Thursday, August 31, 2006

Pocket Lint: ASUS R2H UK launched for £799

Pocket-Lint have just posted a news item saying that the ASUS R2H will launch at £799

That's exactly the same price as the Samsung Q1.

Incredibly, they report that this includes 768MB RAM a 60GB HDD and an external DVD Dual D/L Drive. If this is true, Samsung have a problem on their hands.

There is a link to ASUS on the news story but no source quoted for the news.

Lets wait and see if more details emerge from ASUS today.

Steve / Chippy.

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UMPCs and Windows Media Center.

This is cool.

Currently XP Media Center doesn't contain the features of XP Tablet Edition and Tablet Edition obviously doesn't have the Media Center capabilities.

But when Vista comes, this will change.

Some versions of Windows Vista will include both Tablet PC and Media Center. [ref]

A touch-enabled mobile media center solution is not only going to be very cool, its also going to be pretty much unique amongst operating systems. Neither Apple or Linux can offer that level of out-of-the-box integration yet.

This guy, Stephan Torres, thinks the media center idea is cool too. He's taken a Founder Mininote (AKA Tablet Kiosk 7200 series) put Vista beta on it and then installed it in his car dashboard. Way to go Stephan.

He's also had the privilege of having owned a Mininote for 4 months and his comments are positive. He's happy with the build quality and the power of the device and has a few words to say about other UMPC's too.

  • UMPC Samsung: No the webcam, not of reader SD, buttons of navigation and short cuts not very practical

  • UMPC Sony (UX90 or 180 according to denominations'): I saw it lately has Taiwan and it appears too much small to to me. The screen is practically illegible with Windows XP. It is necessary to have magnifying glasses in the place of the glasses!!!. In any case I do not like too the closed world of Sony.

Interesting points about the Sony there.

On the negative side, Stephan mentions the static webcam ( I agree, a rotating cam would be a lot better.) the poor speaker volume and lack of cellular data capability.

More pics and translated French over here.

Steve /Chippy.

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Last call for Pepperpad Plus!

Update: Ripberger left a comment to correct me on the names of the devices. The Pepperpad Plus was the original name of the pepperpad 3. The current Pepperpad is known only as 'Pepperpad.' Thanks Ripberger.

Pepperpad have just sent out an email covering pretty much what we said in a previous post. That's 2 Pepperpads for $1000 then!

The original Pepperpad Plus Linux-based web tablet device is being cleared out for under $500 (was over $800) on both Amazon.com and e-cost.com to make way for the new Pepperpad 3 device.

Not only that, but the $500 Pepperpad plus is worth another $200 if you're interested in getting the Pepperpad 3. Just order the Pepperpad 3 and order the Pepperpad 3 before the end of Sept and you'll qualify for a $200 discount bringing it down to $500. That's a 30% discount when you take Pepperpad up on the two offers. (Hint: Convince a friend that he needs a Pepperpad Plus and then use the serial number to buy the new Pepperpad 3!)

The new Pepperpad will be shipping, with a 7" screen and an AMD LX800 processor, at the end of Sept. Check out our data sheets on the Pepperpad Plus and Pepperpad 3 for more information, images and links.

Personally I don't think Pepperpad do the Pepperpad 3 device justice in the promotional material. With its x86 architecture processor, there are absolutely thousands of programs out there waiting to be ported over and if the existing Pepperpad community is anything to go by, it won't be long before these devices will be doing more than they were ever designed to do. OpenOffice, Mplayer, Mythtv, TheGimp and Amarok would be the first packages I'd have a go at porting if I had a chance. Followed closely by handwriting recognition software, navigation software and then Windows XP. The only problem is, there's no distribution deal for Europe yet. We hear that they're working on it.

Let me know, readers, if you've ordered one in the U.S. There's a space on Carrypad reserved for your unboxing images and a whole post reserved for the first person that gets XP running on it!

Original email text here

Steve / Chippy.

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UMPC websites sinking?

A quick scan through the Carrypad UMPC links page shows me I've got some updating to do.

Of the 38 sites listed, no less than 10 seem to be stuck in the water. That is they've had no updates for a month or more.

Not only that but 3 of them seem to be 'made for google' now and have no real content on them at all. This is in addition to the 10 or so more that I've found that I never bothered to add to the link list becuase they add no value at all.

Unfortunately, UMPCorigami.com seems to have been hacked and its shut its doors for the time being. I hope they get back on their feet soon.

Now I know that news has been thin on the ground (especially good news!) and that many of these sites are run on a part time basis but I have to say, 'Come on. You're needed.'  Really. With full-time tech journalists knocking the device all over the place it needs a strong community of supporters to counter these clumsy goliaths. There are customers out there that will probably end up with 3.2Ghz and 5kilo's of laptop just to run Internet Explorer if we don't help them!

On the positive side, UMPCity has moved focus and looks to be very healthy and running as MicroPCTalk. The UMPC definition is very hard to stick to. I understand! Good luck to MicroPCtalk.

The only other new site that I can think of is the TabletWiki.

Also added to the list are the established (but missed last time!) sites below.

If you know of any new sites that need adding to the list, let me know. (list at carrypad.com)

The updated and re-organised list is available here.

Steve / Chippy

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Sony UX180P pulled from US market.

OK, perhaps 'pulled' is the wrong word. Lets just say they're not re-stocking any more.

JKonTheRun noticed yesterday that the UX180P had disappeared from the Sony Style website and when I checked it today, it still wasn't there.

Over at MicroPCTalk however, they've had confirmation that it really has been pulled phased out.

we got word directly from Sony USA that they are currently out of inventory for the Vaio UX180P. A new “refreshed model” will be posted in SonyStyle on September 19.

I wonder if the cellular deal didn't work out? Perhaps one of the basic models with compact flash slot is on its way over. No-one actually knows right now.

via MicroPCTalk who, incidentally have changed name from UMPCity.com. Re-set your RSS feeds and bookmarks.

Steve / Chippy

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Australia gets Pentium-M UMPC

[update: Before you contact me Tegatech (Hugo), I know! I've just seen the TabletKiosk 7200 series on your website. You deserve a link for my oversight and another link for offering the base model for AUS$1899. Hugo one of the principles of Techagate who runs a good blog also deserves a link. I promise I'll pay more attention to the Oz market in the future.]

Pioneer Computers in Australia are now offering the DreamBook UMPC H700 in their UMPC portfolio alongside the DreamBook UMPC 700.

If you think it looks familiar then you're right. Its based on the Founder mininote which is appearing in U.S. and Europe as the TabletKiosk i7200 series.

Its available in with a choice of processors; The Celeron version and the Pentium-M version and has the big advantage of a docking station included into the package. Other features included a 1.3mp cam, SD/MMC slot, TV-out and the usual Wifi/BT connectivity.

The device should be available now starting at AU$1999 including tax.

I've ordered the Pentium-M version of this (Tablet Kiosk branded) so watch out for some reviews soon. In the meantime, pop over to the Pioneer website or to our product database for in for info on both versions.

Steve / Chippy.

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New Sony UX 70 Ultra-Mobile PC.

Don't get too excited if you live in the Western world. It looks like Sony has launched a UX50 with a 1-seg digital TV receiver in Asia which isn't much use to those of us living in Europe or America.

Mobile Digital TV is one thing I'd love to see get sorted out in U.S. and Europe. At the moment its a mess of licensing and standards. For the meantime, we'll have to settle with DVB-T in Europe and make sure we carry our usb-DVB stick and antenna with us!

This brings the total number of UX devices to 6. UX90s (Asia) UX90PS (Asia) UX50 (Asia) UX70 (Asia) UX17 (Aus.) UX180p (U.S.) although JKontheRun reported yesterday that it's gone from the website and I can't find it myself either.

Akihabara news doesn't have much more info but thanks to them for the info.

Steve

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Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Fujitsu Loox P70 series. Tasty specs.

One of my favorite ultra-mobile PC's, the 8.9" swivel screen tablet convertible Fujitsu P1510d looks like its getting a very nice set of upgrades which could bring it right to the cutting-edge of UMPC technology.

Engadget has reported that details are up on a Japanese website and sure enough, there they are. (Google translation)

The Loox P series uses an Intel U1400 (Core Solo ULV, 1.2Ghz, same as Sony UX90 and the Australian UX17 version.) processor with Intel GMA950 graphics engine and comes in varying flavors of disk and memory. Other highlights include shock-protected hard drives, Gig-E LAN, Fingerprint sensor, Bluetooth 2.0 and 1280x768 LED back-lit screen (on 8.9". That's almost too much!) This is a very high-end mobile device indeed.

This is only the second LED backlit screen I've seen on an UltraMobile device (Sony UX also has LED backlighting.) Fujitsu are claiming 4.4 hours battery life using a JEITA standardised test. For comparison, the Sony UX has a similar battery and is quoted at 3.5 hours battery life using the same test.

The base model looks to be around 1700 Euro in Japan and launches at end of Sept. Expect Dynamism.com to jump on these very quickly.

Steve / Chippy.

Via gottabemobile

Current version (Fujitsu P1510d) data sheet.

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Averatec AHI delayed.

Maybe I shouldn't have written about it this morning but I've just heard that the Averatec AHI is to be set for a possible launch in Q1 2007. Not Q3 2006 as was previously planned. Averatec sent this public message to me via email.

Through development, we have refreshed our vision for the AHI and feel confident that we can release it during the first quarter of 2007.

That's a real shame because I felt (and still feel) that it stirred a bit of emotion amongst potential buyers just like the Sony UX does. Could it be the keyboard factor? Certainly the slider style of keyboard is becoming the most talked about not only on UMPC's but on smartphones too. Maybe it was the price that was rumored. $700 was a good deal cheaper than the Origami UMPC's.

Well, we look forward to an even more exciting design and specifications next year. I'll be at CES in Jan and I hope the Averatec will be there too.

