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xiaohanfang بازدید : 70 دوشنبه 07 اسفند 1391 نظرات (0)

 

 

The next announcement from the field of tablet PCs of today, the new company Ainol Ainol Novo 9 Spark quad-core tablet on the series, which is available to buy at the price of just € 200 on importing at Ownta.The Ainol Novo 9 Spark Quad-Core Tablet PC brings a 1.5GHz Allwinner A31(Covers&Protectors) Cortex-A7 quad-core processor and features a high-resolution 9.7-inch touchscreen display that can display a Retina optics of 2048 x 1536 pixels. There are also added to 2GB DDR3 memory, two Mali-400 graphics chipset and the internal storage is sized at 16GB and can be increased via the MicroSD card slot for another 32GB.The cameras is a 2-megapixel camera on the front is available, as well as a 5-megapixel camera on the back.

In addition, Wi-Fi is for the exchange of data in networks with this, a very strong 10000mAh battery for the power supply and the Android 4.1.1 "Jelly Bean" operating system.The technical data / specifications / data sheet of the Ainol Novo 9 Spark Quad-Core Tablet PC(Mouse&Adaptor): 9.7-inch touchscreen display with Retina-resolution of 2048 x 1536 pixels Allwinner A31 1.5GHz Cortex-A7 quad-core processor 2GB DDR3 RAM 2x Mali-400 graphics chipsets 16GB internal memory MicroSD slot for memory cards up to 32GB 2-megapixel camera on the front 5-megapixel camera on the back Super HD 2160p video playback 3G (Optional) WLAN Mini-HDMI port 10000mAh battery Android 4.1.1 "Jelly Bean" operating system Price: under 200 € Available about the sourcePhotos and Videos of Ainol Novo 9 Spark Quad-Core Tablet PC:(Screen Replacement)Do you have more reviews, reviews, previews, videos, opinions, prices, price recommendations, comparisons or more for data,

software, drivers, updates, operating system, and the technical equipment discovered? Then off with it in the comments. Of course you can also like other offers, bargains, discounts and deals right post which are for example providers such as Amazon, eBay, Saturn, Media Markt, Aldi Nord and Aldi Süd, Hofer, Lidl, Real and more available.

xiaohanfang بازدید : 31 شنبه 05 اسفند 1391 نظرات (0)


We can also go watch our favorite shows, there are now take on Comedy Central: The cctogo App send pictures and clips (quad core cpu)of shows like "Melissa and Joey" (photo) directly to your smartphone or tablet computer. To start now we are giving away the "Galaxy Tab 2 10.1" from Samsung.
How do you win?
Just play OK! Aufdeckspiel-and then enter their data (Ployer MOMO11 quad core)into the competition form.
Deadline for entries is 06.03.2013Viel wish you luck OK conditions!:
Employees of Klambtverlags are excluded from the contest. The competition is open only to persons over 18 years, under which the income will be drawn once. A cash payment of the profit value is not possible. (Teclast A11 Quad Core)The data of all participants will be used exclusively for the determination of net income. The decision is final. The journey takes place with Deutsche Bahn. The winners will be housed in a hotel.

xiaohanfang بازدید : 34 جمعه 04 اسفند 1391 نظرات (0)


Not too long ago, Canonical announced that the arguably most popular desktop Linux distribution, Ubuntu, will be coming to the smartphone. Now, two days before the Ubuntu Phone image releases for the Galaxy Nexus and Nexus 4 — and around eight months before Canonical project(Ramos W30HD) to be shipping hardware with the operating system — Canonical will continue its assault on the mobile scene with the announcement of Ubuntu for tablets.
Ubuntu for tablets isn't some totally different operating system than Ubuntu for phones. Basically, it's the same OS, but with an interface tailored to a tablet rather than the smaller screen of a phone. However, now that the final (so far) Ubuntu interface has been announced, Canonical is able to tout that its operating system can morph to any interface style — phone, tablet, PC, or TV. Simply hook your Ubuntu phone up to a display, and the phone will project the Ubuntu OS with the appropriate interface to said display.
Canonical isn't satisfied with just projecting a new interface onto a different display, and the OS will sport a "side stage," which is a multitasking feature that will allow a phone app to appear on screen at the same time as, and work side-by-side with, a tablet app. The OS will also feature a voice-controlled HUD, bringing all the magic of screaming at Siri and your Kinect to the mobile Linux space.quad core android tablet
As with Ubuntu for phones, tablet navigation will primarily focus on edge-based gestures for accessing apps, settings, and controls. Canonical boasts that no physical or soft buttons are required. The OS will also feature multiple user accounts per device, fully encrypted.
The tablet interface can scale down to as small as six inches to as large as 20 inches, with resolutions of 100PPI to 450PPI. As previously mentioned, Canonical is stressing the morphing capability of the OS, noting that when the tablet is docked to a keyboard, it can offer a "full PC experience" with access to remote Windows applications.
Along with the Ubuntu for phones preview image releasing on February 21, Canonical will also release a preview image for tablets for the Nexus 7 and 10.
So far, there isn't quite enough information to really delve into what Canonical is getting at with this device convergence. In theory, it would be convenient (and really cool) if you could carry around your Ubuntu phone and dock it to various screens in order to invoke the PC or TV interface.(ainol novo 10 hero) Though cool, we'd need to see how the feature can make our lives simpler, as for example, docking our phone to our TV in order to watch movies is really just an extra step to do something that our media setups already do. The optimized scalability is certainly useful, but we can't see the phone's ability to plug into a monitor and display a PC operating system as replacing our desktops just yet, considering whenever we leave the house and remove the phone, we'd be losing said desktop.
However, the ability to morph OS interfaces and beam a "full" operating system to your TV, tablet, or PC monitor from your phone absolutely has potential. Aside from being able to access all of our data regardless of what device is available at the time, we need more information as to how Canonical intends to change our lives with the new OS. Color us intrigued.

