Posts Tagged ‘Harware’

Hardware 2.0 ‘Very Best Kit List’ for June 2011

May 30th, 2011

Welcome to the Hardware 2.0 “Very Best Kit List” for June 2011. Here I’ve put together a list of the best high-end and mid-range and budget components currently available. So if you’re thinking of building or even upgrading a PC, this list is a must-read for you!

Interesting Note: Noticed the price of a few components go up a few bucks here and there this month. Not sure if this is a supply chain problem resulting from the Japanese earthquake/tsunami or not.

These components are on this list because I firmly believe them to be the best either in terms of performance or price – although I’m ready to admit, as always, that there’s room for debate and some choices “go with the gut” more than others.

Source:http://www.zdnet.com/blog/hardware/hardware-20-very-best-kit-list-for-june-2011/13025

Does Hardware in Smartphones Matter?

May 24th, 2011

Silly question. Of course it matters, otherwise we would not be getting 1080p phones and 3D-capable devices with the ability to run applications our PCs ran four or five years ago.
ZoomBut how much attention do you have to pay to the hardware in smartphones that are on carrier shelves today?

I consider myself a moderate geek and always enjoyed comparing hardware specs and being at the bleeding edge of computer hardware, at least as far as my budget reasoning permitted. That has changed somewhat over the past years, perhaps as a result of the general commoditization of hardware (and growing age.) However, I noticed that I was paying much more attention lately to smartphone hardware, especially as the first dual-core phones arrived.

That was an enlightening moment by any measure. Faster hardware is not necessarily better hardware and it may not matter at all in the grand scheme of smartphone usage.

Several months ago, I purchased an HTC-built G2 phone with an 800 MHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor. The phone had issues, especially on the battery side, which barely lasted 4 hours under heavy use, but it was a decent phone otherwise. The only performance issue I ever noticed was a boot time of more than 1 minute. Now a phone geek, I could not wait to get my hands on a dual-core phone to see how app performance would improve. So I got a LG-built G2x phone, which uses Nvidia’s 1 GHz dual-core Tegra processor. The effect: Boot time is down to less than 20 seconds and Firefox is blazingly fast in JavaScript benchmarks (about 3 times faster than the G2 in Sunspider), but I would still call it the worst phone I ever owned (just behind the RIM Blackberry Pearl).

The touchscreen is less sensitive and a nightmare in games that require accuracy. Application stability is even worse as the default Android browser takes leisurely pauses now and then, the core phone app crashes frequently during dialing and I have gotten used to the fact that my G2X reboots itself three or four times a day. I would love to get by G2 from my girlfriend back, but since she has seen the G2X, my chances aren’t that good. I am not going to bash the G2X, even if my criticism is admittedly harsh. This may be a lemon and I am waiting for a replacement device.

The important observation is that the hardware may be, in the current competitive smartphone landscape, a nice-to-have feature, even if you are shelling a lot of money for your gadget and expect the very best from it. The true value of your phone, however, may not be so much single-core or dual-core at this time. It is platform integration. Apple is, conceivably, leading this discipline since it has only one two devices (excluding tablets) that are fine-tuned to work with its software platform. Just like its desktops and notebooks, Apple is recreating an overall experience – and experience that is tough to match by an Android or Windows Phone manufacturer. HTC or LG will never understand Android as well as Apple understands iOS.

A few weeks ago, I was called by a friend who had trouble with his new entry-level Android phone. He was tired of his iPhone, thought it was overkill and did not want to pay AT&T’s high carrier fees anymore. However, that opinion changed quickly – he got an Android phone with a 3″ screen and learned that Android on a 3 inch screen is a pain in the you-know-what to use. It had a horrible graphics engine and a build quality that suggested Yugo may have returned as a phone. Yes, he should have looked closer before he bought the phone, but it reminded of my LG and the overall lack of dedication to build a device that just makes sense from a usability view.

You can look a fragmentation from different angles – you can defend the Android model and you can attack it in various ways. But you can’t lose your attention to detail and it seems that Google has given phone developers too much freedom in creating new devices. Perhaps it is time to pull back a bit and make sure that tougher standards have been met and better phones are being rolled out to market. Inferior hardware can quickly kill a product image, especially the perception of quality. Microsoft has made its fair share of experience here.

Hardware that works in sync with the overall platform makes it clear that faster and newer chips do not necessarily enhance the user experience.

