Posts Tagged ‘Bluetooth’

Toshiba Satellite E205-S1980

November 20th, 2010

Back at the beginning of 2010, one of our favorite laptop surprises was the Toshiba Satellite E205-S1904. Available as a Best Buy exclusive, the thin blue Satellite was one of the first laptops to feature Intel Wireless Display technology, and at $899, its combination of a then-brand-new Core i5 CPU and solid specs added up to a great value.

The E205-S1980 is an updated version of the E205 for Best Buy’s Blue Label line, adding Nvidia graphics and a WiMax antenna to the package, albeit at a higher price. Nvidia Optimus automatic-switching graphics come in the form of an entry-level GeForce 310M GPU; graphics were one of our biggest gripes on the first E205, and its presence here enables basic mainstream gaming and better video/media creation capabilities.

Other than that, though, the package remains remarkably similar: slightly faster Core i5 processor, same hard drive, same RAM, same design and case structure, same Intel Wireless Display.

Back then, the Best Buy-exclusive E205 bundle we reviewed cost $899. The E205-S1980 costs $1,079, a hefty premium for entry-level discrete graphics nearly a year later. Though the E205 remains a solid laptop with good specs, it feels long in the tooth compared with similar products that are available for even less.

Dell’s entry-level XPS 15 at $849 lacks Wireless Display but otherwise outperforms the E205 in a number of regards, losing out only on weight and battery life.

A lack of Blu-ray and built-in speakers that sound subpar are the biggest negatives, along with a battery life that, by our tests, dropped about an hour and a half compared with the previous E205 configuration. At the original $899 we’d feel a lot better about the E205-S1980, but at $1,079 it just feels like too much.

The Satellite E205-S1980 has the same look as its predecessor, the E205-S1904: dark blue plastic finish (called Fusion Finish in metallic blue), rounded edges, and a slot-loading DVD drive.

The laptop looks thin, but its weird curves and fingerprint-collecting glossy plastic lend it a slightly garish veneer. A larger-than-normal rear hinge enables the 14-inch screen to open up at an angle that floats a little more off the keyboard than standard lids.

The E205-S1980 has a flat backlit keyboard instead of the raised keyboards we’ve seen on other current Satellites, and frankly, the flat keys leave something to be desired.

The middle part of the keyboard still flexes too much for our taste, although our typing experience was largely error-free. The multitouch touch pad beneath is smaller than many multitouch pads currently on the market, and its narrow shape led to awkward navigation.

Larger, stiff buttons below are curved to the case contours, and are surprisingly hard to locate by feel and press.

A row of dedicated media touch-keys run down the right side of the keyboard, controlling audio, basic play functions, an Eco power utility, and backlighting. They beep loudly and annoyingly unless deactivated in a buried Control Panel setting, and responded on a slight delay during video playback.

The Toshiba Satellite E205-S1904’s 14-inch LED screen has a resolution of 1,366×768 pixels, which is standard for 14-inch laptops. With a 16×9 display and reasonably bright backlighting, the screen looked fine when playing DVDs or streaming Hulu videos, although it didn’t stand out in terms of vibrancy or color.

The biggest disappointment on the Satellite E205-S1980 remains from our last review of the E205: the subpar stereo speakers. They sounded middling and soft even at maximum volume, with a tinny quality.

Toshiba laptops usually have good internal speakers, and for a Blue Label product sold at Best Buy, we expected more.

The Satellite E205-S19080 still lacks features available on mainstream-or-better machines, most notably Bluetooth.

The eSATA and sleep-and-charge USB ports are useful, but we expect more for a laptop that’s more than $1,000.

The 4GB of included RAM can be expanded up to 8GB, and the 500GB hard drive is plenty generous for most users, but remain the same from the early 2010 configuration we reviewed.

A new and potentially useful add for some customers is a WiMax antenna, but WiMax isn’t available in every U.S. market yet, and subscription costs can be high for the high-speed wireless Internet access it provides.

The included Intel Core i5 M460 processor is a step up in speed from the Core i5 we tested in the previous E205-S1904, but not hugely so. Slightly bumped speeds are appreciated, but the quick loading and playback of streaming videos and multiwindow computing remain the same from our anecdotal experience.