Steve / Chippy

GottaBeMobile video review of Sony UX-180P

Very nice video show about the Sony UX180P. Warner Crocker brings up some interesting and important points. Especially the crazy location of the rear-facing camera.

Within the show, Warner demo's the Inscribe text entry software that I'm quite interested in trying out and learning myself.

GottaBeMobile is where you need to go to watch the video.

Steve.

Sony UX data sheet, images and links.

Mugen 9-cell battery for Eo v7110/T700...

...Pioneer/Easybook P7/It's/Ago7. I think that's all of them covered!

Ctitanic has posted some photos of the extended battery solution that Mugen are working on. No prices or dates yet.

To me, it looks like a 9-cell solution. That will translate to just under 6 hours if the cells are a similar capacity to the originals. Very useable!

More over at UMPCBuzz.

 

Steve / Chippy.

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UMPC "Watch list" update.

At the end of Spring, I published a 'watchlist.' A report on what we should look out for in the UMPC market during Summer. 3 months later its time to give it an update.

New Nokia Internet Tablet.
No new news on this one I'm afraid. I'm still confident that something will happen for the Christmas market although the probability is going down with every week that passes.
Probability: 80%
My guess on specs: Late summer release. $550. Slightly bigger screen. Better processor. Linux based. Keyboard.

Samsung Q1 with VIA processor.

"This one is strictly a rumor" I said. The rumor was true. The Samsung Q1b looks like its headed for the UK market in October. Other markets unconfirmed as yet. Priced above the existing Q1. Its possible that good battery life on this device could be why the price has been set high.

Averatec AHI.

Averatec told us in June that the AHI was a "work in progress" and that we should look for news at the end of Q3 with a launch soon after.

Founder Mininote.

This one has appeared in the U.S. and Europe as the Tablet Kiosk 7200 series. The 7210 is due to be the first Pentium-M based (and there for the most powerful) Origami UMPC. Look out for my reviews on this one as I've ordered one. It should be arriving this week.

Pepperpad plus.

It turned out to be the Pepperpad 3.  (OK I got the name wrong. I can't get everything right!) Due for launch in Sept. Based on AMD LX800 processor.

Flybook V33i.

Its now available. Watch out for a review from Carrypad in Sept.

DualCor cPc

I said 'ho hum" last time. I'll say it again. Ho Hum. No real news about this. Some people have engineering samples.

ASUS R2H

Its finally been confirmed on the ASUS global website but as-yet there's no press releases, prices or availability info.

Price wars.

Price wars started with the AgoPC being introduced at 15% less than equivalent devices already available.  

Its quite a shame that the watch list is nearly empty now and the chances of more devices appearing before Christmas are now getting slimmer. The next big 'event' in the UMPC calendar will be CES in Jan and we should expect to see the first rumors starting to appear for that during Oct and Nov. In Dec I guess it will be time for the CES Watchlist.

Regards

Steve / Chippy.

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Vega UPPC/UMPC Review and pricing.

Akihabaranews are reporting this morning that 'Suze' (whoever she is) has a Vega UMPC and has done a review. Its available in Korean and helpfully (not!) all placed as jpg files. No chance to do much Google translation then! I assume that Akihabaranews will have a translated version of this soon but I'll see if I cant de-cipher some of the review comments and get some info.

On the way through the reviews and links, I found that the Raon Digital Korean language website has been updated with pricing and some availability news.

The unit is only available in Korea at the moment but they are looking at international reseller partnerships. There's a hint that these could start by the end of the year.

As for pricing, there's a huge flyer up on the Korean version of the website with prices.(click to enlarge.)

The 256MB version looks like it will be 550 Euro ($710)

The 512MB versions looks like it will be 590 Euro ($750)

The pricing is as predicted (although, looking at the flyer, this could be a limited-time offer.) You'll probably also need to add $100 for reseller costs and margin it ever arrives in other parts of the world.

Vega UMPC data sheet. (Carrypad)

Regards

Steve / Chippy

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Saturday, August 26, 2006

ASUS R2H - GPS + UV filter warning.

Just a quick thought on integrated GPS modules in UMPC devices. Especially if you are thinking about the ASUS R2H.

If you have a car like mine that has a UV filter on the front windscreen, there's a chance that a GPS receiver may not work.

 Here's just one reference from this PDF.

Note: Certain vehicles (in particular top specification BMW, Mercedes, Renault Peugeot & Citroen) have UV screens that block the GPS signals from entering the vehicle, which can stop [the product] from acquiring its position. These vehicles require an additional antenna to support [the product] (please contact xxxx for details). Heated screens can also affect signal strength.

I have this problem. The answer is to buy a Bluetooth GPS 'mouse' and locate it near the back window. Another possibility is to look for a SIRF III GPS receiver. These newer receivers might work and no, I'm not sure what type of GPS receiver is in the R2H. My guess is its a cheaper SIRF II model.

If anyone in ASUS can lend me an R2H, I'll gladly test it out for you.

Regards

Steve / Chippy. 

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One UMPC per child.

UMPCs for Kids! $100 UMPCs! 1 million UMPCS go into production!

[update. The CM1 is now called the 2B1. Read more here.]

No, I haven't gone mad. You havent missed any big news. I'm just writing about the One laptop per child project which has been brought to my attention by reader Michael who is asking - Is the $100 device a UMPC?

So to kick-off, here's my definition of a UMPC.

A highly portable computing device with 5-10" screen, wired and wireless connectivity that is able to load and run common Internet, office, media and PIM applications operated through a graphical user interface.

So far, its about the best effort I've seen (even though I do say so myself!) at defining a UMPC but its definitely not the same as Microsoft's who would like to see Windows Vista on every portable device. They had a project called 'Origami.' I'll stop there though and ask you to read the buyers guide if you're interested in going further on that topic.

Back to the CM1 then, the question is - is it a UMPC? My answer is answer is 'yes'

It fits the definition. Furthermore, its more powerful than a Nokia 770, its got battery life than you can only dream of and the screen is higher resolution than any Origami UMPC available. Its got a keyboard, WiFi with directional antennas, USB2.0, Quick-boot BIOS, Linux operating system and costs $100.

In fact, its an Ultra Mobile PC that we can learn a lot from. Take the screen for example. Its a fantastic example of a component being designed for the job intended. Many current UMPCs use common industrial or automotive industry LCD touchscreens that are cheap but don't really do the best job in preserving battery power. These screens can take around 5-7 watts of power. The screen being developed for the CM1 will be a dual-mode screen capable of a monochrome 1200x900 reflective mode (using ambient light reflected from the rear of the panel) that takes just 0.2 watts. The transmissive color mode uses LED backlighting technology and runs at just 2 watts.

Other interesting specifications:

  • The keyboard is integrated into the unit and is a special sealed rubber membrane unit. Its very thin!
  • LinuxBios (fast boot)
  • 400Mhz AMD Geode GX x86 processor.
  • Flash drive - 0.5GB
  • WiFi 802.1b/g with dual rotating coaxial antennas. Built in MESH software.
  • 22.8W/hr battery (at least 10 hours battery life)
  • Touchpad supporting written input.
  • 128MB RAM.
  • Thin version of Fedora Core with the Sugar environment

So what's wrong with the device then? Well, apart from the lack of touchscreen, slightly portly 1.5KG weight, no handwriting recognition, no 3D graphics support, no large NV storage area and inability to run XP, the main problem is that you won't be able to buy one. Not even for your child. The project relies on orders from governments (presumably to stop a black-market forming and to reduce tax bills) of 1Million units or more. Maybe one day we'll be able to buy one for a 'westernised' price but by the time that happens, we might be reaching the 7.8 million UMPC units per year that in-sight predicted. The $300 UMPC's could be common by then!

I wish I'd paid more attention to this project before. I had read a lot about it but never in any real detail. Having read through as much as I can today I have to say I'm very very impressed with the technology going on in this project. It shows us just how 'fat' current UMPCs are and how much further they can go. If the screen on a current UMPC was swapped out for one of the CM-1 dual-mode screens then you'd instantly be looking at over up to (see comments) 5 hours battery life. I love the way that the software is fit for purpose and that the device has been designed for long life (5 years is the planned lifetime of one of these devices.) I really hope that some of the technologies get sold on to UMPC ODM's and filter through.

Thanks again to Michael for sending me the email. I'll be following the One Laptop per child news blog from now on and trying to understand more about the wider aspects of the project. Namely, education of children in developing countries.

Steve / Chippy.

Useful links:

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Friday, August 25, 2006

ASUS R2H. Available at last.

OK, the prediction was right. (see previous post)

At last, Asus have formally announced the R2H UMPC.

The important 'unknowns' are:

Price: Unknown

Availability: Unknown

Other specs are as were previously announced and available for a good 3 months, apart from the RAM which has dropped to a baseline 256MB.

Thanks to aquabubble and jkOnTheRun for the nudge.

Thanks to ASUS for no new news whatsoever.

I assume it will appear in the products section of the websites later today though so keep an eye out.

update: It could be a heavy beast!

Steve

ASUS R2H Launch. Today?

Through GottaBeMobile I see that Digit-Life has reported that the R2H will be launched today.

There's nothing on the ASUS news sites around the world yet and Friday is a strange day to be launching a product. Maybe the launch team fancied going out tonight to celebrate a long long project!

More news later I hope.

Asus R2H data-sheet.

Steve / Chippy.

UMPCs seem like good value this morning.

UMPCs aren't at the $500 mark yet but hold on, have you seen the price of some smartphones that are around at the moment. The top-end HTC keyboard-equipped models cost well over $700 which makes a fully-equipped ultra mobile PC at $899 seem like very good value.

And now this. A 1Ghz Toshiba notebook at $2275.