Source:http://www.tomsguide.com/us/google-android-apple-ios-iphpone-user-experience,news-11275.html

Hardware Disorders With Horsepower Pavilion Laptops

November 15th, 2010

Laptop mechanism systems have been gadgets which competence be employed by people worldwide. They can in truth be drawn out for his or her preferred advantages which they’ve to have accessible their users. One for the many poignant sure aspects could be the portability. Getting the possibility to reason your laptop with we all over the place we go is fanciful saying as you’re means to get the believe which we engage inside of the have the difference of seconds. When obtaining the cover mechanism mechanism system, we will need to 1st consider for what we will put it to operate deliberation which the functions have been countless as well as so could be the mandate as well as capabilities between the device.

After we have done the preference for what we will implement it for, we have been compulsory to establish the businessman to get it from. In stores we have been means to find the far-reaching preference of laptop mechanism producers as well as upon arise the small arriving business get nonplussed as well as do not know what businessman to confirm on. A singular for the many renouned manufacturers in the sourroundings is Hewlett-Packard or this subsequent shorter kind Hp. They competence be viewed as to get the tip laptop or pc retailer with the sourroundings as well as lots of many people lend towards to acquire their items. They have initial category specs as well as so they additionally have the glorious assembled high-quality. They’re constant as well as enlarged durability as well as these dual have been preference variables for the lot of arriving patrons.

The Hp Pavilion is customarily the complement line constructed by Horsepower as well as many people currently contend which the mobile mechanism mechanism systems which occur to be from this product line would be the many helpful. Despite the actuality which it unequivocally is viewed as to get the many considerable retailer from inside the earth, the Horsepower Pavilion additionally has the small troubles upon the drift which no retailer can furnish the undiluted product. They competence customarily try to furnish it glorious as well as the closer they have been to creation it only right, the a small some-more famous as well as sole the object can be. Some consumers contend which we will find the integrate of really critical Horsepower Pavilion laptop or pc ?ssues which for them have been rather disturbing. The signs or symptoms of those Hp Pavilion mobile mechanism counts have been the followings:

- The wireless adapter customarily would not conduct to acknowledge no wireless network while which we have been inside the wi-fi section which has the open or in isolation network
- The laptop mechanism isn’t starting to have no physical phenomenon as well as no enterprising LEDs.

- The complement refuses to physical phenomenon up.
- The battery such as Hp Pavilion DV1000 battery, Hp Pavilion DV4000 battery, Horsepower Pavilion ZE2000 battery assign indicator light will not spin upon when the battery is put in as well as the AC adapter is connected.
- The design in sure cases is not proven while the video label is handling accurately.

If we really own the Horsepower Pavilion pc desktop mechanism as well as additionally we have these concerns, many receptive to advice is to correct them quickly. When you’ve got the guaranty is perfect. You simply contingency boat it to Hp as well as it shall be remade upon the shortest duration of time. All in all, once we confront the Horsepower Pavilion cover mechanism hassles listed above, we ought to send it to the specialized use which competence have all they’re means to to correct it.

Source:http://www.googletoilet.com/pc-support/hardware-disorders-with-horsepower-pavilion-laptops.html

Country in the Park moving to Capitol Mall

August 7th, 2010

The (Sacramento Convention & Visitors Bureau) came to us with the idea, ‘Why not move it downtown?’ and it seemed great to us,” said KNCI promotions director Matt Vieira. “We thought we’d give it a shot. There is grass and a lot of trees, and to have the Capitol as a backdrop is really cool. A lot of major cities do big concerts downtown, which is something Sacramento hasn’t done.”

Mike Testa, spokesman for the Convention & Visitors Bureau, said he hopes Country in the Park will return to Labor Day weekend after this year. “We see the potential marriage between this event and Gold Rush Days in Old Sacramento, which also is held over Labor Day weekend. The idea for us is twofold: to create activity that attracts a local audience and draws visitors from elsewhere, with programming downtown and in Old Sacramento.”

Dierks Bentley, Jack Ingram and Whiskey Dawn are this year’s Country in the Park headliners.

Gates open at 11 a.m.; the show starts at 1 p.m. Tickets are $24 in advance at participating Ace Hardware stores. The event is free for children 10 and younger.

In past years, Country in the Park has alternated between Gibson Ranch, a Sacramento County park in Elverta, and Discovery Park near Old Sacramento. The festival was moved up a week this year to accommodate the performers’ schedules, said Vieira.