xiaohanfang بازدید : 34 پنجشنبه 03 اسفند 1391 نظرات (1)

 

 

A unified ecosystem for Microsoft, was a single operating system and a tablet PC, and a very similar mobile application which is easy to carry. For Apple, have an operating system for phones and tablets, and one on their computers to take elements borrowed from others, all with a common base.quad core tablet 2013
The case of Canonical and Ubuntu, a priori, is more like that of Apple, while its tablet operating system is nearly identical in concept and implementation of that plan to launch the mobile phone. Furthermore, the SDK to develop applications is the same in both cases.Window YuanDao N90FHD

What about the PC version of Ubuntu? Do you develop applications with the same SDK? Are learning steps to unify platforms (integration webapps, etc.). But it seems logical that sooner or later, (PIPO M1 tablet)the SDK runs unifying and applications to be easily portable across all platforms. We shall soon know more details about it.
What is clear is that Ubuntu PC also needs an evolution (rather than revolution should not scare users that have attracted other revolutions) and should not be long in coming.

xiaohanfang بازدید : 204 چهارشنبه 02 اسفند 1391 نظرات (0)


Canonical today is unveiling Ubuntu for tablets, a touch-based interface supporting screen sizes of anywhere from 6" to 20", and use cases targeting both businesses and the home.
The announcement is hardly a surprise given Canonical's recent unveiling of Ubuntu for smartphones, with the first handsets expected to ship in October. Canonical hasn't told us when it expects hardware vendors(quad core android tablet) to ship tablets running Ubuntu, but it's possible Ubuntu smartphones and tablets are on the same schedule.
As previously reported, a developer preview of Ubuntu for phones is scheduled to be released on Thursday of this week. That phone preview can be installed on the Galaxy Nexus or Nexus 4. It turns out the developer preview for tablets will also be available the very same day, and it can be installed on Nexus 7 or Nexus 10 tablets. A software development kit that supports phone app development will be updated to support the creation of tablet apps.
"Installable images and source code will be available from developer.ubuntu.com," and Canonical employees will install Ubuntu on your phones and tablets in person if you visit their booth at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona next week, the company said. A Canonical spokesperson told us that the code coming out Thursday is an early build and "not ready" for in-depth reviews and tests.
UPDATE: Canonical now says it expects mobile devices to ship with Ubuntu in Q1 2014. The October timeline reported earlier was just for the software, not actual devices.YuanDao N90FHD
Canonical provided us with a press release in advance of today's announcement, and founder Mark Shuttleworth will talk to press on a conference call today. We will follow up with more details after that call—Canonical declined to answer any of our questions in advance.
Like Ubuntu phones, Ubuntu tablets can become full PCs
For now, let's talk a little more about what we know. Ubuntu for tablets will run on ARM chips (at least), supporting screen sizes from 6" to 20" and resolutions from 100 to 450 pixels per inch. Just like Ubuntu for phones, an Ubuntu tablet can be docked with a keyboard, mouse, and monitor to provide a full PC experience.
Although Ubuntu is supposed to run smoothly on entry-level tablet hardware, the docking can only happen with "high-end silicon." Canonical did not specify what types of chips are required for Ubuntu tablets to double as PCs, but with phones the requirement is a quad-core Cortex A9 or Intel Atom processor and at least 1GB RAM. While it stands to reason that Intel chips would be supported on Ubuntu tablets, the announcement we have doesn't mention any specific processor platform besides ARM.
Tablets in PC mode will be able to access Windows applications remotely through standard protocols from Microsoft, Citrix, VMWare, and Wyse.
Canonical is clearly targeting businesses with the aforementioned Windows support as well as full disk encryption, support for multiple user accounts on a single device, and an IT management tool covering Ubuntu servers, PCs, smartphones, and tablets. "An Ubuntu tablet is a secure thin client that can be managed with the same tools as any Ubuntu server or desktop," Stephane Verdy, head of enterprise desktop and thin client products at Canonical, said in the announcement.