Can I just compare the Dynabook SS S30 specs to an ASUS R2H for a second please. Differences in brackets.
1Ghz processor (ASUS - 900Mhz)
30Gb drive (ASUS - 40Gb)
512MB RAM (snap!)
Weight 1.2kg (ASUS - 1kg)
Fingerprint reader (snap!)
Vista capable - (My guess is that the Asus will uses the Intel 915 chipset which is vista capable.)
Bluetooth 2.0 (snap!)
No touchscreen (Asus has touch and tablet capabilities)
12" screen (7" screen)
Keyboard (no keyboard)

The processor, I admit, is a generation better than the Celeron-M and the graphics co-processor is a bit better but if Asus offered the R2H with a Core-solo and 945gm chipset, it wouldn't be anywhere near $2000. The Sony UX50 (exactly the same CPU/GPU combo) is only $1500.

Did I miss anything? Oh yeah. Battery. 9 hours battery on the Tosh.

It sounds a lot but it's not really. Lets take the usual 25% off for over-hyped marketing (the Q1 is still quoted as having a 4-hour battery, I haven't heard of anyone who's had much more than 2.5 hours) and you get to 6.75hours. Take into account that the 200gms extra weight is about the same as the extended battery for a UMPC ($100 for 5hours) and you have two devices that are capable of 7 hours (battery swap needed in the case of the UMPC)

Dynabook SS S30 - $2275.
High estimate ASUS R2H UMPC + 6-cell battery - $1200.

Save your money. Get a UMPC. And a docking station. And a big screen if you fancy. And a nice case. And another 6-cell battery. And a Bluetooth stowaway keyboard. And still have change left over for the bus home. In fact, take a taxi.

Steve / Chippy.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Hi Pad. Bump! And other news.

Pay attention everyone. We posted the HiPad news on Monday while Engadget were still in bed!

BUMP! The Data Sheet is also in the product portal now.

And did you miss the review notes for the Founder Mininote/Tabletkiosk i7210? Maybe it was so unexciting that it wasn't worth talking about? OK I'll give you that one!

But moving swiftly on to new news, Kevin Tofel and JKK are comparing the Q1 to the e0 v7110 using Battery Eater. Notes here. If I can keep my fingers off the 7210 for the duration of the test, I'll be running the same test giving us a VIA C7-M, Celeron-M and Pentium-M comparison.

The Mobile Gadgeteer Matt Miller has reviewed the HTC TyTN (Vodafone VPA Compact III, T-Mobile MDA Vario II, Orange SPV 3100, I-Mate JasJam) which is, I have to admit, a nice phone. At 750,-Euro though its not cheap and I think that my Nokia 6280 3G candy-bar slider will make a better companion for a UMPC.

One point of note on the Samsung Q1b. Its going to be more expensive than the Q1 in the UK if the pricing mentioned in the PCW article is correct. That gives that game away a bit because on the surface, the devices aren't much different. OK, there's 60Gb and 1Gb of RAM on offer but I think they've got something else up their sleeve. Its either a 1.5Ghz processor or very good battery life. My money is on the latter. I think they will match or even beat my previous predictions written up in my April report "VIA C7-M CPU and Battery Life tests."

Finally for today, I noticed that the UMPC has been mentioned in the MP3Car.com forums.

After researching carputers for months, I finally figure out UMPC will be my ultimate solution. It is easy to setup, less wiring and no power issues.

At the moment the Q1 is the only UMPC device to have a car mount available. Hopefully we'll see more car mounting options soon because I want to try out that GPS software that was blogged today.

Steve / Chippy.

Tags: Too many!

Readers UMPC images.

People have been sending me UMPC images. Thanks! I'm enjoying them.

Maybe some of those Circuit City salespeople that jkOnTheRun were talking about should have this as a bookmark. All potential notebook buyers should be asked 'What do you really want to do with it?' and then shown the images.

I've posted them up at the gallery here. Max 640x480 for guests but some are larger. If you want a copy of the big versions, please register in the gallery.

Keep sending in the pics.

Regards

Steve / Chippy.

Logitech and Solidtek mini-keyboards tested

There's been a rush of mini-keyboard info over the last week. Here's a summary post if you're looking for some options.

Jezlyn from "Late to the Party." has been out and snapped up a few of them to test. There's plenty of pictures and a final conclusion on which she finds best.

Is it the Logitech or is it the Solidtek? Take a look.

 

Steve / Chippy

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Samsung Q1b (VIA C7 version) manual spotted.

A Carrypad reader, Mr Anonymous (!), spotted that the Q1b manual is already online here.

Sure enough, on page 3, there it is in black and white.

The disk and memory specifications are slightly different to what was released for the UK market (1GB/60GB) but I guess its a manual written for multiple English language markets. A quick scan of the manual doesn't reveal any battery life details unfortunately.

[Update. The Q1b will use the VX700 integrated north/southbridge chipset. A slight advance on the shipset used on the VIA C7-M based eo i7110. This could bring battery life advantages.] 

Steve / Chippy.

Carrypad data-sheet. Samsung Q1b.

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Founder review hints at eo i7210 performance.

I knew there had to be one out there somewhere. The Founder Mininote has been available for some time in Asia so after an hour or so of searching and translating I managed to find a review of the Pentium version of the Mininote on a Chinese website. As far as I know, this is exactly the same as the TabletKiosk eo i7210 so it will give some good pointers as to what to expect when the device is released here.

The review is very hard to read but I picked up some information from the translation. Here is my interpretation of the main points (my own comments in red italics)

  • Battery life: 2.5hours under general use. Not bad. Not exceptional.
  • No extended battery available. I think this will be less of a problem with a docking station available but I might look for a second battery.
  • 'Engineering' plastics. There are a few comments about the quality of the plastics and they don't seem all that positive. In fact, overall I think the device looks rather industrial. Not as good as the Q1.
  • Wifi is USB-based. Not Centrino chipset based. That will be  power-disadvantage and might also trigger the C3 state problem that also occurs on the eo v7110.
  • 3dmark 2001 SE - 3585 (eo i7110 is about 900, UX50 is around 2500.) Personally I'm not interested in 3DMark scores but its nice to know that the Intel graphics combined with the Pentium keep it ahead of the rest.
  • 1.3Mp camera is good enough for web conferencing.
  • Noticeable heat build-up. Fans started after 30 minutes. Noise was noticeable.
  • The review sample only had Windows XP home edition. TabletKiosk versions have Windows XP Tablet Edition. 
  • Covered USB connectors look good.
  • Mic and line-out on top is not the best positioning.
  • Hardware brightness buttons.
  • Stereo speakers "very clear voice soft music, while bass inadequate."
  • Backlit keys are good.
  • Video output switch on the docking station. Looking at the icons, it seems to be a switch between TV and VGA outputs. I am really hoping that I'll be able to drive a VGA monitor and the eo screen at the same time as separate screens.
  • Pointer needs practice to get used to.

In general I get the feeling that this is a standard UMPC like we've seen before. Nothing groundbreaking. Personally I haven't been expecting anything more than this because its probably a 2005 design and the only thing that I really found that made it stood out from the others was the included docking station. However, I'm a little curious now to see was gaming I can get going on it.

The heat and noise issues are the most worrying thing mentioned in the review. Quite what baseline this reviewer was using thought, we don't know. To be honest, if it's quieter than this Athlon-64 laptop I'm using right now, I'll be happy!

Here are some picture edits from the review. There's a lot more on the website. Google translation here. Original here.

 Steve / Chippy

Carrypad data-sheet. eo i7210 eo i7209

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Monday, August 21, 2006

TabletKiosk 7200 series on target.

Have you ordered a TabletKiosk eo 7200 series UMPC? If so, you'll be happy to know that the target release date looks like it will be met.

How do I know this? Because I've been badgering the supplier for info!

This time next week, the first devices will be dispatched for local distribution. That means 1st week of Sept for customers as promised.

In the meantime, how about some naked eo i7200 pictures and comparison shots with the Q1? Click the pics for three review pages for the equivalent Lucoms Solo M1 at the Tablet PC Club website(Korean.)



I still haven't found out about the battery life on these things but something's telling me it might not be as good as the new Samsung Q1b.

Steve / Chippy.

data sheet: TabletKiosk eo i7209, eo 7210

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Mugen Power battery for Q1

UMPCBuzz have got hold of pictures of the planned extended battery for the Q1 by Mugen Power.

It looks bigger than the 6-cell version from Samsung. Could be a 9-cell part perhaps. No detailed specs are available at the moment.

UMPCBuzz have more pics.

Update: Ctitanic confirmed that its three times the capacity of the normal battery.

Steve / Chippy

Samsung Q1b update

Following on the from the previous Q1b news, the info has also been posted on UK-based Personal Computer World

Samsung is also bringing out a Q1b model in October which uses Via's C7-M processor, and slightly improved disk space and Ram: 60-byte hard disk and 1GB of Ram. It will cost £899.

This puts it above the existing Q1 in terms of price. Are they touting the VIA C7-M as the best processor for a high-end system? If they've combined the best of Samsung tech with a good design and software around the C7-M we might see some impressive battery life figures.

Release date is October in the UK. In fact, most of the Q1b stories seem to be coming from the UK at the moment. I think someone there got an interview with Dinesh Chand the product manager at Samsung.

Samsung Q1b data sheet.

Steve / Chippy.

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Samsung Q1b - VIA C7-M version.

"Samsung also plans to release the Q1b, a version of the UMPC that uses a 60GB hard drive, 1GB of RAM, and more significantly Via's C7-M processor"

This has just been posted up in some Q1 news at Cnet UK

This was a rumor a while back and we have it in our watch-list.

Samsung Q1 with VIA processor.
This one is strictly a rumor (that no-one has formally denied yet!) I really cant imagine Intel (or Microsoft) letting Samsung simply drop a VIA onto the same UMPC motherboard and letting them compete head to head. No-one, even Samsung, is going to benefit from that. Its possible Samsung could remove some of the interfaces (VGA, Ethernet) and make a stripped down 20GB version I guess. We'll have to wait and see.
Probability 25%
Our guess on specs: Late summer release. $750. Via processor. Reduced Q1 specs.