Source:-http://www.modbee.com/2010/08/06/1283801/country-in-the-park-moving-to.html

HP ProBook 5310m: A slender laptop for business users

April 26th, 2010

HP is one of the biggest players in the computer industry, and as such they cater to every type of user from your typical home consumer through business executives and data centers. With such a large range of offerings, quality and features can vary quite a bit. The ProBook line is part of HP’s business laptop segment, which means build quality is at the higher end of the spectrum compared to consumer laptops. Like Lenovo’s famed ThinkPad line, the ProBook 5310m starts with a magnesium alloy chassis for improved durability. And like most other business laptops, users get an anti-glare (i.e. matte) display. The competition consists of Lenovo ThinkPad, Dell Latitude, and Sony VAIO, to name just a few alternatives.

At its core, the HP 5310m is similar to many CULV laptops that we’ve looked at. The catch is that you either get the lowest of the low Celeron SU2300 (1.2GHz, 1MB cache, 800FSB) or you take a big step up from CULV territory and get an SP9300 (2.26GHz, 6MB cache, 1066FSB). While Core i3/i5 are getting headlines these days—and rightfully so—Core 2 products will continue to sell for a while, particularly in the thin and light form factors. The HP 5310m has been out for a few months now, and in some ways it was already a little long in the tooth at launch, but IT departments are rarely looking for the latest and greatest hardware. Instead, they want a stable platform that they’ll be able to purchase for a year or more without worrying about upgrades and changes, and the 5310m provides exactly that. Here are the specs and configuration options for the 5310m, with bold items indicating the components in our test unit.

Outside of the SP9300/SP9400 CPU options and the matte LCD, the specs of the 5310m are standard fare. However, we can also see that HP made some compromises in service of the very thin chassis. At less than 1″ thick and with a flat design (i.e. unlike laptops where the front is .8″ thick while the back can bulge to 1.5″), the 5310m is definitely thin, but it lacks an optical drive and only comes equipped with one SO-DIMM slot. Our concern with the RAM limitation isn’t so much of a performance problem, but rather available memory and cost. All of the standard models come with a single 2GB SO-DIMM; custom builds with 4GB are available through HP, but they cost more and the upgrade to a 4GB SO-DIMM comes at an exorbitant $300. Newegg’s prices for the same 4GB SO-DIMM range from $165 to $220, depending on brand and speed, so if you want 4GB you’ll find it cheaper to upgrade on your own.

Coupled to the single SO-DIMM option is a lack of pre-configured 64-bit OS support. The laptop is fully capable of running Windows 7 64-bit, but HP chooses not to offer such a build from their factory. Given the business target audience, it’s not a huge surprise: most IT departments are still running XP and will probably just ghost the corporate image onto the 5310m, but for consumers looking to buy a higher quality business laptop it’s regrettable.

While we’re on the subject of omissions, note that the single audio jack functions as either a headphone or a microphone port. If you want to use a traditional headset, you’ll need a USB adapter. The audio output from the speakers, as you might expect, isn’t very load. On the bright side, the speakers don’t distort horrendously, which is more than we can say for some of the Acer laptops we’ve tested.

On the positive end of the spectrum, even with the puny 4-cell battery, battery life is respectable. HP claims up to 6.5 hours (7 hours for the SU2300 CULV model), though we measured just shy of six hours in our idle battery life test. (HP uses MobileMark 2007, which tends to put a close-to-idle load on laptops; at a lower LCD brightness you can almost certainly get 6.5 hours, but we calibrated for 100nits.) All of the 5310m models come with higher performance 7200RPM drives, or you can even opt for a 128GB SSD if you’re so inclined.

The most likely competition for the 5310m would be something like the ThinkPad Edge, except with an SP9300 CPU the 5310m will clearly hold the performance advantage over a CULV laptop. If you’re okay with “consumer” laptops, ASUS’ new U30Jc with Optimus G310M graphics and an i3-350m CPU only costs a bit more; it also has aluminum covers, though without handling it yet we can’t comment on build quality. We’ll have a review of that in the coming weeks, but it obviously has the performance advantage. The question is whether it has a stylistic advantage… and of course most businesses are likely to go with HP, Dell, or Lenovo over ASUS. Plus, the magnesium alloy frame and well-designed keyboard are very good features.

How does this business-oriented laptop stack up to the competition? As you might expect, the CPU ends up beating CULV configurations quite handily, at least in application performance. The lack of a discrete GPU means gaming and graphics tasks aren’t something you’ll want to do on the 5310m. Battery life is decent, particularly when you consider the small 4-cell battery, making the 5310m a reasonable system for those who travel a lot. The size and weight are also good for portability enthusiasts, and build quality as mentioned is top notch, so let’s delve a little deeper.

Source:http://www.anandtech.com/show/3673/hp-probook-5310m-a-slender-laptop-for-business-users

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