The tablets aren't business-only, though. A one-minute video Canonical showed us yesterday displays a very Kindle Fire-like experience in scrolling through available TV shows and movies. The video also shows that the tablet interface is largely similar to the Ubuntu phone interface but obviously scaled up to the bigger screen size.
Just after this story published, Canonical posted an additional, longer video with Shuttleworth describing the tablet experience:pipo m1 tablet pc rk3066
The tablets will support split-screen multitasking, as we saw a user making a video call on one part of the screen while manipulating a business document on the other side. "Ubuntu allows a phone app on the screen at the same time as a tablet app," Canonical's announcement said. Canonical calls the ability to have two apps on-screen right next to each other "side stage." It looks like it operates similarly to the Windows 8 "snap" feature, which snaps two applications next to each other.
Canonical has been promising that Ubuntu will ultimately provide one operating system for phones, tablets, desktops, servers, and even supercomputers. Some of the design decisions for Ubuntu on the desktop do seem to have been geared toward bringing Ubuntu to touch screens. The application launcher—a customizable list of icons on the left side of the Ubuntu Unity desktop—is being brought to phones and tablets to provide quick access to apps. Further, the Ubuntu Dash tool for searching one's desktop has been expanded to allow search of both local files and the Internet (notably, with Amazon search results baked in). It looks like that same universal search will be front and center on the Ubuntu tablet interface.
Voice control can be used to manipulate the Ubuntu tablet interface's heads-up display.
Here are some more of the features of Ubuntu for tablets, as Canonical describes them in its press release:
Secure multi-user: Multiple accounts on one tablet with full encryption for personal data, combined with the trusted Ubuntu security model that is widely used in banks, governments and sensitive environments, making it ideal for work and family use.
Voice controlled HUD productivity: The Heads-Up Display, unique to Ubuntu, makes it fast and easy to do complex things on touch devices, and transforms touch interfaces for rich applications, bringing all the power of the PC to your tablet.
Edge magic for cleaner apps: Screen edges are used for navigation between apps, settings and controls. That makes for less clutter, more content, and sleeker hardware. No physical or soft buttons are required. It's pure touch elegance.
Content focus: Media is neatly presented on the customizable home screen, which can search hundreds of sources. Perfect for carriers and content owners that want to highlight their own content, while still providing access to a global catalogue.
Full convergence: The tablet interface is presented by exactly the same OS and code that provides the phone, PC and TV interfaces, enabling true device convergence. Ubuntu is uniquely designed to scale smoothly across all form factors.
Who will sell Ubuntu tablets? That's to be determined
One of the big questions for both Ubuntu phones and tablets is who will build them. Being able to install preview software on Nexus devices will be nice, but Canonical won't reach a major audience unless smartphone and tablet manufacturers get on board.
Canonical said that hardware manufacturers won't have to start from scratch, because Ubuntu for phones and tablets will run on pretty much anything that already runs Android. "For silicon vendors, Ubuntu is compatible with any Linux-oriented Board Support Package (BSP)," Canonical said. "This means Ubuntu is easy to enable on most chipset designs that are currently running Android."

xiaohanfang بازدید : 33 سه شنبه 01 اسفند 1391 نظرات (0)

 


The tablet is the culprit, plain and simple. The tablet accomplished something many in the PC industry did not see coming. (quad core tablet)Its form, function, and touch user interface adequately served the mass market needs uniquely. In fact, Steve Jobs said it best at the launch of the iPad: "The iPad is more intimate than a notebook, and more capable than a smartphone."
Believe it or not, this is exactly what the mass market needed. The fact of the matter is that the PC as we knew it — whether a notebook or a desktop — had gotten to a point where it vastly over-served the mass market's needs. The capabilities had outgrown the most common use cases of the mass market. Tablets, as it turns out, serve the most common use cases and needs of the mass market more than adequately.