I'm doing some further investigating...back soon.

Picked up through eagle-eyed Ultranauts.com.

Steve / Chippy.

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HiPad II. Almost UMPC.

Its another AMD LX800 powered device that I've just spotted on the Korean Tablet PC Club website. The Sesol HiPAD II is an updated version of the original HiPad that appeared last year.

It's got a 10.4" 800x600 screen (and a simulated 1024x768 mode), 20Gb HDD, upto 1Gb RAM, flash drive option, wifi, DMB, WiBro and UMTS (3G) options, CF, USB, VGA, PCMCIA and possibly a GPS option.

It will run CE, XP embedded or XP/XP Pro (no mention of tablet edition but it does have a touchscreen.) It has a launcher application and supports screen rotation.

Take a look at the pics here (Korean website) or on the company website (English) here.

No pricing info available at the moment.

The Carrypad data sheet for the Sesol Hipad is here.

Steve /Chippy.

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Thoughtfix's 770 laptop.

Thoughtfix's Nokia 770 laptop project is complete.

 

He's taken a 770, an additional battery, a USB hub and a keyboard, made some new cables and fitted it all inside a day-planner case.

There's some good videos, a flash presentation and some images so if you've ever thought about making your 770 more useful, take a look.

Part 1

Part 2

This modular approach is great. I'd like to see it taken further with ultra-thin, ultra-light, battery powered 12" LCD screens available together with a keyboard in cases like this. You could just open up and connect via next-gen Bluetooth. Then you'd be able to use a UMPC as 1) and handheld  2) a desktop (in a dock) 3) a modular laptop.

Thanks Thoughtfix.

Steve / Chippy.

Carrypad links: Nokia 770 data-sheet.
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Sunday, August 20, 2006

Secure Screens with Microsoft OneCare.

Watch out for this if you're thinking of putting one-care on your UMPC (or any touchscreen device for that matter.)

Thoughtfix at Ultramobilegeek.com had some problems with his eo. Installing the Windows OneCare security packages disabled his touchscreen.

I have a feeling that Kevin Tofel of jkOnTheRun uses OneCare on his Q1. Maybe Thoughtfix should drop the guys a line. I'd certainly be interested because I'm due for a renewal on my Anti-Virus software and I won't be buying Kaspersky again. So far I've heard nothing but good reports about OneCare and at $50 for 3 PC's it's also good value.

Steve / Chippy

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Samsung Q1 accessories.

jkOnTheRun has some photos of the Q1 car dock. Actually it looks more like a simple holder rather than a dock. There's also some photos of the extended battery. Pop over to take a look.

The items are appearing on EBay via sellers in Asia now so at least we know that they are available somewhere in the world! Here's a picture one of the items that's being offered at the moment.

Taking a look at the various UMPC-related auctions on EBay, I found this.

Its a strange-looking tablet that I've never seen before. It labeled as a Fujitsu Stylistic LT P600 and Its got an old old spec. Anyone know anything about it?

Also going on EBay are a stack of UMPC-related domain names. $2K for UMPC-ACCESSORIES.COM anyone?

 

Regards

Steve / Chippy

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Saturday, August 19, 2006

Apple tablet.

I've really been trying to ignore all the rumours about an Apple tablet/UMPC over the last 6 months but this one has caught my eye.

It was shown on jkOnTheRun just a few minutes ago and it just looks lovely. The image shows a price of $2499 and what looks like a 10" or bigger screen. Possibly not a UMPC then.

Event if it's a photoshop design, its worth airing just as a recommendation to Apple. Just like this one that we saw back in March.

The image was sent to jkOnTheRun from blog.hooway.com

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Friday, August 18, 2006

Thoughtfix found a mini-keyboard.

Brando workshop make a small keyboard and Thoughtfix went out and bought one...for $25! A bargain.

It's the perfect size to fit in a UMPC gadget bag.

If you're in Europe, its sold under the Keysonic brand as the ACK-3400U for 20,- Euro.

Thanks Thoughtfix.

Update: Jezlyn at "Late to the Party" found another option.

Details here.

Update 2: jkOnTheRun found another! Info here.



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Linux on a Q1

Kevin Tofel of jkOnTheRun has been playing with Ubuntu on his Q1 and came up with the same problem as others did. Touchscreen.

Linux is one of the things that Thoughtfix will be looking at on his eo. Thoughtfix has done a lot of work with Linux and I plan to keep in touch with him on his progress. I've also got some support available from Epios who are also interested!

Its going to take some time but I feel quite confident that Linux on an Origami is going to be achievable and, importantly, useful!

If you're interested in Linux on UMPC's , there's a Linux section over at Origamiportal.com forums where we're tracking as much as we can on the subject.

Steve /Chippy.

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More R2H images.

Asus have kindly sent me their marketing image pack for the R2H which I've uploaded to the gallery and product info page.

R2H images

Two things to note from the close-ups.

1) No docking port.

2) VGA,TV-out and Ethernet port on board.

This, for me, puts it above the Samsung Q1 and in the same media-oriented bracket. Considering the gps, webcam, fingerprint scanner and tv-out, its going to sit above the Samsung Q1 in terms of specifications and in the same media-oriented bracket. If the price is better than the Q1, this is going to knock it for six.

Regarding launch date, we've heard two rumors of week 37 in Europe. That's the week starting 10th Sept.

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Thursday, August 17, 2006

ASUS R2H. Not dead!

A number of people have asked me if I know the status of the Asus R2H, probably the most eagerly awaited Origami UMPC so far.

Well I don't know much but I do know that the project is still alive and somewhere on this planet are boxed R2Hs being stock-piled ready for the word 'GO'.

The R2H was supposed to be launched at the beginning of August but, as always, a good project isn't a good project until the dates have slipped!

The R2H is going to be a feature-packed device with its optional GPS, fingerprint reader, single sign-on software and web cam but the original specifications included the Celeron processor which wouldn't be my choice. Especially 6 months after the specifications were announced. Lets hope they've taken the time to update that to a Pentium-M.

I have a couple of PDF's for those that need to read as much as possible but one of them is in German. Both are from March so beware, specifications might have changed.

Press release
Marketing flyer (German)
Carrypad R2H data sheet (links and pics too!)

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Another on-screen keyboard for UMPCs: InScribe.


At JKOnTheRun, I've just read about the Ilium Inscribe on-screen keyboard software for tablets and umpcs.

It looks like it just might work!

Instead of tapping the screen, giving you one chance to get the correct key, Inscribe allows you to drag across the screen between letters for a whole word. Using this method, Inscribe can determine the keys you were really aiming at by using direction changes. What a great idea.

Personally, I'm still a fan of keyboards but I'm very slowly coming round to the idea that keyboardless operation might be possible with some training. Speech recognition, well-mapped function keys, on-screen pen and thumb-keyboards and handwriting recognition used in the right places are going to reduce the number of situations where a keyboard is required.

If this scribe method is enhanced, it could evolve into a hybrid scribe/gestures input method where the shape is analysed and translated into the likely word using dictionary lookups, contextual info and spelling rules.

Steve / Chippy.

Two UMPC's for $1000


Two Non-origami UMPC's for $500 a-piece is the offer that I've just taken a look at. (U.S. Only)

I'm talking about the Peperpad UMPC's. (Yes, yes. We can argue all day but they are ultra-mobile PC's whether you like them or not!)

Here's the deal:
If you're really really quick, the original Pepperpad is being cleared out for $479 on ecost here.
(and here. The site seems a little unreliable.) Thats a $300 discount and is already a good deal as far as i'm concerned. But, here's the better bit. When you've got the original Pepperpad in your hands, use it for a $200 discount on the Pepperpad 3. Total cost for 2 UMPC's under $1000. (you can keep the original!)

So we're talking about two versions of the Pepperpad mobile web tablet. The original is based on the 624Mhz Xscale processor, has a graphics accelerator, 8.5" screen, sd slot, and runs a special version of Linux. Its got a keyboard, hard drive and..well.. take a look here at the specs here.
The new version, the Pepperpad 3, is not available yet but it is a slightly smaller version (7" screen) and has better wifi, and importantly, runs an AMD LX800 (like the Vega) which means its x86 architecture is binary-compatible with many many versions of Linux software out there. In theory, it should be able to run Windows but that totally depends on the internal hardware. If Raon Systems can run WIndows on an LX800 then maybe the Pepperpad 3 can too. Full Pepperpad 3 specs are here.

Don't panic about the $479 offer though, it looks like the normal clearout price is $499 anyway (from around $800) Not sure how many they have left.

Regarding the discount on the Pepperpad 3, all you need to do is quote the serial number of your original Pepperpad and Pepper Computer will take $200 off the price of the Pepperpad 3.
In total, thats about a $500 / 30% saving on the two devices. Not bad at all. Here's the info page at Pepper Computer. I can't see anything that says that you can't do this but it might be wise to double-check with Pepper. I've left a message with them and will confirm this as soon as I know for sure. Pepperpad have confirmed that this IS a valid way to purchase both the Pepperpad and Pepperpad 3 together.

I've got a soft spot for the Pepper devices. I like the way they've designed to a small hardware spec and the way that they've made sure the software is fit for the purpose. Much like the Nokia 770 really (although that one really does need a processor boost!)

Meanwhile back in Europe, we'll just keep dreaming!

Regards.

Steve / Chippy.

USB-based cellular data solutions.


The other night I was downloading the MoTR podcast on my pocket PC via Bluetooth to my mobile phone's UMTS (3G) modem. 350kbps isn't such a bad rate and this is one of the ways I'll be looking to use for streaming my music from home to my UMPC when it turns up in a few weeks. It appears though that we have slightly different mobile phone contracts than our U.S. cousins. This setup might not be possible for many people.

