Posts Tagged ‘7’

ExoPC Windows 7 Slate up for pre-order in the US

December 19th, 2010

It’s been a few months since the ExoPC slate computer went up for order in Canada, but it’s just this weekend that the company launched pre-orders in the US. The Microsoft Store is taking pre-orders for the tablet for $699.

For that price, you get a tablet with an 11.6 inch, 1366 x 768 pixel display, Intel Atom N450 CPU, 64GB solid state disk, 2GB of RAM and Windows 7 Home Premium. Oh yeah, it also has a custom user interface which is designed to make Windows easier to navigate using your fingertips.

I happen to have a demo unit on my desk, but it will probably be a little while before I get around to a full review, because ExoPC let me know the company is pushing out a major software update soon… and another in January. While I probably won’t wait for the second update (which will include a custom on-screen keyboard that looks like it could be an excellent alternative to Microsoft’s), I do at least want to spend some time using the new software before passing judgment.

What I can tell you right now is that the ExoPC has excellent build quality, a very responsive screen, and reasonably well thought-out software. Unfortunately, like most Windows slates I’ve tested, it doesn’t have stellar battery life. I’ve only been able to get about 3.5 hours or less of run time so far.

If you’re interested in pre-ordering, Engadget reports that the tablet will begin shipping in about a week. It should also be available in Microsoft’s retail stores.

Source:-http://liliputing.com/2010/12/exopc-windows-7-slate-up-for-pre-order-in-the-us.html

HP finally announces Windows 7 powered HP Slate 500

October 24th, 2010

California based HP finally made it official that it will be launching Windows 7 based HP Slate 500. The device was long expected after Microsoft CEO unveiled the tablet computer in CES 2010 in Las Vega Nevada. At one point rumor started to spread the Hardware Manufacturer has killed the tablet device. HP recently announced that it will mainly focus on WebOS operating system which it became the HP property after the company acquired Palm. Regardless of all rumors, it is now official and confirmed that HP Slate 500 is coming soon.
HP Slate 500 is not just a test of HP as a tablet computer maker. The device will also be used to test Windows 7 operating system for tablet devices. HP Slate 500 is one of the few high profile Windows 7 powered tablets.
HP Slate will be sold for $799. The device will come with HP Slate Digital Pen [stylus], HP Slate Dock, and HP Slate Portfolio [case]. HP Slate will be available for purchase though HP Web Store.

Source:-http://www.morningcity.com/mc/featured/10084142.htm

Google Chrome 7 Beta version launched

October 4th, 2010

Setting the ante higher in the web browser wars is Googles latest version of its Chrome browser, the Chrome 7 web browser. This latest new edition, though still in the beta state, has a faster and improved Google Instant search.

Chrome 7 web browser has full hardware support for 2D and WebGL 3D graphics. Also hinted is the improved applets integration into the browser like never before. This can be guessed by looking at the revised log code.

Now, Google Chrome Labs inclusion in the browser aims at making it easier for testers to use new features and test them, using about:labs command through the Omnibox, ditching the command line method that was complicated and very clumsy.

Source:-http://www.littleabout.com/Techno/google-chrome-7-beta,98389.html

Dell 7 Tablet PC is Weeks Away company

September 30th, 2010

A representative for Dell, the world’s third largest maker of personal computers, said in an interview that the company’s slate-type personal computer with 7” screen would be available in the following weeks. In addition, there will be a 10” and 3” models.

“Dell will launch its seven-inch tablet in the next few weeks and a 10” tablet within 6-12 months,” said Amit Midha, the president of Dell in China, reports the Wall Street Journal.

Mr. Midha also reiterated the plans to release tablets with 3”, 4” and 10” screens in the future. Even though the current Streak with 5” screen is based on Google Android operating system and the forthcoming 7” model will also use the same OS, he reported added that some of the new products among the slew of tablets from Dell will also run Microsoft Corp.’s Windows operating system, without naming specific products or whether it would be Windows 7 or Windows Phone 7”.

Michael Dell, the head of Dell, has already demonstrated the 7” slate from the company at a conference, emphasizing the importance of tablets for the company in particular and for the industry in general. Given the current confirmation by the president of Dell China, it is highly likely that the 7” model will emerge ahead of the Christmas holiday season.

Unfortunately, nothing is presently unknown about the hardware inside Dell’s 7” slate. The only thing for sure is that Android suggest an ARM-based system-on-chip.

Source:-http://www.xbitlabs.com/news/monitors/display/20100929170712_Dell_7_Tablet_PC_is_Weeks_Away_Company.html

Windows 7 Hardware in Pictures

September 15th, 2010

The iPad may have arrived with authority, but laptops and netbooks are still very much alive. As Microsoft and its hardware partners prepare for the back-to-school buying season, here’s a slideshow of the latest Windows 7 machines for work and play, from slim netbooks to big honkin’ gaming laptops.