The Nvidia GeForce 310M graphics are the biggest addition to the E205-S1980, answering one of our few gripes with the previous E205 (which only had integrated Intel graphics).

Nvidia Optimus enabled for automatic switching and battery conservation, and the graphics netted modest-to-good results for mainstream gaming; Unreal Tournament III ran at 36.9 frames per second at native pixel resolution and graphics options set to medium.

Activision’s racing game Blur was playable, but exhibited some choppiness and frame rate drops. You can get by with gaming on the E205-S1980, but it’s not a system for gamers.

Source:http://reviews.cnet.com/laptops/toshiba-satellite-e205-s1980/4505-3121_7-34211765.html?subj=fdba&part=rss&tag=rb_content%3Brb_mtx_Search+Results#reviewPage1

Creative ziisound d5 bluetooth speaker review

October 29th, 2010

Creative’s ZiiSound D5 promises to deliver the convenience of wireless audio without committing the sin of sonic compromise, and it comes pretty darned close. If that surprises you, you’ll be doubly amazed to learn that it accomplishes this feat using Bluetooth.

The ZiiSound D5 is a sound-bar type stereo speaker with an iPod docking port, a Bluetooth receiver, and a Bluetooth dongle that can be plugged into most any model iPhone, iPad, or iPod (except the Shuffle). If you’d prefer to stream from a computer, Creative sells a $39 Bluetooth USB dongle separately. And if you have another brand of media player—one built by Creative, perhaps—there’s a 1/8-inch auxiliary input in the back of the cabinet.

The ZiiSound D5 is elegantly designed–you could almost call it a cubed Zeppelin.

We’ve reviewed Bluetooth sound systems before and haven’t been impressed. The ZiiSound D5 is different. One of the key ingredients in Creative’s secret sauce is the third-party audio codec known as Apt-X Bluetooth. Apt-X encodes audio with 16-bit resolution at a 44.1kHz sampling rate (the same as an audio CD), and then compresses it at a 4:1 ratio for wireless streaming over a Bluetooth connection.

We auditioned the ZiiSound D5 by playing tracks encoded in Apple Lossless from an iPod docked directly to the ZiiSound D5, and then streamed the same tracks via Creative’s Bluetooth dongle. Remarkably, we were unable to detect any compression artifacts or other unpleasantness in the stream; in fact, the audio sounded great. Wireless iPod speaker docks are so much more convenient than the alternative. Who wouldn’t rather pick up their iPod to change tracks, adjust the volume, or navigate playlists instead of walking over the speaker and manipulating the iPod’s controls while it’s docked.

Having said all that, however, knowing the amount of manipulation the audio is subjected to bothers us at an intellectual level: The iPod converts the tracks from digital to analog and outputs them to the dongle, the dongle converts them from analog to digital; compresses them, and streams them to the speaker; and the speaker converts them from digital to analog for final playback. How could that not have an audible impact?

Listening to Mocean Worker’s funky “Chick A Boom Boom Boom” (from the Inside Deep Throat soundtrack), we were surprised at the ZiiSound D5’s expansive sound stage: This speaker systems sounds much larger than its 11.7 x 4.3 x 3.5-inch dimensions would lead you to believe. We soon discovered, however, that this speaker system doesn’t like to be pushed. While rocking out to David Bowie’s “Sweet Thing,” from his Diamond Dogs album, we maxed out the volume control by too aggressively stroking the touch-sensitive metal band around the ZiiSound D5’s middle: Bowie suddenly sounded as though he was singing around a mouthful of pork cracklins.

When all is said and done, the ZiiSound D5 is a very solid effort even if it does fall a good distance short of our current favorite iPod speaker dock, the full-sized B&W Zeppelin. After all, that device costs twice as much and doesn’t have a wireless option.

Source:http://www.maximumpc.com/article/reviews/creative_ziisound_d5_bluetooth_speaker_review

Microsoft bluetooth mobile keyboard 6000

October 26th, 2010

This mobile keyboard comes with a novel addition: besides the main keyboard section it includes a separate numeric keypad in the box. The two devices are separate with two different Bluetooth connections required to use both.