It was consumers themselves who led us to this observation. Many consumers we observed and studied continually told us how the iPad had become their go-to device for most of the daily tasks they used to do on the PC. Often times this is simply browsing the web, checking email, and using a few key apps like Facebook. The bottom line is that hundreds upon hundreds of millions of consumers are finding exactly what they need in a tablet and using the desktop or notebook less and less — and only for a few specific things.
This emphasizes the point that the PC as we knew it is not going away; it is simply assuming a new role. One where it's not needed on a daily basis by many and only exists to serve a few key tasks. One quick note on this point: Keep in mind that I am talking about the mass market. There are certainly segments of the market that need desktops or notebooks for work, or for pure heavy lifting tasks on a daily basis. My point is that this is a much smaller group compared to the vast majority of mass market consumers who have very simple needs for technology. The PC(Ramos W30) as we knew it, the one that was growing annually, needed the mass market to continue growing. That s()hip has sailed. Tablets have taken over the growth, role, and the relationship with consumers from the PC and I don't see that changing any time soon.
So Where Do We Go From Here?
This does not mean that all hope for the PC is lost — quite the contrary. We are already seeing quite a bit of innovation in form and function from the industry. Many companies are attempting to steal attention back from the tablet by making their PCs more like tablets. This is creating both challenges and opportunities, but at the very least, PC vendors are being forced to think in new ways about their products. I think there is a role for many of these new PC form factors like hybrids and convertibles. I just don't think they are enough to add growth to the traditional PC(Quad Core A31) market. Even with these devices, the PC industry will still shrink, largely because people will hold on to PCs longer. The refresh rates needed for industry growth will shift to tablets, where consumers will refresh their purchases more often.

Where we go from here is the multi-screen world. In the age of the PC, it was all about one primary computing screen. Now it's about many. Consumers will have two or three or four screens in their lives and they will want to use all of them as a part of their computing solution. The future is not about one screen; it is about many, and the sooner the industry embraces this reality, the sooner companies can stop worrying about the shrinking growth of one segment and begin thinking about the growth of another.
Bajarin is a principal at Creative Strategies Inc., a technology industry analysis and market-intelligence firm in Silicon Valley. He contributes to the Big Picture opinion column that appears here every week.

xiaohanfang بازدید : 64 دوشنبه 30 بهمن 1391 نظرات (0)

 


The US is the biggest tablet market in the world, and it is poised to grow even bigger to around 72 million by 2018, new research data compiled by Transparency Market research has revealed. Sales of tablet PCs(quad core tablet 10.1) have been growing steadily ever since the iPad was launched in 2010, and it is expected to surpass sales of notebook PCs soon.
The reasons are obvious. Tablet PCs are compact and portable with enough of battery life on most devices to last at least a whole day. Performance levels have enhanced significantly since the first iPad was launched so that the latest iPad 4 with A6X dual core chip with quad core graphics is offering performance several times better than its predecessor. What is more impressive is that the improvement has happened in just the three years time that the segment has been a reality.

Another reason for the tablet segment to grow by leaps and bounds is its multitasking ability. A tablet can be the perfect entertainment device, which can be used to get along with a plethora of tasks. (quad core)These include ebook reading, playing games, listening to songs, or watching videos. The easy availability of a wide range of apps has only added to the scope of using the device.
Coming back to the data Transparency Market research has come up with, while the segment size stood at around 34 million in 2012, it could jump to 72 million by 2018. Also, while Apple has maintained a leadership position in the segment since its inception, that could change by 2018 when Android could be seen taking the lead. Also, while tablets with 10 inch sized displays have made up the bulk of the market, that could also change with more and more cheap 7 inch tablets coming on to the scene.

Another interesting change we can witness in the not so distant future is more acceptance of the device among the entrepreneurs. The business community has been slow in making the tablet PC an inherent part of the business, but the next wave of tablet sales push is likely to be from the business segment.Ainol Novo10 Hero Quad Core
However, the biggest change could be the way the segment itself is shaping up with the emergence of the Windows 8 platform together with devices such as the Surface. With Windows 8 and the Surface line of tablets, Microsoft is opening up a whole new aspect of tablet ownership—that of content creation. So far, tablets are known more as devices designed for content consumption. What we will be seeing next are tablet devices that will change the way we see computers.

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xiaohanfang بازدید : 63 شنبه 14 بهمن 1391 نظرات (0)

 

 

The tablet market is growing at an incredible rate all around the country. Many analysts and research firms have already found that more and more consumers and business users are replacing aging computers with tablets.(Ainol Novo9 Spark Quad Core)Many of the business users that are getting tablets are getting these devices as their first mobile computing product rather than replacing a notebook computer.A company called Transparency Market Research has published a new study looking at the tablet PC market in the United States. According to the company, tablet PCs shipped 34.2 million units in 2012. The company is predicting that the tablet PC market within the United States will reach 71.6 million units by 2018. That would give the tablet market in the US a growth rate of 13.1% between 2012 and 2018.

