

NVIDIA Computex 2010 - the Fermi GPU chip

And the magic starts here.

Check out the various NVIDIA Experience videos we've taken at the tent:

NVIDIA 3DTV Play


Showing how the 3DTV Play works with any 3D TV from popular brands (correction over the voice-over - the glasses aren't NVIDIA's since this is an NVIDIA 3DTV Play solution).

NVIDIA ION


In this corner, we can see NVIDIA's ION graphics platform put into work in mini thin-client computers from various partners.


NVIDIA demonstrates the various netbooks and all in one computers powered by their ION graphics platform.

NVIDIA Optimus


There are a healthy number of notebooks on NVIDIA's Optimus technology. Here are some of them. Even the MacBook made its way into the NVIDIA Experience Center. Combine this with Intel's upcoming ultra low power Core i5's and we're set for notebooks running for 8 hours or more straight!

NVIDIA 3D Vision Surround


A live demonstration of how NVIDIA's 3D Vision surround plays like on a game like Need For Speed Shift. Details and resolution are already maxed out on all monitors. The computer shown

is running on GTX480s on SLI.


This one shows what the cockpit looks like on a triple display set up.

NVIDIA Computex 2010 - the Fermi GPU

The NVIDIA GeForce GTX480

NVIDIA Computex 2010 - The streaming 3D experience

The audience in a mini auditorium at the NVIDIA Experience Center. Little did they know about the streaming 3D demonstration that was about to thrill them

NVIDIA Computex 2010 - Jen Hsun with Murray Vince of Microsoft

NVIDIA boss Jen Hsun chats up Murray Vince, General Manager of OEM Engineering and Strategy at Microsoft, about their Silverlight technology and NVIDIA's 3D streaming tech.

NVIDIA Computex 2010 - Jen Hsun with Alice Chang of CyberLink

Jen Hsun with CyberLink's CEO, Alice H Chang on the matter of 3D Blu-ray playback.