I put the question to the JKontheRun team in their MobileTechRoundup: Why do you need a separate cellular modem when you've probably got a mobile phone with a GPRS/EDGE/EVDO/UMTS/3G/whatever modem always with you and already available via Bluetooth or USB? They gave me the answers.

In the U.S. many contracts state that you're not allowed to 'tether' your PC to cellular data via a mobile phone. This sounds a little crazy but I guess its aimed at keeping controls on data downloads. Data plans are often flat rate in the U.S. (see footnote) and I guess you could happily download a huge amount of data if you're using a tethered PC and potentially run a VOIP application as the end device has enough processor power to run the codec software. Of course this theory goes out of the window with relatively powerful devices like UMPCs and smartphones that have built in cellular modems, GB drives, SD card slots and USB host capability.

For the time being though, the way to get round it in the U.S. (and please correct me if I'm wrong) is to buy a USB-based cellular modem, put your SIM card into that and then download to your hearts content. As a result of this little loophole, a number of USB-based Cellular modems are now being offered.

Mobility Today has tested three in the last month and seems to be happy with the results. The only downside being that it can put an extra strain on the battery. I'd also add that they're expensive, ugly and who the hell is going to know if you're using your mobile or a data modem anyway just by looking at the data usage?

Anyway, that said, you might not have a GPRS/EDGE/UMTS mobile or you might want to buy a new SIM card with a data-only contract for cost or billing purposes so there's a few cases where these things might come in useful. If so, check out the reviews at Mobility Today.

Franklin Wireless USB EVDO USB adaptor

Falcom Samba 75 GPRS/EDGE USB adaptor
Falcom SAMBA GSM/GPRS USB adaptor


Steve / Chippy.

footnote: In Europe, flat rate plans are starting to appear. In Finland for example, you can even use HSDPA (1mbps) for 10 Euro per month. In Germany, flat rate is around 40 Euro per month (also 1Mbps if you have the phone and the coverage.) at 1mbps, quality video streaming and thin client working (vnc, remote desktop) are possible. Another case for a WebOS?

Kgadget VEGA review and forum thread dissapear.

Maybe someone can double check for me but it looks to me like the original link and any search for 'vega' on the Kgadget website (the site that did the slightly strange review about the Vega.) results in an error. They've been removed.


As I posted yesterday, Raon digital distanced themselves from the review by issuing a statement to us, further increasing the speculation that the review was untruthful. Either Kgadget picked up on it and decided to backtrack or Raon Digital had a little word with them.

Either way, I think I can safely say that we're back to square one with the Vega and that as far as performance goes, ony RaonDigital have the information we need.

Regards
Steve

Email updates from the Carrypad UMPC Journal.

I forgot to tell you all about the email updates that are available. Simply enter your email address below and you'll receive a confirmation email before you know it. After the confirmation you'll receive one email per day with all the Carrypad news for the previous 24 hours. Compact, bijou and with an opt-out option!

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner



Regards
Steve /Chippy.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

UK UMPC prices too high? Import and save 20%

I know, I know. The title of this article sounds like its written for a digg UMPC search but, and my apologies to the established UK resellers, this has to be aired.

I've just been reading an article in UK's Stuff magazine about Expansys importing and supplying the Sony UX series UMPC in the UK. I also ran an article on the subject and came to a similar conclusion that importing is the only way to get hold of some of the UMPCs if you're in Europe.

Having read the article though, I looked into the price of importing other devices into the UK and found that importing a device that is already available in the UK or Europe can work out cheaper than buying in the UK.

The recent announcement by agopc of the ago7 UMPC prompted me to look in detail at import costs for the Amtek T700 OEM devices and it turns out that you can save around $300 (UKP150 - 20%) over the current UK price by importing from the U.S. I looked at the ago7 and the eo v7110 (in 512MB/40GB configuration) as UK imports through Agopc and Dynamism respectively and after adding the 17.5% VAT and the P&P (it appears that there's no import duty to pay on portable/handheld PC's imported to the UK but double-check this with your supplier please before you order.) the price works out at about $1100. Even better, if you can get 10 or more people together, you could be looking at bulk purchase discounts of $50-$100 off the unit price and a few hundred on postage costs. I'm almost tempted to buy up 20 right now! Anyone for a Carrypad branded Amtek T700?

Of the two options I looked at, ordering through Dynamism is possibly the easiest as they have a UK version of their website and a well-oiled processes for exporting from the U.S. Agopc are cheaper but you might have to spend a little more effort in the ordering process and checking on details.

I wouldn't really recommend this as a choice for businesses though. Companies like PocketPc Solutions, the Tablet Kiosk partner in the UK, are very experienced in offering local pre and post-sales support and for most businesses, the value of this far outweighs the savings. (and i'm not sure you can claim back import taxes.) There may also be issues with US versions of software and US power adaptors so if you are thinking of putting in an order, check with the supplier about this. Also watch out for special offers (PocketPC Solutions are running an offer through August) and always contact your local supplier to see if they can offer any extra discounts or bundled accessories.

Some helpful links to get help you on your way:
Dynamism.com (UK page) Can supply a number of types of UMPC.
AgoPC. (U.S. based suppler of the ago7 branded Amtek T700)
PocketPC Solutions (local UK supplier of the Tablet Kiosk v7110 branded Amtek T700)
CamTech Systems (local UK supplier of the Paceblade Easybook P7 branded Amtek T700)


Steve / Chippy.

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Raon Digital: Vega Information may be incorrect.


We've been in touch with Raon Digital and had a little conversation about the current status of the Vega. Its clear that there's a little bit of over-excitement by certain websites on the capabilities of the Vega and RaonDigital have released this public statement to us:
"Please be advised that RAON, the manufacturer of VEGA, releases the official information of VEGA only on its homepage www.raondigital.com. Information from other sites may not be incorrect and/or insufficient"
I'm happy about that. I was worried that the Vega was being hyped through some sort of old-boys-website-club over there in Korea but its now clear to me that Raon are alive, honest and aware of whats going on in the community.

Now then, lets ignore all the hype and start from the very beginning. Carrypad is a very good place to start so send it over chaps and we'll do the honourable thing!

Carrypad produt portal: Raon Digital Vega.
Steve / Chippy.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

UMPCs are expensive for a reason.

OnlyUMPC have a link to a really interesting cost breakdown for the component parts of a UMPC written by Linda Epstein of TabletPC2.com.

Its a great post and goes through exactly why UMPCs won't reach $500 in a short space of time and why the economies of scale haven't kicked in for the market yet. I said similar things in a post the other day about incubating UMPCs.

There are going to be something like 100 million notebooks sold in 2006. I'm guessing that Origami UMPC sales will reach about 0.01% of that so can you imagine the differences in the price of component parts and the cost-per-unit of tooling, production and marketing. Its huge.

I'm also a believer that the price needs to stay high for a bit to give resellers a chance to find their feet in marketing these devices. Its a costly exercise to have to spend an hour with a client to show them the advantages of mobility!

Well done Linda on a great article.

Steve /Chippy.

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MTR podcast tackles the Vega UMPC.

I'm just listening to MobileTechRoundup 63 and the guys are having a good conversation about the Vega UMPC.

It sums up the current status and general feelings about the device nicely so if you're on the search for info about the Vega, have a listen to the podcast.

Also on the show a discussion about Notebook Hardware Control which is a great bit of software for monitoring and setting up a UMPC for efficient battery and cpu use.

Steve / Chippy.

Monday, August 14, 2006

eo v7110 vs Nokia 770

The ultramobilegeek (Thougthfix) blog rounded up its four part series comparing the eo v7110 with the Nokia 770 internet tablet.

There's some good info about user opinions and I second the thoughts about docking stations. They are a must-have accessory for a UMPC and like with the Sony UX and The Tablet Kiosk i7200 series, they should be supplied with the device.

I keep hearing comments from women that like these devices too.
Kristi (19) was very enthusiastic about the TabletKiosk eo. She described it as "very cute" and "would bring it everywhere."
Is it because the UMPCs fit into ladies handbags where a notebook won't?

From the Carrypad product portal:
Nokia 770 internet tablet data sheet
Tablet Kiosk eo data sheet.


Steve / Chippy.

UltraSync software for UMPCs

Through Ultramobileblog, I've just found out about a new syncronisation solution tailored for UMPC's. UltraSync from Imagine LAN

Back in Feb I was asking questions about how the UMPC's would syncronise data and this looks like the perfect solution.

UltraSync™ software from imagine LAN provides comprehensive digital content synchronization (files, music, pictures, video, Outlook® email, and browser favorites) between an Ultra-Mobile PC and its companion PC.

There's a press release here.

What I'd like in a sync solution is a 'random selection' mode where it will copy xGB of random files from a given directory tree once per day/week so that I always have a new selection of music/videos whenever I take the UMPC away. It would be nice to have a UMPC in the car that woke up in the morning, did a wifi sync and went back to sleep again, freshly loaded with new content.

Ultimately though, one wouldn't need any data on a UMPC. If you're connected 24/7 via 3G cellular data, all your media can be downloaded or streamed (I'm already storing my MP3's offline using Slimserver), emails stored offline (IMAP), bookmarks, rss, maps, books etc etc etc. In fact, why bother with the applications when you could use a WebOS. One day. Perhaps.

Steve / Chippy.

TabletWiki

Tablet PC MVP WNewquay of TabletPCBuzz has started a TabletPC wiki which should build up to a nice community knowledge center for Tablet PC and variants (including UMPCs.)
This is a place where you can find, add, and edit knowledge about your Mobile Technologies. The initial focus is on Tablet PCs, Ultra Mobile PCs (Origami) and Media Center PCs. As various technologies converge, we may see articles on other gear, but for now our focus will be on Windows Tablet and Touch Technologies.
There's a section on UMPC's which I plan to add some information to soon.

via Craig Pringle.