The company says that in 2010 the iPad held the largest share of the tablet market accounting for more than 80% of the US market. The company predicts that Android-based tablets will pass the iPad by 2017. The most popular tablets currently have screens ranging between 9.6-inches and 11-inches with more than 25 million tablets in this range sold in 2012.quad core cpu
However, the company says that the popularity of this large-screen tablet segment is declining. As the popularity of the larger screen tablets declines, the popularity of tablets with screens eight-inches and smaller is growing significantly. I'd wager this has a lot to do with the large and ever-increasing number(Sanei N10) of seven-inch Android-powered tablets that continue to come to market at low prices. The company also predicts that mobile workers will continue to adopt tablets at an impressive rate with a growth rate of 18.1% from 2012 to 2018.

xiaohanfang بازدید : 49 جمعه 13 بهمن 1391 نظرات (0)

 

 

The preliminary survey by business research firm IDC showed the tablet market grew 75.3 percent year over year in the quarter. and rocketed 74.3 percent from the previous quarter's total of 30.1 million. IDC said the strongest growth came from Android, including tablets made by South Korea's Samsung and Taiwan's Asus, which makes a Google-branded Nexus tablet. (quad core cpu)Apple remained the biggest seller, but its market share was under 50 percent, IDC said. The survey found that Microsoft, which launched its new Surface tablet in the quarter, failed to break into the top five sellers and shipped a modest 900,000 of the devices in the quarter. Overall, the market's strong gains came from a spate of new product launches, including the iPad mini, and lower prices, which encouraged buyers over the holiday shopping season, IDC said. "We expected a very strong fourth quarter, and the market didn't disappoint," said IDC analyst Tom Mainelli. "The record-breaking quarter stands in stark contrast to the PC market, which saw shipments decline during the quarter for the first time in more than five years." Apple's iPad held its top position with 22.9 million units shipped. That was up 48 percent from a year earlier, but lower than overall market growth.

As a result, Apple's market share declined for a second quarter in a row to 43.6 percent from 46.4 percent in the third quarter.(tablet pc quad core) Samsung, the number two vendor, saw year-on-year growth of 263 percent, selling 7.9 million tablets and grabbing a 15.1 percent percent market share. IDC said Amazon, which does not provide its own sales data, delivered some six million tablets in the quarter to retain its spot as the number three vendor. That represented 26.8 percent growth, giving Amazon a market share of 11.5 percent, IDC said. Fourth place belonged to Asus, which sold 3.1 million tablets, year-on-year growth of more than 400 percent. That gave the Taiwan-based firm a 5.8 percent market share. (ainol novo 10 hero)Barnes & Noble sold one million of its Nook tablets and accounted to 1.9 percent of the market, the survey found. IDC analyst Ryan Reith said Microsoft will need to shift its strategy to compete better in the tablet market. "There is no question that Microsoft is in this tablet race to compete for the long haul," he said, calling the market reaction to Surface "muted." "We believe that Microsoft and its partners need to quickly adjust to the market realities of smaller screens and lower prices. In the long run, consumers may grow to believe that high-end computing tablets with desktop operating systems are worth a higher premium than other tablets, but until then (selling prices) on Windows 8 and Windows RT devices need to come down to drive higher volumes."

xiaohanfang بازدید : 49 پنجشنبه 12 بهمن 1391 نظرات (0)

 

 

 

The Samsung ATIV Smart PC is the first tablet with Windows 8 we receive proof that turns into laptops via hooking a keyboard dock included base. The precursors of the class are the Pad Transformer from Asus,(Ployer momo11)which, thanks to the success of sales have become an example to follow.This new wave of products in fact comes with Windows 8 but aims to attract attention with a solution that is not a novel. The base is a 11.6-inch tablet as it has the only new operating system from Microsoft, hoping to attract the attention of those winks to the tablet but longs to the same system installed on the desktop with the intention of installarci all programs running on your PC.Sanei N10

A kit is the keyboard dock which for many is associated with the concept of productivity.Resulting hybrids, which in the case of the product under test can be considered as substitutes of the now defunct netbook. In fact, if on one hand the touch and the detachable keyboard(YuanDao N90FHD) open a sea of ​​possibilities, the other components selected from Samsung clip the wings. The need to contain the prices has led to install an Atom CPU coupled with 2GB of memory.

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