No Bluetooth adapter is supplied, so the keyboard set will only work if your computer can already connect to Bluetooth devices, or if you buy a separate adapter. So ease of connection will differ depending on your computer’s Bluetooth software and hardware, but we didn’t have any trouble. Buttons on the back of each keyboard section are used to put it into a ‘discoverable’ state to allow connection to the computer.

The keypad takes one AAA battery and the main keyboard takes two, and there are power switches on both to prevent unnecessary drain.

The keys on both sections are quite shallow (the keyboard itself is only 1cm thin), but they were still reasonably comfortable for typing. The keyboard uses Microsoft’s Comfort Curve design so its edges tilt backwards, forcing the user’s hands a touch further apart than normal.

It’s less wide than a standard keyboard, even without a keypad, and it’s small enough to sit on a lap besides placing it on a desk or table. It’s also light enough to not make too much difference to overall bag weight if you are taking it travelling.

The recommended price of £80 is high but at the time of writing it’s available from Amazon at £40 which is a good deal.

The thinking behind the separate sections is that you can leave the numeric part at home when you don’t need it. Few people will need the numeric keypad, but even if you won’t be using the it, at £40 this is a good-value mobile keyboard – as long as your PC or Mac already has a Bluetooth connection.

As well as working with computers the Mobile Keyboard 6000 (and the number keypad) will also work with mobile devices such as phones or the Apple iPad.

Source:http://www.computeractive.co.uk/computeractive/hardware/2272219/microsoft-bluetooth-keyboard

Maingear slides out clutch-13 and clutch-15 laptops

October 24th, 2010

If we didn’t know any better, we’d easily mistake Maingear’s newest duo as the sexiest portable duo we’ve seen today.

And maybe it is.

The up-and-coming pre-fab PC builder has just unleashed a new pair of laptops, the Clutch-13 and Clutch-15.

Predictably, the former is a 13.3-incher while the latter clocks in at a more usual 15.6-inches, and both feature Intel’s newest Core 2010 CPUs and looks that (almost) kill.

The smaller guys is equipped with a WXGA (1366 x 768) resolution panel, 1.2GHz Core 330UM, integrated Intel graphics, up to 8GB of DDR3 memory, a 750GB HDD (or 512GB SSD if you’re feeling whimsical), 802.11g/n WiFi, Bluetooth, gigabit Ethernet, an HDMI output, eSATA, ExpressCard slot and compatibility with an optional docking station that adds an ODD among other useful niceties.

The Clutch-15 sticks with the same WXGA resolution (disappointingly, might we add), but offers up a choice of Core i3/i5/i7 CPU, NVIDIA’s GeForce GT 330M GPU (1GB), WiDi support and a full-size keyboard with number pad.

They’re available as we speak starting at $1,099 and $899 in order of mention, so feel free to gloss over the next hour of work while configuring your own.

Source:http://www.engadget.com/2010/10/22/maingear-slides-out-clutch-13-and-clutch-15-gaming-laptops/

MSI gets official with 17.3-inch FX700 and FR700 multimedia laptops

October 16th, 2010

June was a lifetime ago, we’ll give you that, but surely you can’t forget those 16 Optimus-based laptops that NVIDIA teased us with at Computex, right? Right. At any rate, MSI has just come clean with a delightful pair of them, the FX700 and FR700.

Both of these beasts boast 17.3-inch widescreen displays, the company’s own anti-scratch, anti-smudge coating and a design that actually looks fairly attractive given the hugeness.

The former also includes up to 8GB of DDR3 memory, a Core i5 processor, NVIDIA’s GeForce GT 425M (1GB), HDMI / VGA outputs, 320/500/640GB hard drives, a DVD SuperMulti drive, four USB ports (two of the SuperSpeed variety), a 5-in-1 card reader, inbuilt webcam, WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, gigabit Ethernet and a 6-cell Li-ion that’ll probably exhaust itself long before you’d like it to.

The FR700 includes most of the same specifications, but opts for integrated Intel graphics for those who aren’t planning to dabble too long in Crysis.

Per usual, MSI’s keeping quiet when it comes to pricing and release details, but we’d be shocked if they didn’t find their way onto retail shelves pre-Christmas.

Source:http://www.engadget.com/2010/10/15/msi-gets-official-with-17-3-inch-fx700-and-fr700-multimedia-lapt/

Bluetooth Computer Mouse

October 7th, 2010

Working with computers is not unusual in any way these days because we all do it in various situations at work, at home, at school and in many other places that we might go to as well.