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

AGOPC launches UMPC with aggressive pricing.



AGOPC, a new UMPC reseller, have today launched their first product, the ago7 UMPC.

In a press release received from the company, agopc highlights better pricing as the way to broaden the UMPC market and has launched the Amtek T700-based ago7 with 512MB RAM and a 40GB drive at $899.

The ago7 goes head-to-head in America against the Tablet Kiosk v7110 as it's basicaly the same device under the logo but with a $100 price advantage you'll have change left over for the 6-cell 5-hour battery.

Its an interesting move by agopc. Only a few days ago I posted my opinions on how UMPC's will be marketed and lowering the price was one of my least favoured options. However, the customer side of me is very happy about this!

Agopc will be stocking the standard range of accessories including the 6-cell battery, the 3-cell battery a car charger and a unique, low-cost Ethernet adaptor that plugs into the docking port at the base of the unit and if you're quick, ago7 ships with a free flexible keyboard!

Competition is always good and its nice to see more resellers coming on board. Good luck agopc!

Carrypad data sheet - AgoPC Ago7

Regards
Steve.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Incubating UMPCs - Keep the price high.

From day one, we've defined a UMPC as an Ultra Mobile PC! It seemed a fairly simple concept that all these devices should be under the same umbrella and as we move on, its becoming clearer that for everyone's benefit, these devices need to be grouped together. When we say 'everyone', we mean manufacturers, resellers, journalists, marketing and PR companies and of course, UMPC owners.

The UMPC 'platform' or segment (WhatisNew called it the 'small form factor platform' which is a nice term but one that's already well-defined as a small table-top PC. See Sudhian's SFF Techwebsite.) is new and in terms of specifications, is nothing more than a low-end notebook PC. Its a little difficult to sell purely on the basis of the word 'mobility'. Those that have had the privilege of using a UMPC for a few days can see the benefits, but those walking into the notebook PC area of the local computer store and seeing a mini-PC (with no keyboard!) for a higher cost than something with better specifications (and a keyboard!) need a little help in understanding what it's all about. These customers and the responsible salespeople need marketing help.

What are the options for marketing UMPCs then? I'm not a marketing expert but I've had a long (this article has taken at least a month to write.) think about it and come up with some ideas. Lets assume that there is a market for UMPCs and look at a few scenarios.

Wait for the early adopters to show-off their UMPCs.
Do we just wait until the early adopters have shown their devices around and written their reports? Nope. That's not the answer because there's a lot of negative noise coming from those uneducated journalists and their wide-circulation, advertising-subsidised glossy magazines which are drowning out many of the great reports coming from the long-term users. Although the early adopter reports are important, its not enough to incubate the UMPC market. An additional, related activity is UMPC websites and UMPC bloggers. These are also very important but don't really have any impact on people that aren't aware of UMPCs. I doubt that many people have 'stumbled' over Carrypad.com while looking for a new notebook!

Long-term circulation of devices to mainstream journalists.
What about giving a few hundred devices away to non-tech journalists in the hope that they will see the light? Unfortunately, there is no big UMPC 'fund' out there and there is no UMPC marketing organisation to decide how to spend the money. This scenario will require all competing manufacturers to come together and agree on a unified marketing strategy and to fund the distribution of UMPCs. At the moment, its every company fighting for themselves and, possibly counter-productively, believing that their UMPC is the only real solution on the market. Certainly a strategic placing of devices is important and the continued circulation of review samples should be encouraged. Product placement and strategic freebies are also part of this activity and will help in the long-run.

More advertising.
What about some advertising campaigns? TV, magazines, radio, internet? Apart from the high costs, one of the problems is, its easier to sell notebooks, desktops, smartphones and car navigation units than UMPCs at the moment. Why change a successful marketing strategy? The other problem is that some of the new markets that the UMPC could fit into (sofa PC, bedroom PC, kitchen PC, car PC) contain style conscious customers. Marketing 'style' is very expensive. The margins on UMPCs would have to be kept high to support this sort of advertising but it's possible that this could be a 'seed' point.

Let the application sell the device.
What about finding the killer-application? Well, UMPCs are low-end PC's and there may not actually be a killer-app for UMPCs. In fact, the killer app. is more likely to be its useability and mobility rather than any software application.
Live TV is possibly an application that might help. With a subscription model you can sell UMPCs cheaper and with DVB-H/DMB, there's no need for WiFi/3G always-on networking. Unfortunately, there's no common mobile TV infrastructure yet. DMB, DVB and IP streaming are all competing together and we'll probably see different solutions in different regions of the world. It will take at least 2 years before single-chip multi-protocol TV reveivers are cheap and small enough for UMPCs.

Market to the Verticals and wait.
One customer type that is easier to find and target (although not necessarily cheap to market to) is the business markets and the 'verticals.' If businesses see financial gains through additional mobility (think delivery, stock-taking, estate agents, hospitals etc.) then the cost of a device is very easily justified. If a lot of devices can be sold into these markets (with good margins for resellers to support the marketing costs) it might be possible that these business users stimulate interest across other business areas and down into the home. Like early mobile phones, notebooks and pocketPC's, the business users had them first. It wasn't until normal users had seen the devices in use, began to understand the advantages and then saw that the 3rd generation of devices had become cheap and easy to use that the mass-market took off. One of the worst things that could happen in this scenario is that the hardware becomes too cheap too early and the margins become so small that resellers wont have any interest in selling the devices.

Lower the price?
What about lowering the price? Won't it stimulate normal users to take up the devices? At the moment there simply aren't enough devices being sold to be able to reach good economies of scale and to cut prices. UMPCs are expensive simply because they cost a lot to produce in small numbers. Part costs for a production run of 5000 are obviously going to be much much higher than the part costs for a low-end notebook that might have a sales forecast in the hundreds of thousands. Cutting the price is a very dangerous strategy at this stage and probably the least favorable marketing option.

So UMPC marketing is going to take time. There's not going to be a big bang of sales. Like mobile phones and notebook computers we are going to have to wait for people to learn about these devices though many different channels. UMPCs in business meetings, hospitals, taxi's, hairdressers and hotels will be where the interest starts to build. Where high-margin sales can be completed. Where traditional sales and support processes can be used and where the risks can be lowered to an acceptable level.

In my opinion, the $500 UMPC could really damage the traditional product lifecycle.

If you've got an opinion about marketing UMPCs I'd be interested to hear it. Feel free to place comments here or contact me via email.

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Labels:

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Raon Digital Vega. Official specs revealed.

The Raon Digital Vega website is now live!

The "Ultraportable PC Vega" specifications are pretty much as we expected.
There's no built in Wifi which is very very disapointing. Obviously, space is an issue in such a small package and if you have to choose to between USB ports and built-in Wifi, I guess USB is the more useful. A WLAN adapter is included in the package to ease the pain!

The procesor is the AMD LX800 with its 'companion chip', the CS5536. The CS5536 includes 2D processing for video but I'm still baffled as to how Kgadget got good 3D performance out of it in their review. The processor/co-processor combination is just not built for 3D applications. I hope to be proven wrong.

Battery life is quoted as 1.8 hours with the 'compact' battery pack. It doesn't sound much but the compact battery is about 1/20th 1/2 the size of an Origami UMPC battery. Thats very very good. There's a 'standard' battery which gives three times capacity.

[correction: 1.8 hrs battery life is quoted for the optional 'compact' battery. With the standard battery (20% larger than most Origami UMPC batteries) the quoted battery life is 'up to' 5.5hours. This is still very good compared to the limit of 3 hours on a standard Origami-based UMPC. (Aug 2006.) ]

The screen is touch sensitive but operating system is Windows XP (presumeably to get the cost down) so there'll be no 'inking' on the standard model.

I can't find any pricing information for the device yet.

The English version of the website doesn't seem to be working yet and, annoyingly, most of the text is displayed as bitmaps so I can't run babelfish on it.

We're working on getting pricing and availability information from the vendor.

Data sheet for Raon Digital Vega.

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Sony Mylo. Another Almost-UMPC



I have to admit, it looks desireable and it will probably sell well. The new Sony Mylo (you must have heard about it by now?) has a nice specification and a nice price but I won't be covering it on the Carrypad portal.

Like the other 'almost-UMPCs' that I reported on recently the screen isn't big enough for either video or rich web browsing, two very important functional factors that seperate PDA's, smartphones and the Mylo from UMPCs.

Comparisons with the Nokia 770 that i've seen on other websites are a bit misplaced. The Nokia has a similar form factor and price but with an 800x480 screen, the Nokia opens possibilities for video and rich web browsing, even if it doesn quite have enough processing power for the video element.

On the positive side, its nice to see that someone is prepared to write their own software and not take existing desktop software and try to squeeze it into an ultra-mobile device. Its also nice to see the keyboard (the slide-out keyboard is easily the most well-received design in UMPC's and I believe that we'll see many more variations of the slide-out theme.) and some stylish design.

So good luck Sony with the Mylo. When you have a Mylo+ with a 4.5" 800x480 screen we'll be first in line to test it out.

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Gadgetkorea reviews the VEGA

[Gadget Korea have removed all references to the Vega. Details here.]

GadgetKorea got hold of a VEGA and managed to do some testing.
Apperently its very good!

The review is was here.

I don't really understand how they've managed to get such video performance out of this device as the built in graphics on the LX800 'companion chip' (as AMD call it.) don't seem capable of 3D graphics. There must be an external GPU solution in this. The review mentions that videos play well:
play videos at 25fps at a very demanding 800x480 @ 6 channel MP3 6 channel
That is a demanding rate. Something that would definately require a graphics co-processor.

The review also talks about long battery life and upgradeable RAM and HDD. It mentions 'integrated wifi' but then goes on to mention that a usb wifi module is included in the package.