Source:-http://www.cio.com/article/596861/Windows_7_Hardware_in_Pictures_The_Latest_and_Greatest_Laptops

Walkthrough of MSFT’s Windows Phone 7

September 10th, 2010

A little tour of Windows Phone 7 on a Asus’ Windows Phone 7 smartphone.

It seems rumors that Windows Phone 7 will launch on October 11 have kicked things off in the leaks department. We’ve gotten a peek at not one but two Windows Phone 7 devices in the last 24 hours and these aren’t just blurry photos. Oh no. One of them is a 12-minute video shot at Gnomedex and showing the finer points of Windows Phone 7 and a glimpse of Asus’ upcoming hardware for the new OS.

Though the video doesn’t give much away about the phone itself, it does provide plenty of opportunity for gawking, and we know from the Windows Phone 7 minimum requirements that all devices must have at least a 1GHz processor, an WVGA (800×480) display, 256MB of RAM and 8 GB of storage, 5-megapixel camera with flash, an FM tuner and six dedicated hardware buttons back, start, search, camera, power/sleep and volume up and down.

The other leak is a photo of Samsung’s upcoming Windows Phone 7 offering. Again, not much is known about this device but the screen shows 8GB of storage, and the back of the device sports a camera and LED flash.

Source:-http://www.tomsguide.com/us/Windows-Phone-7-Demo-Tour-Walkthrough-windows-mobile,news-7986.html

Microsoft Releases Windows Phone 7 to Manufacturers

September 4th, 2010

Microsoft today announced that its new Windows Phone 7 mobile operating system has been released to hardware manufacturing partners.

Achieving RTM status means that Microsoft has completed its main software engineering tasks. Hardware partners will now begin integrating the new mobile operating system into phone products. Actual Windows Phone 7 mobile devices are expected to be delivered to customers “later this year,” according to Terry Myerson, CVP for Microsoft’s Windows Phone engineering team, in a blog post.

Myerson claimed that Windows Phone 7 is “the most thoroughly tested mobile platform Microsoft has ever released.” The software has undergone 8.5 million hours of “fully automated test passes,” he explained. It was tested by independent software vendors and early adopters, as well as Microsoft employees, who have been playing with Windows Phone 7 prototypes for about a month or more.

Windows Phone 7 is Microsoft’s latest push into the consumer mobile OS space. The company’s Windows Embedded OS dominates the mobile space for industrial devices and ruggedized mobile handsets, but Microsoft has tended to stumble in the mobile consumer market. For instance, in July the company killed off a consumer mobile offering called “Kin” that was loosely associated with Windows Phone 7. Kin was aimed at the teen and college-age consumer market. In May, Microsoft restructured its upper management in the Entertainment and Devices Division, which is responsible for consumer mobile strategy.

Hardware implementations of Microsoft’s consumer mobile OS have lagged behind those of competitors. Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android free mobile OS already run in new mobile phone products. Microsoft’s CEO Steve Ballmer admitted at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in July that “we missed a generation with Windows Mobile.”

Later that month, Ballmer alluded to hardware partners “Samsung, HTC and LG” coming to market this fall, possibly referring to Windows Phone 7 hardware. In February, at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Microsoft had announced a longer list of Windows Phone 7 hardware partners. Back then, Microsoft said that Dell, Garmin-Asus, Hewlett-Packard Co., Sony-Ericsson and Toshiba were also making Windows Phone 7 devices. Microsoft has not been so specific about its consumer mobile OS partners since that time.

It’s thought that Windows Phone 7 might increase the cost of mobile phones by around $15 per device to pay for OS licensing costs. Once again, Microsoft will be faced with having to compete against a free Linux-based operating system, such as Google’s Android. That’s a battle it’s won repeatedly in the PC market, but Google’s stature in backing Android could change that dynamic.

One possible setback for Google is happening on the legal front. In July, Oracle sued Google for copyright infringement, claiming that Android violates Oracle’s Java technology intellectual property rights it acquired with the purchase of Sun Microsystems. Microsoft has also indirectly attacked Android on the legal front. It hinted at legal troubles to come for hardware manufacturers using Android when it sued HTC over intellectually property allegedly used in HTC’s mobile smartphones running Android.

Microsoft has also been unclear about the migration path from Windows Mobile OSes to Windows Phone 7. The issue has to do with how various hardware vendors have implemented Windows Mobile in earlier phone models. In some cases, an upgrade path from Windows Mobile to Windows Phone 7 isn’t assured, Microsoft has indicated.

Source:-http://rcpmag.com/articles/2010/09/01/microsoft-releases-windows-phone-7-to-manufacturers.aspx

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