It is absolutely necessary to be able to use computers these days because all fields of activity require computing skills for many of the job positions being made available on the market.

This is why learning something new about computers is always useful even if it might not seem so at the moment in the future there will certainly be a moment when we will be glad that we have spent some time learning about these devices when we had the chance.

There are numerous interesting and useful types of data to be considered about computers when a good knowledge related to them is wanted to be acquired. The computer mouse for example represents one of the main computer hardware components that we all work with daily and that is in this way very important to be analyzed.

There are numerous types of computer mouse devices that can be considered nowadays when trying to discover new technologies having been made available within these devices and in this way new computer mouse types and designs that might prove to be very useful and at the same time interesting for us to use.

One such type of mouse can be considered the Bluetooth computer mouse, which has been very much appreciated by numerous computer users who have chosen to use it and who have discovered various interesting features being presented by it.

There are numerous Bluetooth computer mouse devices that are available on the market nowadays and in this way everyone interested in learning more about this type of devices can easily find everything that might interest them.

There are numerous features that can be considered and each model of Bluetooth computer mouse presented on the market can be discovered to present various features and specifications that either bring them closer to other such models of devices or make them special somehow.

One example of a Bluetooth computer mouse is Sony VGPBMS80 Laser Mouse.

Its system requirements are known to be either Windows 7 or Windows Vista. Its dimensions have been considered to be the following ones: 1 inch height, 2 inches width and 4.06 inches depth.

Its pointing device type of connectivity technology is wireless and its movement detection is laser type.

Many of the users who have worked with it have appreciated it for its features and because they could make good use of it.

Certainly, this is not the only type of Bluetooth computer mouse device available on the market. There are numerous other similar or more distinctive ones that can be found and analyzed.

In this way we all have the possibility of working nowadays with the best Bluetooth computer mouse that we can find and that could help us wok much easier in all sorts of activities every day.

Source:http://www.mousearena.com/bluetooth-computer-mouse-2/

Apple TV costs $63.95 to build

October 6th, 2010

The second-generation Apple TV costs $63.95 once materials and manufacturing are factored in, according to a new teardown study by research firm iSuppli.

The Apple TV’s actual BOM (Bill of Materials) comes to $61.98. Samsung-produced components, including the device’s A4 applications processor and DDR (Double Data Rate) SDRAM, made up 26.7 percent of that cost, or $16.55. The device’s memory section cost $14, enough to make it the second-most-expensive component, followed by the WiFi/Bluetooth module at $7.65.

The Apple TV’s interface section—in iSuppli’s example, represented by Analogix Semiconductor’s ANX9836 HDMI transmitter and Digital Audio Interface device—costs $2.60. The power supply cost $2.15.

“The first Apple TV was built like a net top computer. The architecture was basically a stripped down, small-form-factor desktop PC,” Andrew Rassweiler, director, principal analyst and teardown services manager for iSuppli, wrote in an Oct. 5 statement. “The second-generation Apple TV is more like an iPad or iPod Touch with no display. The Apple TV’s A4 processor core, Wi-Fi/Bluetooth chip and power management chip are the same building blocks used in the iPad, iPhone 4, and iPod Touch.”

Outside components such as the remote control cost a total of $6.10, iSuppli estimated. Manufacturing costs add another $1.97 to the Apple TV’s grand total.

“The remote appears to [be] machined from a solid piece of aluminum,” Rassweiler added. “Because of this, the electronics of the device must be slid in through small holes on the side, similar to putting a ship in a bottle. It’s a clever and detail-oriented piece of design that makes the remote very pricey and very unique to Apple.”

With the second-generation Apple TV, the company has increased its margins over the first-generation product. Whereas the first-generation Apple TV was apparently a near-breakeven product, according to iSuppli, the second affords Apple a margin of 35 percent above its manufacturing costs and materials. “However,” the firm wrote in an Oct. 5 research note, “even with this improvement, at a current retail price of $99, the second-generation Apple TV is at the bottom end of the hardware margin spectrum for Apple products.

Source:http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Desktops-and-Notebooks/Apple-TV-Costs-6395-to-Build-iSuppli-771013/

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