Vega data sheet. (Carrypad product portal)

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Monday, August 07, 2006

UMPC HDD modding.

Ctitanic has posted some extensive details (with pictures and warnings!) about how he upgraded the existing 40Gb drive to 100GB in the Tablet Kiosk eo. Now he's free to load up as much music and video as he wants. The eo comes with a 2.5" drive which is easy to get hold of and also available with higher spindle speeds than the 1.8" drive in the Samsung Q1.

In May, GuardianZX9 reported that he'd upgraded the 1.8" drive in the Samsung Q1 so its seems that there's no problem upgrading either of the two available Origami UMPCs.

What i'd love to see though is someone swapping out the drive in the Samsung for a Flash HDD. You could save quite a bit of power as well as boosting speeds!

Samsung says that the Flash disk consumes only 0.1W when not in use and just 0.5W under load. For comparison, a typical mobile hard drive consumes somewhere between 1W and 2W of power in seek, read and write processes and between 0.2W and 0.8W when idle.
Remember that taking apart your UMPC is likely to invalidate your warranty.

In the Product Portal.
Samsung Q1 datasheet, images and links.
Tablet Kiosk eo v7110 datasheet images and links.

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

More Vega images and analysis. No wifi?



A few more images and some info has surfaced through the Korean-language Shinhojun blog.
Translation reveals some information that I'd interpret as 'there's no built in WLAN. The USB is used to enable a radio environment.' Indeed, in the images, you can see a USB hub with a BT or Wifi adaptor attached.
From hazard the W-LAN is not had built-in the size of the product inconveniently
There's an image of video performance specifications that I can't translate. If any of our Korean readers can help out, please leave a comment.



Without Wifi, this is going to relegate the device to a different league. I can not see myself plugging in a wifi stick every time I need internet access. Lets face it, thats over 50% of the time. If its true, its dissapointing.

On the positive side though, what it does prove is that Windows XP will run on an AMD LX800 making the Linux-based Pepperpad 3, also an AMD LX800 device, an interesting challenge for hackers!

Babelfish translation of Shinhojun blog.
Vega data sheet (Carrypad product portal.)

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Nokia 770 v's eo v7110. Nokia wins Round One.

I've been involved with a discussion on Origamiproject.com about whether the Nokia 770 internet tablet is an Ultra Mobile PC.

My take is that it should be called a UMPC for two main reasons. Number one, its more than a PDA and runs a desktop kernel. Number two, it should be in the bracket just to stimulate designers into seeing what could be done with such a small form factor.

I'm a big fan of what Nokia have done and the direction they are coming from. Unlike Microsoft who decided on a desktop OS and then ended up with a very expensive piece of hardware, Nokia took a hardware requirement and then started to fit the software into that. OK it falls a little but short of the mark but when thermo dynamics is never going to be your friend, starting with a hardware spec seems a sensible choice. The Nokia 770 mark II is going to be a very interesting device indeed. (Nokia confirmed that they were looking at a new device and they've only got a few weeks until the big buying season starts.)

There's a similar thread here.

Anyway, along the same lines, Thoughtfix the UltramobileGeek, who owns both devices, has just started a series of blogs comparing the two devices starting off with an 'in the box' look. The Nokia wins round-1!

Steve.

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Vega UMPC. Pictures.




[update3: Gadgetkorea got hold of the Vega for review.]
[update2: more Vega pictures and notes.
Journal entry here.]
[update: Vega details now in the product portal.]

AVING, a Korean website have some great pictures of the Vega UMPC that was supposed to be launched next week. OK, its not an Origami-based UMPC and some will call it a pocket PC but its running a full version of Windows XP and it looks great. In the original article (Aving.net. More pictures available at their site.) there's talk about 6 hours battery life and, if i was able to translate and convert correctly, a top price of about 700,000 Won (550 Euros/ $700)
  • AMD Geode LX800 processor
  • Widows XP HOME operating system
  • 256MB of memory
  • 30GB hard disk
  • 4.3 inch LCD
  • measures 160 X 80 X 27.5mm and weighs 480g
  • wi-fi antenna. (Built-in wifi unconfirmed.)
  • connector for GPS antenna
  • USB ports.
  • available in September (regional availability unknown)
Looking forward to the 10th August? I am!
Via Navigadget.

I'm buying an eo i7210 UMPC.

The title sounds a bit like a school playground boast doesn't it - "and my Dads got a Ferrari. And it goes 500 miles an hour." - but I think I've found my 1500,- Euro 'Carrypad Office companion' that I was talking about recently.

Its been quite a simple choice as it all boiled down to whether a docking station was available. The eo 7110/easybook P7 was at the top of the list just waiting for a docking station to complete the requirements but last week, Tablet Kiosk knocked it off the top spot with the announcement of the 7200 series. The UX series had been near the top but the cost was too high and the screen too small.

The biggest problem was actually finding a supplier for the device in Germany. This is a problem that occurs often in Europe. Although there's close to half a billion people here, there's something like 20 official languages and a heap of red tape to get through to be able to sell something here. Consequently, devices are always delayed and sometimes never ever make it. Fortunately Tablet Kiosk have a partnership in the UK with Pocket PC solutions so I was able to contact them to confirm they could ship into Germany. Then, during conversations about UMPC's with Coxion in Finland, they mentioned that they were buying some 7200 series units for testing and assessment, well, to cut a long story short, I'll be buying one on a no-support basis through Coxion. As I'll probably pop the lid within the first week, that's fine by me.

The i7210 has a few issues (I can't see any way to use the hi-def 7.1 channel audio on the device. The 80gm touchscreen might be too sensitive for me. Is there a built in mic? Will the Pentium perform efficiently? I'm worried that the pointer 'pad' won't be as nice as a pointer 'stick.') but, as a mobile office companion, its as good as it gets for the price point.

What I am looking forward to is the dual-screen output when docked, (800x480 on the UMPC and 1200x1024 on an LCD screen is a lot of screen space!) the S-Video output (this might replace my pvr.) getting a wall-mount, (its got standard VESA mounting holes) and opening it up to see if I can retro fit a DVB-T digital TV receiver back into it (the Asian versions of this device have a DVB-H receiver in them. I assume its just a USB-bus device.)

There will be plenty of reports up on Carrypad when I've got the device at the end of August (fingers crossed.) I'd be interested to hear from existing founder/ecs/daewoo UMPC owners out there so if you've already got one, drop me a line.

Regards
Steve / Chippy

Friday, August 04, 2006

Coxion . New mobile computing products.

From the land where unlimited 1Mbps 3G connectivity costs 10 euro per month and were many mobile phones are born comes not one, but two UMPC announcements.

Coxion have been in the mobile computing market for a while, selling mainly to business and vertical market customers (that means bulk sales!). They've contacted me to let me know that there's new things going on!

Firstly, the WebBook 3G. The new version of the WebBook (here's the existing one.) looks interesting. The unit is slightly re-designed, will utilise Windows XP embedded and has 3G support built in. The design looks very much like what we'd like to see in our Carrypad concept, although it's not ideal for consumers as it's using Windows XP embedded. We'll try and get hold of detailed specs for this one.












More interesting though, is the information about UMPC's. Coxion aren't just reselling UMPC's, they're modding them too! Thats right. If you want UMPC's with flash drive and 3G module built in, have a word with them. We're going to torment them into giving us a modded eo/t700/P7 with a few new accesories they've been working on.

On their new mobile computing web page they show the WebBook range and the Tablet Kiosk 7200 series UMPC.
[Correction. Its an unbranded 7200/H70/Mininote thats shown on the website.]

If you're in Europe and looking at a bulk UMPC purchase, it could be worth having a chat with Coxion. I wonder if they're able to get me on of those lovely Tablet Kiosk i7210 UMPC's?

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Amd finds its way into a second UMPC?

Ctitanic has just posted some 'tips' that are related to a teaser campaign that is running at the moment.

The teaser ad (shown here at the Raon Digital website) hints at a new Pocket PC 'Vega.' OK. Nothing too exciting there. However, Ctitanic's tips show a UMPC-like specification.
  • AMD Geode LX800
  • DDR SDRAM 256MB
  • 30GB HDD
  • 4.3inch LCD
  • Windows XP home
  • 350g
The specs come from a Korean website. (babel translation link.)

Windows XP on an AMD LX800 is possible but it will be like running it on a PIII 500Mhz. The Pepperpad 3 uses the same chip but has a tailored version of Linux running as the operating system. No one has had a chance to test this out yet so the LX800 remains an unknown quantity.

Its due to be released on 10th August. Next Thursday. All very interesting.

Thanks Ctitanic at ultramobilepc-tips

And there's more new ultra mobile news to come......stay tuned for the next post.

Steve / Chippy.

Asus R2H leads another battle.

There's a fun site over at origamibattle.ning where you can choose between UMPCs in random UMPC fight-offs. I spent ages doing it yesterday wondering when it would come to an end. I gave up when I realised it was a continuous stream of random UMPC pow-wows!!! Current winner over there is the ASUS R2H. Funny that, its winning over here too.

Based on the last 15,000 hits on the product portal, this is how the top ten UMPC 'viewing chart' looks right now. It's very clear is that the winner of the Carrypad product portal readers chart, by a large margin is the ASUS R2H, which hasn't even been launched yet. Bring it on ASUS, your customers are waiting!

[Click to go to the data sheet, images and links for each device]

Our previous results, from back in April when the Samsung Q1 was winning, are here.

Regards
Steve.

Mo-bits VX3. New UMPC design



[Update - Added VX3 data sheet to the product portal here.]

The mobile PC design company, Mo-Bits, are working on a new UMPC, The VX3 ruggedised 7" UMPC.

We've seen the X15 design before (the 7" version shown below is due to go into production in September but we still don't know how its going to end up looking or who will brand it.) and the VX3 looks to be based on the X15-7 original design. The specifications (pdf download here) are excactly the same apart from the 'ruggedisation' and re-style.

We're talking about a VIA C7-M / VX700 based UMPC here. The VIA VX700 being the space saving, advanced integrated north/south bridge that is, as far as I know, in the DualCor cPc and capable of mpeg-4 and WMV hardware acceleration. The fingerprint sensor is show on the picture along with a camera and a docking port. There are no left-hand mouse buttons shown so I hope that the pointing stick integrates a left hand button 'push' sensor like on the eo v7110/easybook P7.

In these clothes, the VX3 looks far better than the X15. Our suspicion that the X15 case shown was just a test moulding looks to be right.

'Ruggedised' always means higher production costs and niche target market so don't expect this version to turn up in your local electronics store. In fact, it appears that this ruggedised version is a late edition to the X15 family and could have been specified by the company financing the production run. To me, that almost confirms that this device won't be branded by a mainstream electronics company. At a guess, we could narrow it down to brands like Motion Computing, Roda Computer, Itronix, GoRoo or DRS Technologies who already work in sectors which might be interested in a ruggedised UMPC.



Thanks to Mo-bits for the new information.

Mo-Bits VX3 Data sheet and links
Mo-Bits X15-7 Data sheet and links
Mo-Bits X15-5 Data sheet and links.

Steve / Chippy.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

IMHO, I disagree. (Frank on the v7200 series)

Frank (Ctitanic), ever the eager UMPC beaver, has posted some interesting reading over at Ultra Mobile PC thoughts about the new eo v7200 series UMPC's. Some of which I don't agree with.

Apparently the PDF version of the manual (a 2005 version) is available through the FCC website and Franks been through it and picked out some points.
  • No integrated Mic
  • No resolution change button
  • Mono speaker
We'll have to get these points confirmed to be sure. For a start, there's a hole next to the camera which looks like a mic input and also one under the prefs button. Take a look at the close-up images below.



Frank also thinks that the Pentium-M is not a good choice for battery life when compared to the Celeron. Actually, the opposite should be true. The Pentium-M should give battery advantages over the Celeron. The Celeron's only advantage is price. The Celeron is basically the Pentium-M with some cache and speed-stepping removed. The Pentium-M is able to use speed-stepping to reduce clockrate and therefore save power over the Celeron. From the article I posted about the Origami CPU options:
The Celeron-M devices are Pentium-M devices with a reduced L2 cache and importantly, speed-stepping removed. .... In real terms, it means that the Celeron uses more power than the Pentium and that it could be slower in some operations.
In addition, as Frank already mentioned, if the architecture supports C3 states (the Founder looks like a Centrino architecture. If it's Centrino, it will have the Wifi as a seperate chipset and not in the USB bus, causing problems, like it was in the v7110.) it could take a marginal lead over the other two Origami UMPC's on battery life. Of course, we saw with the Amtek model that manufaturers can make cock-ups. Theory and practice are two different things so despite the facts, I'm keeping my fingers crossed.

Take a look here at some comparative battery life tests on 1.5Ghz C7, Pentium-M and Celeron based devices.

Accessorise.
Frank got hold of some prices for the 7200 series accesories. The bluetooth keyboard will go for $99.
They have also two carry cases: the eo Portfolio Carrying Case for $24.95 and the eo Slip Case for $14.95.
No word on the price of the show-off (wall) mount.

Thanks for the research Frank and if i'm wrong, I promise to send you some nice German beer.

eo i1709 specification page with hi-res images and news links.
eo i1710 specification page with hi-res images and news links.

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Thoughtfix and his new 'old' eo.

Spare a thought today for Thoughtfix. He odered his Tablet Kiosk eo v7110 last week, received it yesterday, did the obligatory unboxing ceremony and started to get busy. 6 hours after he got his 7110, he learned that Tablet Kiosk had launched new versions of the eo. Oh the pain!
While still downloading and installing stuff on my freshly installed TabletKiosk eo v7110, I was admiring how fun it is to use and getting used to the interface. I finally got around to checking my Gmail from it and found something. A press release.
Still, on the bright side, Thoughtfix should do a good job of testing and reporting on the eo as he's already proved himself with his other blog on the Nokia 770 internet tablet. He's got a great list of things to do and as a Linux-fan, I expect him to be playing with Linux distro's as soon as he's got though his testing list. Right Thoughtfix?

Do the poor guy a favour and check out his tear-stained Ultramobilegeek blog before the eo goes out of the window!

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

The Almost-UMPC's

The definition of a UMPC is a little blurred at the edges and from time to time I see questions like "Why isn't device X in the product portal." or "Why don't you just go out and buy a PSP." or "Do yourself a favor and forget it—get a smartphone." (Thanks Gizmodo)

Valid points.

With that in mind though, I've written a summary of the 'Almost UMPC's.' That is, devices bubbling under (or over) our definition of a UMPC.

Take a look here to see why the Flybook, HTC Universal and PSP don't make it into the product portal and why the Nova5000 just got added! And as always, if you think I'm wrong, tell me why and I'll happily shoot you down with a few big-headed emails. No sorry. I was getting all Gizmodo on you there for a moment. Keep the emails coming. It makes me think!

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Labels:

Gizmodo. Bad day for UMPC's?

Hold on chaps. Don't you think you're getting a bit too negative about UMPC's? I know you're a succesful web site and that with your readership, inbound link list and coverage you don't need to side with anyone but there's no need to sound like a 12 year old in a forum. Really!
here's a series of the mini-tablets that can do a bad job of everything, only faster.
Actually it made me laugh a little because I sent them a tip about the 7200 series today. No wonder they didn't link back to my positive sounding post! Next time i'll know better than to try and boost my google rating with cheap links. ;-)

Take a look at the news coverage. Its worth a laugh. and then when you want to learn something about UMPC's, pop over to any of the sites on this UMPC linklist. These guys are the experts.

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Tablet Kiosk eo 7200 series accessories.


Going through the ordering process for the eo 7210 (yes, I'm ready to put money down on this one as soon as I find a German reseller.) I see that Tablet Kiosk have some nice little accessories available.

The VESA mounting bracket looks perfect for my lounge mounting scenario, and the branded BT keyboard looks like the nice folding one we've seen in the Founder images. Finally there's a nice little case for the device.

Outstanding questions: A car mount kit would be nice. It doesn't look like it's available. Does the BT1.2 protocol support high quality stereo streaming over the A2DP protocol? How much faster is the Pentium-M going to be. How much more battery life will it enable (remember that the Pentium-M supports speed stepping.)

Oh what a fun day its turning out to be!

Regards
Steve/Chippy.

Tablet Kiosk. New 7200 series UMPC's.


Only recently, we were reminded of the Founder Mininote/ ECS H70 / Lucoms Solo M1 UMPC product. With the camera, the cradle, the s-video out and the SD card slot, it looks like it has some nice advantages over other UMPC's. If you're in the U.S. or Europe and keeping an eye on this device you were probably wondering when the damn thing was going to be available.

We're happy to say that your (and our) wait is over! Tablet Kiosk have signed a distribution deal with ECS and they're bringing two versions of the UMPC to the U.S. and Europe. One of the two will be available with a Pentium M ULV processor option making it the first Pentium-M based Microsoft UMPC that has been launched. That should give it clear performance advantages (less power consumption and more procesing power) over other MS UMPC's. The press release is on the TK news page.





The two new UMPC's are the eo i7209 (Celeron-M) and the i7210 (Pentium-M)


The info has been added to our product database including more images and links to news as we see it.

To keep up to date on news and reviews in from other sites, subscribe to one of the feeds available.

Pre order has started in the UK (with delivery available Europe-wide) through PocketPC-solutions- the official Tablet Kiosk UK partner. The i7209 is available with a special pre-order price of UKP750 and the i7210 is available with a special pre-order price of UKP950. In the U.S., Tablet Kiosk in the U.S. are offering the devices for $1099 and $1399 resectively.

What do we think of them then? Well, the docking station will make a huge difference to useability, especially with the Pentium-M version which could possbily be used as a complete low-end desktop replacement. Its a shame that the cool folding keyboard (shown here) doesnt seem to be bundled and as expected, the Digital TV receiver available in some Asian versions has been removed. There's no GPS built-in which, for this price, should really have been bundled considering that the digital tv module seems to have been taken out. The Celeron based model doesn't seem to offer much over the existing eo v7110 apart from the extra 512MB, the docking station and 1.3Mp (15fps) camera. For $200, thats a reasonable deal. We're glad to see that both devices have a synaptics touch pointer device which will make it much more useable. We've also noted that dual-screen operation is possible via the docking station. Hopfully this is not just a mirror screen feature and TV-out also operates on a seperate second screen.

Pricing is about right for the two models especially as the docking station (still unique amongst the Origami UMPC's) is included. Not only is this going to be the first Pentium-M based umpc but it will be the first UMPC that converts easily into a desktop PC.

Regards
Steve / Chippy.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Q1 powerbank.


Over at Origamiproject.com, Kevin J has been asking for more info about the Q1 powerbank which I didn't even know existed. Its an external power-pack that costs nearly $250 and weighs over 500gm. Thats a lot of money and a lot of weight. The advantage is that you will probably never have to plug the Q1 directly into the mains supply again! The powerbank plugs into the power input socket on the Q1 and acts like a normal mains supply giving you 9hours of life or allowing you to charge the main Q1 battery. After use, you just re-charge the powerbank on it's own.

Hamtaro has the powerbank and replied on the forum with a picture and some more info.



You charge the power bank using the charger from the Q1. Then you plug the power bank in the Q1. The Q1 will react as if the charger is plugged in. I really like the power bank, because it gives me a lot of extra power. I also like the fact that I never have to use my Q1 anymore while having it plugged in the wall. I just use the power bank and than I recharge that.

Thanks to Hamtaro for permission to use the photo.

Steve/ Chippy